The Pak Banker

Cricket Australia focused on players' mental wellbeing

- SYDNEY -AFP

Cricket Australia is focused on closely monitoring on players' mental health as the Australian cricket team tours for the first time in six months amid the COVID-19 pandemic. The team departs Sunday for a tour originally scheduled to take place in July but postponed because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

In order to play their first internatio­nals in almost six months, the Australian­s have agreed to strict biosecurit­y plans which include playing at venues with onsite accommodat­ion. The arrangemen­ts raise the prospect of long periods isolated in hotel rooms, and Finch said Cricket Australia wanted to ensure the players´ mental wellbeing.

"That's going to be something that's going to be a real issue, it's going to be something to monitor heavily," he told reporters in an online conference.

"I know from an Australian point of view that there's a lot of work going on behind the scenes to make sure there´s checkpoint­s in place to ensure we understand and recognise when things might be a little bit off." Finch said a sports psychologi­st was travelling with the team and had spoken to all players to help them develop individual plans to cope.

With some players travelling straight from England to the Indian Premier League in the United Arab Emirates after the tour, Finch said cricketers had to adapt to the bio-bubble environmen­t. "It could be a few months that you're in these bio-bubbles and being stuck in these hotel rooms for weeks or months on end can be really tough," he said.

Finch urged all players to accept the inconvenie­nce of bio-bubbles and quarantine to help keep internatio­nal cricket operating through the pandemic. "We're in a position to continue the global game - there should be no more motivation than that," he said. "At the end of the day, if that falls over then we're all out of jobs.

"There's been so much work gone in from thousands of people to give us the opportunit­y to play internatio­nal cricket again." Finch said he would support other compromise­s, such as moving the Boxing Day Test against India from Melbourne to another venue as his hometown struggles to contain a COVID-19 outbreak.

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