Stanford reveals US$100 million deal
Antiguan-based billionaire Allen Stanford has confirmed that he will be investing US$100 million in a series of Twenty20 matches over the next five years which will make England and West Indies players among the highest paid in the game.
The deal, announced at a slick media conference at Lord’s, will centre on five US$20 million games between England and a Stanford All-Stars XI, drawn from the Caribbean, at his purpose-built ground in Antigua. The first of these will be held on November 1, Antigua Independence Day, before England head to India.
“I see the Stanford 20/20 as a fantastic opportunity for current players in the Stanford 20/20 tournament to take a giant leap into the spotlight and gain exposure to top class opposition,” Stanford said. “The Stanford 20/20 for 20 [million dollars] will be a highly anticipated event, not just because of the prize money, but because of the traditional friendly rivalry that exists between England and the West Indies.”
“The winner goes home happy, the loser goes home unhappy. We had to create something that had never been done before and take cricket to the previous level in the Caribbean, we’ve not been running our sport at a professional level.”
There were concerns with the winner-takes-all format proposed by Stanford but those seem to have been resolved. A deal will mean that if England win, each of the XI will receive US$1 million, the rest of the squad share US$1 million, and the management team splits another US$1 million. The remaining US$7 million will be shared between the ECB and the West Indies Cricket Board, regardless of the outcome of the match itself.
The sums exceed those available for all but the top-paid players in the IPL, and, for the England cricketers, will also come on top of their existing ECB central contracts.
Giles Clarke, the chairman of the ECB, brushed aside suggestions the deal was pandering to the players in light of the distractions offered by the IPL. “I’m not seeing a great deal of worry in the dressing room about finances and we are not trying to appease them,” he said. “It gives them a chance to perform under pressure and to make money beyond the dreams of some of their predecessors.”
Stanford initially offered South Africa a winner-takes-all match in 2006 but their board declined. A similar offer to India, with a bigger pot, was also dismissed.
Aside from the five matches, it is reported that Stanford will put up US$9.5 million a year for five annual quadrangular events to be held in England from next year. England and West Indies will always be involved in these.
Source:Cricket News
Capture the Conversation tells you what people are saying right now!
Share on Twitter | StumbleUpon | Del.icio.us | Digg | Facebook
Thank you for reading this post. You can now Leave A Comment (0) or Leave A Trackback.
Post Info
This entry was posted on Thursday, June 12th, 2008 and is filed under Cricket, General.You can follow any responses to this entry through the Comments Feed. You can Leave A Comment, or A Trackback.
Previous Post: Counties head for showdown over ICL rebels »
Next Post: Tight Caribbean tussle ends too soon »
Read More
Related Reading:-
Clarke reveals big-money offersI was always uneasy with Stanford deal – PietersenStanford match to go ahead as scheduledECB expects Stanford deal will continueECB under fire as players go cold on StanfordStanford wants to bankroll EPLStanford deal will continue – CollierStanford sets up multi-million dollar matchStanford will not be bullied in sponsorship rowUnrepentant Clarke comes out fighting
- Determined Bangladesh put pressure on England
- Symonds, Rohit star in 10-run win
- Vettori and McCullum keep New Zealand afloat
- All-round Mumbai start as favourites
- Punjab hold nerve on night of mediocrity
- Naved to appeal against PCB ban
- New Zealand fall behind powerful Australia
- All-round Rajasthan seal maiden win
- England work hard to restrict Bangladesh
- Symonds helps Deccan to first home win




Australia
Bangladesh
England
India
New Zealand
Pakistan
South Africa
Sri Lanka
West Indies
Zimbabwe