The Herald (South Africa)

England captain Morgan wary of Hales return after drugs ban

-

Alex Hales’s hopes of an internatio­nal recall suffered a setback when England limitedove­rs captain Eoin Morgan said it would take yet more time for the batsman to regain trust following a drugs ban.

Nottingham­shire opener Hales was dropped from the World Cup squad shortly before last year’s tournament after it emerged he had tested positive for drugs.

England went on to win the event on home soil in dramatic fashion without him and he has not played internatio­nal cricket since.

England, however, are set to name a training squad of up to 45 players on Friday.

It is unlikely players will be allowed to move between formats as England seek to cram a full programme of Test and limited overs internatio­nals into a season that will start in July at the earliest after the coronaviru­s wiped out the initial few months of their home campaign. That led to suggestion­s Hales, who has three of England’s five highest Twenty20 scores to his credit, was in line for a recall.

But even though England allrounder Chris Woakes said last week that Hales deserved a second chance, Morgan appeared to be in a less forgiving mood.

“On the cusp of a World Cup the huge breakdown in trust between him and the players was dramatic,” Morgan said. He was speaking at an online event to mark the 15-year anniversar­y of cricket charity Chance to Shine, which promotes the game in British state schools.

“I’ve certainly spoken to Alex and see an avenue for him to come back.”

Neverthele­ss, Morgan said: “It’s only been 13 months since the incident. Given that it could have derailed a World Cup campaign, I think it will take more time, yes.

“It’s not about performanc­e with Alex, he’s a fantastic player.

“It’s about on and off the field and values we adhere to.”

Hales might also have been looking at a recall this season as a way of forcing his way back into the squad for the World Twenty20 in Australia this year.

The Internatio­nal Cricket Council insisted earlier that press reports the tournament would be postponed due to the pandemic were “inaccurate”, while stressing it was examining contingenc­ies.

Morgan, however, was sceptical about the prospects of the October 18 to November 15 tournament going ahead as planned, given what he forecast would be Australian government reluctance to let overseas teams into a country where there have been only just over 100 deaths from Covid-19.

“I’d be surprised if it goes ahead,” Morgan said.

“My reasons for that would be if you look at how Australia have handled the pandemic, they’ve shut down the borders pretty early, had a limited number of cases and deaths in comparison to the rest of the world.”

Dashing batsman Morgan, 33, hopes to lead England at the T20 World Cup, whenever it is, and at the following 2021 edition in India, despite a longstandi­ng back problem.

And the left-hander hopes form and fitness will allow him to be involved in the defence of England’s 50-over title in India in 2023.

“I think a lot of that is going to be dependent on my body,” he said.

“If my back continues to get better, yes, that could be a chance.

“If it continues to deteriorat­e, you can’t look past the T20 World Cups.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa