Tuesday, October 1, 2024
spot_img

Pietersen ponders possible ODI return

Date:

Share post:

spot_img
spot_img

LONDON: Kevin Pietersen has said there is still a chance he could play ‘white ball’ cricket for England again despite retiring from limited-overs internationals.

However, the batsman – who remains a Test cricketer – said it would need a drastic change to England’s packed schedule for him to consider a return to one-day and Twenty20 matches.

Asked if he would reconsider his retirement from cricket’s two shortest formats, the 32-year-old said: “Never say never. I’m a lot older and more mature than a few years ago, so you never know.

“Anything can happen. I’ll never say no, but the schedule would have to be a hell of a lot different for me to come back.”

Pietersen called time on his limited-overs career when England denied him his wish to carry on playing Twenty20s while quitting 50-overs games.

They said he had to make himself available for both formats amidst concerns that, otherwise, the 50-over side would be weakened by several players following Pietersen’s lead.

Pietersen, man of the tournament when England won the World Twenty20 in the Caribbean two years ago, still harbours hopes of helping the side defend their title in Sri Lanka in September.

“I still hope there might be a compromise for the World Twenty20,” he said. “If it happens, great, but I’m not holding my breath.”

However, Pietersen’s critics insist he could have kept playing for England in all three major formats and still have given himself a break if he’d opted out of the lucrative Twenty20 Indian Premier League.

But Pietersen said expecting him, or other world stars, to miss the IPL was unrealistic and that his participation wasn’t simply a matter of cash.

“Okay, the ECB (England and Wales Cricket Board) may say me playing in the IPL makes it hard to rest me but what annoys me is that, with every other board the IPL is a matter of fact. It’s not going away,” he said.

“It’s going to be there and players want to play in it. Players want to go and earn their money and unless you let them, decisions will have to be made. (AFP)

spot_img
spot_img

Related articles

Govinda bullet incident: Nephew Vinay Anand shares health update

Mumbai, Oct 1:  Vinay Anand, nephew of Govinda Ahuja, has given a health update on the actor-politician and...

Research seminar at Aaranyak flags multiple facets of conservation efforts

Guwahati, Oct 1: The two-day biennial research seminar organised by Aaranyak (www.aaranyak.org) on September 27 and 28 was...

Lower House choses Shigeru Ishiba as Japan’s new Prime Minister

New Delhi, Oct 1: Shigeru Ishiba, 67, leader of Japan's ruling party, was elected as the Prime Minister...

Funding of pan-India LWE outfits: NIA conducting raids in seven places in Bengal

Kolkata, Oct 1: The National Investigation Agency (NIA) is conducting raids since Tuesday morning, at seven locations in...