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Texan offers $100 million for England Twenty20 series
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April 19, 2008 09:44 IST

Texas billionaire Allen Stanford has offered to put up $100 million (50 million pounds) for England [Images] to play five Twenty20 games against his West Indies [Images] All-Star team.

England and Wales Cricket Board chairman Giles Clarke had said on Thursday the prospect of England taking part in a winner-takes-all $20m match in West Indies is "very likely".

But after talks on Tuesday between Stanford and ECB chief executive David Collier, the American told The Times he believed the richest single game of cricket would be just the start of a series that will make millionaires of the England players.

The first $20 million game would be on Independence Day in Antigua on November 1 and Stanford then wants to alternate venues annually between his own purpose-built ground and Lord's.

"I talked to David about the first game and then how we could collaborate in the future," Stanford was quoted as saying in Saturday's Times. "I said that it could be an annual event, maybe we could come to Lord's in 2009 and then alternate.

"I would be happy to make a five-year commitment. Asked if that meant $100 million, he said: "I'd be willing to do it. The money is real and I think we will get a game.

The BBC reported on Thursday that the American is also keen to help create an English Twenty20 league and the ECB is eager to appease players keen to cash in on lucrative tournaments.

"We are spending a lot of time looking at creating a robust, sustainable and economically viable league that still protects our core revenues of Test cricket," Clarke said.

Last year Stanford, who has already funded a full Twenty20 Caribbean regional tournament, gave West Indies cricket US $100 million over three years in what he described as a bid to bring the game into the 21st century.

"England are in a position of choosing which way they want to go," Stanford added in his Times interview. "They can embrace the Twenty20 revolution which started in your country, or they can sit back and let India and the others determine the future.

"I think the ECB will grab this opportunity and guide the game into the future better than anyone else."




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