The Cricketer says:
A two-thirds consensus has been reached on a reduction of games in the Men's T20 Blast for next season and beyond. The expectation is that by shrinking the group stage from 14 to 12 games per county, losing one home match each, the competition will become more wedded to certain days, with the hope of creating a product that is easier for spectators to follow.
A return to the regionalised groups, which existed for the Blast's first seven years until 2010, would see Northamptonshire, Warwickshire and Worcestershire from the existing North Group, and Somerset, Gloucestershire and Glamorgan from the existing South Group merge to form what was formerly known as the Midlands/Wales/West Division.
it is likely that T20 Blast Finals Day, which has flitted through the competition's lifespan between mid-season and the end of the campaign, is set to revert to mid-July, so as to play out the entire tournament before The Hundred.
The future shape of the County Championship, though, remains less certain. There are 10 counties that are believed to have agreed to a 12-game model, with a 12-team top division, split across two pools. At least 12, though, are required in order to affect change. One county are understood to be considering abstaining; it is very possible that the Championship will remain in its current structure.