Australia’s Test against Afghanistan likely to be postponed, says CA chief executive Nick Hockley : Rashtra News
Cricket Australia chief executive Nick Hockley said that the board will stick to its position of not playing against Afghanistan if women’s cricket is not supported in the latter country.
The one-off Test would be Afghanistan’s first in Australia. (Reuters Photo)
HIGHLIGHTS
- The Taliban’s takeover has led to worries that Afghanistan’s nascent women’s cricket programme will collapse
- Australia players and officials have in the past said that they won’t face Afghanistan
- The match is scheduled to be held in Hobart from November 27
Australia’s scheduled one-off Test against Afghanistan is likely to be postponed indefinitely, with a timeline to be established on the basis when it becomes clearer what impact the takeover by the Taliban will have on sport in the country, Cricket Australia chief executive Nick Hockley told local media on Monday.
CA last month threatened to scrap the Test, which is scheduled to start in Hobart on November 27, if the Taliban government, which took power in August, did not allow women and girls to play the sport. Officials and players, including Test captain Tim Paine, have expressed misgivings about facing Afghanistan if women’s cricket is banned in the country.
“It’s likely that we will postpone until a point of time where there is more clarity and that’s following consultation with the Australian government,” Hockley told the ABC.
“The work we’ve been doing is to understand the current situation on the ground.
“We made our position very, very clear off the back of some earlier comments around, potentially, cricket as a sport for women and girls not being supported in Afghanistan.”
Hockley also said he was confident negotiations with the Western Australia government would be successful and that the fifth Ashes Test will go ahead as scheduled in Perth next January.
The tourists conditionally agreed to proceed with the tour late last week after Hockley held two video conference meetings with the England players to ease their fears about overly strict biosecurity protocols.
Western Australia has employed strict border controls to keep COVID-19 out of the state and if the government stuck to its rules, the England squad would have to quarantine for two weeks after arriving in Perth from the fourth test in Sydney.
Hockley thought the state would be prepared to relax the quarantine requirements and allow the England players to play the Perth test in a bio-secure bubble with some freedoms.
“We would desperately like to play the fifth test in Perth. It’s absolutely our intention to do so,” he added.
“Those discussions are going on right as we speak. That will be our focus over the next couple of months.” The Ashes starts in Brisbane on December 8.
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( News Source :Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by Rashtra News staff and is published from a www.indiatoday.in feed.)
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