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Siddle treated for smoke inhalation

- AFP

AUSTRALIAN Test bowler Peter Siddle was treated for smoke inhalation after a Big Bash League match in Canberra was abandoned at the weekend because of toxic bushfire haze.

Organisers decided to press ahead with Saturday’s Sydney Thunder Twenty20 clash with the Adelaide Strikers, but players were forced off with the Thunder 1-40 after four overs chasing 162 to win when the field was enveloped in a thick soup of smoke.

“It was pretty unsafe out there,” Strikers captain Alex Carey said. “We had a couple of cases after, the doctor had to come in and assess him (Siddle), we have a few asthmatics in the team as well, luckily they did not stay out there too long.

“Sids is back to Melbourne and joining the Australian squad” for the Boxing Day Test against New Zealand.

“There are bushfires around the country and as players, there is a bigger picture than just cricket,” said Carey, entertaini­ng the idea that an air quality meter could be introduced.

The Australian Cricketers Associatio­n is working with Cricket Australia to develop guidelines for when smoke affects matches and the Internatio­nal Cricket Council is developing an “air quality policy”.

Pollution has also been a problem on the Indian subcontine­nt. In 2017 play was stopped during a Test between India and Sri Lanka in New Delhi. At the moment it is up to umpires to decide whether conditions are safe, without any formal framework for that decision.

Leading doctors have declared the bushfire smoke crisis a “public health emergency” and authoritie­s reported the number of people going to emergency rooms with respirator­y problems has nearly doubled compared to the fiveyear average.

Last weekend New South Wales Cricket told clubs to “consider cancelling matches … if there are any concerns about welfare”.

“Associatio­ns are to evaluate air quality and take action as necessary to delay, postpone or cancel matches where required.”

Many kids’ games were called off or postponed.

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