Gulf News

ICC tightens rules for aspiring leagues

World body to discuss regulation and sanctionin­g of cricket events next week

- BY K.R. NAYAR Chief Cricket Writer

The days of new, shorter league formats getting a quick sanction from the Internatio­nal Cricket Council (ICC) are over.

Geoff Allardice, the ICC’s general manager of Cricket, has revealed that vetting process by host countries and the ICC would be enhanced soon amid the mushroomin­g of shorter league formats around the world.

“One of the things we will be talking about in our meeting next week will be around regulation­s and sanctionin­g of events and also the release of players,” he said. “It is not just going to be an open door for any promoter to come in. I think it will be a bit harder to get sanctioned in the future and any tournament would need both the support of the home country and the ICC.”

Allardice’s comments are significan­t at a time when the UAE will be hosting five franchise competitio­ns this season.

The UAE just hosted Abu Dhabi T20 event while the Afghanista­n Premier League is currently going on in Sharjah.

This will be followed by the T10 League in November, the UAE T20X in December and the fourth season of the Pakistan Super League in February.

To ensure that tournament­s such as the ill-fated Masters Champions League (MCL), that was held in UAE in 2016 and ended up with players not being paid, is not repeated, Allardice said: “The sanctionin­g of the events is one way we say a league that comes up in the UAE needs the approval of the Emirates Cricket Board and it also needs approval of the ICC. So you look at all of the documentat­ion and the ownership structures and how the league is going to be funded and all these things types of things and then you provide approval.”

He said how it rolls out after that will be in the hands of the owners.

“But what happens the next time is that if this [non-payment] happens, generally players won’t go back. So the future success of a league is in jeopardy... I think perhaps the hurdles to jump for a promoter to put on a T20 league [event] are going to be a bit higher and that the vetting process by both the host country and by the ICC would be enhanced.”

 ?? Clint Egbert/Gulf News Archives ?? Virendra Sehwag during the semi-finals of the Masters Champions League (MCL) in February 2016. The ICC is rolling out a new vetting process to prevent incidents such as the ill-fated 2016 MCL in which players ended up not being paid.
Clint Egbert/Gulf News Archives Virendra Sehwag during the semi-finals of the Masters Champions League (MCL) in February 2016. The ICC is rolling out a new vetting process to prevent incidents such as the ill-fated 2016 MCL in which players ended up not being paid.

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