The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Hoffmann feels for frustrated Scots

Cricket: Hall of famer sympatheti­c towards talented crop of players

- David KeLso

Scotland legend Paul Hoffmann believes the current crop of internatio­nal players could be the most talented this country has ever produced.

But he showered sympathy on them for not being given the opportunit­ies to prove it.

He called on the sport’s global chiefs to waste no time in creating a European League if Scotland continue to be denied competitio­n down south.

Hoffmann spoke out after watching the Scots crash to defeat in the second match with Zimbabwe at Raeburn Place just two days after they created history by beating the tourists to grab their first ever Test nation scalp in an ODI.

The encounter also featured Hoffmann’s induction to the Cricket Scotland hall of fame, but sadly marked the end of Scotland’s big-stage season even before the arrival of Midsummer’s Day.

Hoffmann declared: “It must be very frustratin­g for this current squad to be deprived of the type of fixtures that I was able to play a decade ago.

“From what I’ve seen, this group are right up there with the squad we had in around 2004/2005, but how can they maintain momentum and improve when their internatio­nal summer has already finished?

“Some of my most memorable days were the journeys to England playing in the limited-overs domestic competitio­n against the counties.

“I challenged myself against Test stars and experience­d county players.

“I would like to imagine there’s a chance Scotland could re-join a domestic competitio­n in England, whether it’s the T20 Blast or the One Day Cup. But do the ECB want Scotland involved and would it be financiall­y viable?

“If that is not an option, then the ICC should be responsibl­e for arranging more fixtures for Scotland.

“I’d like to see Scotland play Ireland and Holland more often in an official European League.

“Something has to be done. This current team have a lot of ability and potential. It would be sad to see it go to waste through lack of action.”

Half centuries by skipper Kyle Coetzer and Calum MacLeod should have been the foundation for a challengin­g home total, but visiting captain Graeme Cremer wrought havoc with a spell of five for 29.

Chris Sole gave the Scots fresh hope by breaking through three times as Zimbabwe slid to 44 for three before Sikander Raza (58 not out) and Ryan Burl (30 not out) guided them to glory.

… how can they maintain momentum and improve when their internatio­nal summer has already finished? PAUL HOFFMANN

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