For 140 years, cricket fans in search of light
reading have turned to Wisden. But this week the cricketers’
bible faces a challenge from a new rival. Spin, a monthly title
to be launched on Thursday, will target younger fans, with a
format based on mainstream men’s magazines.
The magazine hopes in particular to appeal to
British Asians. The first issue will include a preview of next
month’s India-Pakistan series, including interviews with Sourav
Ganguly, the Indian captain, Rahul Dravid, the world’s number
two batsman, and Bob Woolmer, Pakistan’s English coach.
Imran Khan, the Pakistani MP and former cricket
captain, will write a monthly column, and Phil Tufnell, who
gained a reputation as the bad boy of English cricket, is the
magazine’s first cover star.
Duncan Steer, the editor, believes the `A3220m
four-year television rights deal between the England and Wales
Cricket Board and BSkyB, announced in December 2004, proves the
public appetite for cricket.
Mr Steer said: "It’s a young, mainstream
audience. Sky bid big money for the rights, sponsors are putting
big money into the game, but when it comes to the magazines, it
looks a bit old-fashioned. Cricket is not a fringe activity. Our
aim is to say it’s exciting."
Since September 2003, when Wisden Cricket
Monthly merged with The Cricketer to form The Wisden Cricketer,
there has been only one magazine devoted to the sport in the UK.
The title is closely associated with the Wisden Cricketer’s
Almanack, named after its founder, the "small but accurate"
19th-century fast bowler John Wisden, which has been published
yearly since 1864.
Mr Steer saidSpin would offer a different take
on the sport from Wisden. "They are more Anglocentric and more
traditional. Our approach is like that of a mainstream men’s
magazine in terms of editorial style. A lot of sports now have
magazines that cover their sport in the same way as music is
covered."
But John Stern, the editor of The Wisden
Cricketer, said his magazine was not old-fashioned. "The name is
traditional in that it is synonymous with the Almanack which has
been around for 140 years, but it is an international, glossy,
mainstream magazine that appeals to fans of all ages, male and
female."
He added: "We welcome a new magazine into the
marketplace. The fact that Spin is launching would indicate to
us that cricket is on the up and that interest in cricket is
increasing."
Spin will launch with a cover price of `A31.50
and a print run of 70,000, but Mr Steer said he would be
"delighted" to achieve anything like the 35,000 copies that The
Wisden Cricketer sells each month.
- The Independent