The Pak Banker

We'll get you home safely, BCCI tells IPL players

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India's cricket board, the BCCI, told players it will ensure their safe return home once the ongoing Twenty20 tournament is completed, in a charm offensive as the Covid-19 pandemic grips the country, local media reported.

Australia's Adam Zampa, Kane Richardson and Andrew Tye have cut short their IPL season and gone home, while India offspinner Ravichandr­an Ashwin has pulled out as the south Asian nation grapples with skyrocketi­ng case numbers.

In a letter to players, BCCI interim CEO Hemang Amin assured players full support during and after the tournament, which is being played under biosecurit­y protocols and ends at the end of May. "The BCCI will do everything to ensure that you reach your respective destinatio­ns seamlessly," Amin wrote, according to local media reports. "Rest assured that the tournament isn't over for BCCI till each one of you has reached your home, safe and sound." Vital medical supplies poured into India on Tuesday with the country's new caseload running at well over 300,000 a day and with 2,771 deaths in the last 24 hours taking the country's toll so far to 197,894.

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison has said his country will not prioritise IPL players for repatriati­on. "They [cricketers] have travelled there privately under those arrangemen­ts, this wasn't part of an Australian tour," Morrison said. "They are under their own resources and they'll be using those resources, I'm sure, to seek to return to

Australia in accordance with our own arrangemen­ts."

Amin said the cricketers were playing for more than just the a trophy. "As some of you have said, 'If we can help distract people from all the troubles of recent times, even if it is for a short while, we have done a great job'," he wrote. "If, even for a minute, you can bring a smile on someone's face, then you have done well. While you are profession­als and will play to win, this time you are also playing for something much more important... humanity."

Meanwhile, exAustrali­a Batsman Chris Lynn has requested a charter flight home for Australian players, News Corp reported on Tuesday. Lynn said he asked Cricket Australia for a charter flight when the governing body contacted players about their health and travel plans.

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