Macclesfield Express

Pad up! Time for cricket to come back

- CRICKET

RECREATION­AL cricket is set to resume this weekend after Prime Minister Boris Johnson appeared to back-track on his earlier claim that issues surroundin­g communal teas and dressing rooms made the sport unsafe.

Speaking at a Downing Street press briefing, Johnson admitted he had ‘invoked the third umpire’ and now accepted that the sport could now return, subject to a series of as-yet unpublishe­d guidelines.

There has been increasing frustratio­n over the government’s stance on the sport, with the England and Wales Cricket Board repeatedly insisting that sport is safe to play.

The governing body’s pleas appeared to fall on deaf ears when the Prime Minster, speaking in a Friday interview with LBC Radio, hinted the sport was not safe to return and insisted: “It’s the teas, it’s the changing rooms.”

However, hours later he changed his tune, admitting: “Having been stumped this morning on the science, I have sought scientific advice and medical opinion and the third umpire has been invoked.

“We do want to work as fast as possible to get cricket back and will be publishing guidelines in the next few days so that cricket can to resume in time for next weekend. Cricket can resume next weekend.”

The government’s persistent refusal to sanction a return of minor cricket had frustrated people in sport, particular­ly in light of the green-light to other sports such as golf and tennis, and Saturday’s scheduled reopening of pubs and more businesses.

Johnson had previously described the cricket ball as a “vector of disease” but said the dangers were more widespread.

Chief Medical Officer Chris Whitty, speaking alongside Johnson, said the caution was wellplaced but concurred that a careful and sociallydi­stanced return for the sport would now be acceptable.

Whitty said: “One of the issues with cricket is that it brings together a much larger number of people from different households than the six laid out as the maximum number of people who should be meeting outdoors now.

“But it is perfectly possible to have cricket where people do keep their distance and provided people don’t do things which are clearly not sensible... it should be possible to make the game itself very safe because it is an outdoor sport at a distance.

“It is a non-contact sport in the way that some other high-risk outdoor sports are.

“There however risks associated which we need to thing about and deal with which are perfectly manageable.”

The ECB welcomed the developmen­t, with chief executive Tom Harrison saying: “It will come as great news to our nation of recreation­al cricketers that the UK government has given the green light for the game to return from next weekend.

“We have maintained a constant dialogue with UK government and they’ve been supportive of our desire to see recreation­al cricket return when it is safe.

“They now agree that with appropriat­e measures in place to mitigate the risk, it is safe.

“We know how difficult it has been for everyone to go without cricket this summer, and we thank you for your patience.

“As the nation’s summer sport we believe we have a role to play in getting people active across the country, especially young people, and it is heartening to know that club cricket - albeit with social distancing in place and some other adaptation­s - will soon be back across England.”

 ??  ?? Local cricket will return this weekend
Local cricket will return this weekend

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