The Mail on Sunday

England put family first to save Ashes

- By Richard Gibson

CONFIDENCE is growing that mass withdrawal­s from the Ashes by leading England players will be avoided after Cricket Australia shared proposed tour conditions with the ECB.

Although the informatio­n received on Friday’s deadline has thus far only been shared among the governing body’s executive, and was being digested this weekend, one source suggested the guidelines were ‘better than expected’.

England’s players received emails advising them that they would be briefed on the details in 10 days.

Negotiatio­ns are expected to have concluded before October 4, the date upon which the players will be asked to clarify availabili­ty. A squad will then be selected and announced ahead of England’s white-ball team travelling to the United Arab Emirates for the Twenty20 World Cup on October 8.

The ECB — whose dialogue with the BCCI to rearrange this month’s cancelled Manchester Test for 2022 continues — already have a picture of the conditions under which their own players are prepared to tour following a written consultati­on conducted by the Team England Player Partnershi­p.

It’s understood that a compromise on the quarantine rules imposed for families is key to the strength of squad England send down under. Although players have come to terms with their partners and children having to adhere to the 14-day hotel periods stipulated by the Australian government, they would like the freedoms they expect to receive themselves extended to their loved ones.

The ECB have prioritise­d getting families on the trip and those who want to can be there for the duration, which opens the prospect of relations of multi-format players being on the road with England teams from the second week of October to the latter half of January.

Several wives and girlfriend­s will be in tow when Eoin Morgan’s men head to Dubai to try to unite internatio­nal cricket’s two white-ball belts next month. They will be accommodat­ed in the team bubble at The Palm hotel.

These are the kind of details the England players hope can be replicated in Australia. Ideally, they would like to be free to visit restaurant­s, play golf and leave their hotel to venture to ‘green zones’.

However, there’s a lingering concern in the camp at what might happen in the light of a positive Covid case being recorded within their party. They fear it will lead to an immediate return to the roomonly living.

Restrictio­ns currently vary stateto-state and greater freedoms should be enjoyed at the start of the tour in Queensland and South Australia, which are almost free of Covid. It’s a different story in Victoria and New South Wales, where infections are higher.

Any changes to the Ashes itinerary — for example, Western Australia not relaxing its two weeks’ quarantine on even domestic arrivals — will be in venue only with the Test dates set in stone.

Meanwhile, an example of the complexity of organising top-level sport in Australia was provided yesterday when the England women’s netball team was forced to pull out of its tour.

 ?? ?? THE ASHES
Scheduled to start in Brisbane on December 8
THE ASHES Scheduled to start in Brisbane on December 8

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