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Copyright at the bottom of the second picture is 1995.
Ok looks like my memory has meshed a couple of things together. Crowe's game had 8 ball overs, there was a Super Eight game in Oz and the 1999 tournament was called Super Max Eights.


Twenty years ago, Martin Crowe tried to start a cricket revolution.

On February 5, 1996, thousands flocked to Cornwall Park in Auckland to witness the first game of Cricket Max, the short-form version of cricket invented by Martin with some help from his brother Jeff.

It featured a number of innovations, but two were more important than the rest.

Teams had two innings of 10 overs each, and shots played into a Max Zone behind the bowler counted double, turning fours into eights and sixes into 12s.

The first game also included sets of four stumps, eight-ball overs, a ban on LBWs, and specialised roles determining who could bat and who could bowl, all of which would disappear as the game became a fixture of the New Zealand domestic calendar for six years at the turn of the century.

From the November 1996 to November 2002, seven Cricket Max competitions of various formats and lengths were held.
At its peak, Max ran from November to February, and consisted of 31 games - more than the Ford Trophy has today. In its last edition, it consisted of six games over a single weekend

Today, there are four players still active who played a game of Max - Peter Fulton, Rob Nicol, Brent Arnel and Brendon McCullum.
A wide range of descriptions were used by the media in covering it.
It was "exciting," "a good product," and "a TV game".
It was "something for Sky to use to fill in the Friday night slots vacated by rugby and league," "cricket's equivalent of rugby sevens," a strange hybrid that was unlikely to catch on," "little more than a haphazard slog," and, wrote the editor of Wisden, "a dangerous intruder".

But it was also "not just the hit-and-miss cricket that you think it might be," "a vision for the future," "a big adrenalin rush," and "a development tool for introducing the game around the world".
Having found a footing in New Zealand, Crowe tried to take the game global.

The Max Blacks played the England Lions in a three-game series in 1997, and Crowe made approaches to other nations looking for support.

It was combined with an Australian short-form game, Super Eights, and an international tournament was held in Kuala Lumpur. Super Max Eights was endorsed by the International Cricket Council in June 1999, as the "official third-generation game," but that didn't lead to any great upheaval - in England in particular, the Max Zone concept meant it never got off the ground.
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Super 8s was different to Cricket Max. This was a Greg Chappell invention.

Super 8s is a defunct short form of cricket devised by Greg Chappell for the Australian Cricket Board in 1996. The format was conceived as a way to financially reward the top-class domestic cricketers in Australia whose opportunities of making it into the significantly higher-paying Australian national side were limited. Matches were played outside the regular cricket season during the Australian winter at rugby stadiums with smaller rectangular fields such as Willows Sports Complex in Townsville.[8] An international tournament was held in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia in July 1996.[9]

The changes from the usual Laws of Cricket include:[10]

  • Eight players per side
  • 14 over matches
  • All players except the wicketkeeper must bowl a minimum of one over, but no more than three overs
  • A boundary 6 is worth 8 runs
  • Batsmen must retire at 50 runs, but are allowed to return if balls are left in innings
  • Last batsmen allowed to continue to end of innings, even after 7 wickets have fallen

 

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I liked watching Super 8s on Fox Sports back in the day, and also the odd Hong Kong Sixers tournament. There was 1 Australia game that Lehmann took the gloves for the final over and Gilchrist bowled us to victory.

I'm fairly sure I watched one of those tournaments where Australia sent over a team of players who had been retired for 10-15 years while all the other countries sent over their best players.
 

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