ICC eyes franchise cricket curbs

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NEW COMMITTEE LIKELY TO OVERSEE BETTER SCHEDULING

Ahmedabad, June 1: Alarmed by the rapid spread of franchise cricket across the globe, the ICC board has approved the formation of a committee that will work towards creating a balance that doesn’t disrupt the current international calendar.
Currently, IPL takes up two months of the yearly calendar, with SA20, ILT20, BBL, BPL, SLPL, The Hundred, and the CPL being prominent leagues across the globe.
Add to it, there is the European T20 Premier League, set to commence this year, making it a lucrative career option for quality T20 players who want to turn freelancers.“The Board expressed concern regarding the growing expanse of franchise cricket and resolved to form a committee to assess the harmonisation of franchise cricket with the international calendar within the current structure,” the ICC said in a statement.
The threat is real for countries like the West Indies, where talented players simply want to ply their trade in T20 cricket leagues.
One prominent example is of Nicholas Pooran, who retired from international cricket before the age of 30.
Heinrich Klaasen is also dominating leagues but has called time on his South African career. Sunil Narine was never really interested in donning the West Indies jersey, even in T20 leagues.
However, with so many leagues, the Future Tours Programme (FTP) of the ICC pertaining to bilaterals threatens to get affected significantly, apart from India, which doesn’t allow its current registered First-Class players to participate in other leagues.
Earlier, the various ICC committees over the years had proposed that there should be a cap on how many leagues a player can freelance in a particular season and also honour national commitments. (PTI)

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