The Cairns Post

Opinions split on value of T20 bouts

- MICHAEL RAMSEY, AAP

ENGLAND coach Trevor Bayliss wants Twenty20 internatio­nals to be abolished but New Zealand counterpar­t Mike Hesson says such a move would damage the game.

Bayliss’s comments came after his side beat New Zealand by two runs in Hamilton but fell short of qualifying for the tri-series final against Australia due to an inferior net run rate.

They also come in the context of a gruelling summer that has fuelled concerns about the internatio­nal schedule.

With a miserable Ashes campaign, five one-day internatio­nals and the T20 tri-series just behind them, England head immediatel­y into another run of ODIs and Tests in NZ.

For the likes of Dawid Malan, James Vince and Tom Curran, that could extend their time away from home to almost six months.

“Look, I haven’t changed my opinion on it. I wouldn’t play T20 internatio­nals,” Bayliss told Sky Sports.

“If we continue putting on so many games there’ll be a certain amount of blowout with not just players but coaches as well.”

Black Caps coach Hesson said there was a financial imperative that needed to be considered for smaller nations.

“There’s always a workload issue – I think that’s fair – but there’s also a revenue-generation issue as well,” he told reporters yesterday.

“In some countries that’s not as big a deal but for New Zealand Cricket, to get 35,000 people to Eden Park or whatever it was the other day is huge for us, huge for the game and huge for the promotion of the game.

“And we certainly get great support for T20 internatio­nals over here.”

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