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Originally Posted by vvvrulz I saw nothing wrong with the 1996 format. Two big pools, and then straight knock-outs from the quarter finals, the best team wins on endurance. I have no idea why this was scrapped and the whole "Super-6's or Super-8's" were introduced. Thats where the problem started for me, before the 1999 competition everything was running along very smoothly. |
The answer lies in your post itself. Maybe the organisers thought that a 'sraight knock-out' format immediatly after the first round would be too abrupt - like a guillotine solution. For example, if South Africa & Bangladesh had met in a second round knockout match on the slow Guyana pitch, the Saffers would have been eliminated. Without taking anything away from BD's exellent performance on the day, that result would have been unrealistic from a larger perspective; depite the initial excitement, major teams would soon have realised the futility of such a format.
But in changing it, they went too far the other way and made it into a 'Super' type second round, where every qualifier plays everyone else except the one that they played in the first round. That and the stupid 'carry over points' system should be scrapped. An in-between format where the winners of Groups A & D form Pool 1 with the runners of Groups B & C
AND the runners of A & D form the Pool 2 with winners from B & C, would be ideal. Points in the second round would be fresh ones with no carry over from the first round. Then the winners from Pool 1 would meet runners of Pool 2 in the semi-final and vice-versa.