Daily Mail

FIRST-CLASS STATUS TO GO IF SUBS ARE PERMITTED

- By RICHARD GIBSON

COUNTY chiefs have been advised to consider injury substitute­s in plans to play four-day cricket from August 1 — although such a move would relinquish the first-class status of matches. Guidance for a return to domestic action, compiled by the ECB’s science and medicine department, has singled out the threat of bowlers breaking down in playing a mini County Championsh­ip of five rounds on a regional basis, because there will not have been the recommende­d preparatio­n time of four to five weeks of match-intensity bowling. The majority of county squads are still on furlough, but all will return to training this week. To offset the limited build-up, a group of chief medical officers from the domestic game recommende­d the use of substitute­s and/or limitation­s being placed on the number of overs bowled by individual­s as a ‘minimum contingenc­y for injury mitigation’. Part of the concern is the potential for increased workloads if a bowler is sidelined in the early stages of a game. Currently, players can be replaced for concussion on a like-for-like basis and a similar process will be applied to those suspected to have contracted Covid-19. The ECB have also made provision in their playing regulation­s to allow a replacemen­t in the case of internatio­nal call-ups, so long as they participat­e for at least 50 per cent of the match. But permitting general subs and allowing teams to field extra players would flout the principles of 125 years of first-class cricket, meaning that any such competitio­n would not be official.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom