The Scotsman

ICC discuss structure of global cricket

- Clive Wellington

Decision makers at the Internatio­nal Cricket Council have met to debate the future of bilateral internatio­nal cricket.

The ICC board and chief executives' committee met in Dubai this week against a backdrop of the continued rise of global franchise leagues, asp ate of under strength touring squad sand the ongoing financial struggles of national governing bodies beyond the' big three' of England, India and Australia.

Discussion­s were held over the possibilit­y of strict scheduling­windows to reduce fixture conflict and the context of limited-overs internatio­nals outside of world events. While no clear recommenda­tions emerged, ICC chair Greg Barclay suggested the talks would continue.

"The ICC board and committee meetings are the forum for us to discuss the long-term future of the internatio­nalgame and at this set of meetings we spent a number of hours constructi­vely considerin­g the structure of the global cricket calendar," he said. "Whilst there are no easy answers, there is a commitment to exploring how context can be delivered and further options will be considered at upcoming meetings."

The board approved the mandatory introducti­on of 'stop clocks' in all ODIS and T20IS, after a successful trial showed they saved around 20 minutes per match in the 50-over format. The new playing condition comes in on June 1 and will be used at that month' st 20 world cup in the West Indies. Under the rule that was trialled, the fielding side has 60 seconds to start a new over, with failure to do so initially attracting two warnings before a five-run penalty per incident would be applied.

 ?? ?? ICC chairman Greg Barclay
ICC chairman Greg Barclay

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