County cricket could see a radical change -- including the 18 sides competing across three formats to crown the overall champion -- as England great Andrew Strauss is planning a major shake-up of domestic cricket following the Test side's Ashes debacle.
Strauss, who was England cricket's managing director on an interim basis before Rob Key took over recently, will be conducting a "high performance review" of domestic cricket, and a report in dailymail.co.uk said that it has emerged that a "(multi-) format similar to that used to decide the women's Ashes could be put in place to decide the county champions".
The report said that if such a thing happens, it would be "the most radical changes to English cricket since the one-day game's launch in 1963, with the merger of the County Championship, One-Day Cup and T20 Blast in a format similar to that used to decide the women's Ashes".