The National - News

Afridi and Gayle among star cast for new cricket format to be trialled in Sharjah

- PAUL RADLEY

A potentiall­y revolution­ary new format of cricket will be trialled in Sharjah later this year, subject to Internatio­nal Cricket Council approval.

Shahid Afridi, Chris Gayle, Kumar Sangakarra and Virender Sehwag have signed up for a new competitio­n, in which matches of 10-overs per side are played inside 90 minutes.

It is believed over 100 internatio­nal players have been sounded out about playing in the event, with the rights to a number of franchises representi­ng different areas of the subcontine­nt having been sold.

Afridi, the crowd favourite, who made his first Twenty20 century in UK’s T20 Blast yesterday at the age of 37, is signed up to a franchise reportedly known as “Team Pakhtoons”.

The matches are due to take place at Sharjah Cricket Stadium, although the ground’s administra­tors were unwilling to confirm their involvemen­t.

The new competitio­n is planned to be fitted into four days, finishing on December 24, in what promises to be a busy winter of cricket in Sharjah. The ground is also being lined up to host Pakistan internatio­nals, the Pakistan Super League, as well as Afghanista­n’s first Tests series against Zimbabwe.

The tournament is being run by a management group owned by Shaji Ul Mulk, a businessma­n who is a long-time supporter and benefactor of cricket in the UAE. Ul Mulk acknowledg­ed the event is “a work in progress”, but is sure it will go ahead, pending permission from the Emirates Cricket Board and the ICC.

He hopes it will have a lasting impact on the landscape of cricket, by streamlini­ng the game even more than Twenty20, to a timeframe in line

with sports such as football. “The rationale we are following is that world sports can be 90 minutes,” Ul Mulk told The National.

“Cricket evolved from five days, to one day, to T20, which lasts for 180 minutes. So why not 90 minutes? The whole concept is for fast-paced cricket and a short format.”

Official details of the participat­ing players, the franchises, and the draft process for each of the teams, are due to be made next week. The involvemen­t of the likes of Afridi, the Pakistan all-rounder, and Sehwag, the former India opener, will likely go a long way to generating supporter interest in the event.

The presence of Afridi is usually the best guarantee of ticket sales for cricket in the UAE, while, even in retirement, Sehwag proved to be the main draw at the ill-fated Masters Champions League in the Emirates last year.

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