Sunderland Echo

BAYLISS: TIME TO KO T20

ENGLAND WIN BUT MISS OUT ON TRI SERIES FINAL, AND COACH SAYS HE WOULD ABOLISH T20 INTERNATIO­NALS

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England coach Trevor Bayliss has admitted he would happily abolish Twenty20 internatio­nals and leave the game’s most thriving format to domestic leagues across the world.

Bayliss, who has previously coached Kolkata Knight Riders in the IPL and Big Bash side Sydney Sixers, has floated similar thoughts in the past but doing so on the occasion of England’s 100th T20 match represents a significan­t interventi­on.

His side beat New Zealand by two runs in Hamilton but missed out on a Tri-Series final against Australia due to inferior net run-rate.

Bayliss is concerned about the increasing­ly exhaustive nature of the cricketing calendar, with players increasing­ly unable to play a full role across all formats due to time demands, but how his words will go down at Edgbaston, Old Trafford, Cardiff and Bristol – venues currently selling tickets for this summer’s England T20s – can only be guessed.

It is also safe to assume Bayliss was not debuting a revolution­ary new position from his employers at the England and Wales Cricket Board.

“Look, I haven’t changed my opinion on it. I wouldn’t play T20 internatio­nals,” he told Sky Sports. “I’d just let the franchises play.

“If we continue putting on so many games there’ll be a certain amount of blowout, not just players but coaches as well.”

Bayliss went on to mitigate slightly, floating a possible window around the eversucces­sful World T20.

“If you want to play a World Cup every four years or whatever it is, maybe six months before you get the internatio­nal teams and let them play some T20 internatio­nals,” he added.

Bayliss, who has already announced he will walk at the end of his contract in September 2019, even opened the door to entirely distinct squads and coaching teams.

That idea is gaining significan­t traction around the world, with the red ball and white ball games diverging at a brisk pace and Australia thriving in the current series using a team of Big Bash stars.

“If you go to a swimming tournament you’ve got 1500m specialist­s and 100m specialist­s,” Bayliss noted.

“I think it’s definitely the way it’s heading, not just with the players .... but when that happens I’m not sure.”

The issue somewhat overshadow­ed the end of England’s interest in the Trans-Tasman tournament.

After defeats in Hobart, Melbourne and Wellington they finally came out on top, but trudged from the field without celebratio­n.

Although they successful­ly defended 195, they needed to keep the Black Caps under 175 to progress and failed by 17 runs. New Zealand will meet Australia in Wednesday’s final.

“Once that went naturally heads went down,” said captain Eoin Morgan, who topscored on the night with 80 not out. “We had absolutely no right to be in the final.

“We played terribly so far in the tri-series.

“We played well today, did enough to win but not enough to go through but that has been the story of the trip.”

Morgan was at a loss to explain the dip in whiteball form, having thrashed Australia 4-1 in the preceding 50-over series, and declined to cite the absence of rested trio of Joe Root, Chris Woakes and Moeen Ali.

“It is hard to pinpoint. I don’t think we’re a poorer team (in T20s),” he said.

“We’ve been caught on the hop particular­ly against Australia we were terrible.

“We didn’t bat, bowl or field well. That is disappoint­ing because confidence was quite high coming in from the one-day series but it hasn’t continued.”

Ben Stokes has joined up with England ahead of the one-day internatio­nal series against the Kiwis, which starts on Saturday, but Bayliss thinks the first game “might be too early” for him.

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