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Surrey learning from Dolphins as they hope for Oval matches in 2020

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Surrey are “copying the homework” of American football’s Miami Dolphins as they draw up plans to stage county cricket at their Oval headquarte­rs this season despite the coronaviru­s. Next week should have seen the south London ground hosting the first Test between England and the West Indies.

But the Covid-19 outbreak has seen that series, and the start of the English season, delayed until July at the earliest. Surrey have several England players on their books, including batsmen Rory Burns and Ollie Pope, sibling allrounder­s Sam and Tom Curran and wicketkeep­er Ben Foakes.

But it now looks as if The Oval will miss out on any internatio­nal cricket this season, with all those fixtures played at ‘bio-secure’ venues such as Lancashire’s Old Trafford and Hampshire’s Ageas Bowl that, unlike Surrey’s headquarte­rs, have on-site hotels.

This week, however, plans emerged that would see The Oval reopening with a capacity reduced from 25,000 to 6,000 to meet social distancing guidelines.

Surrey chief executive Richard Gould, asked yesterday about the origins of the scheme, told a conference call: “To be honest, we were copying the homework of the Miami Dolphins. You see a lot of businesses doing this sort of war-gaming now.”

Earlier this month, the Dolphins revealed details of a plan to play games before a reduced numbers of spectators and still meet social distancing guidelines, including timed entrances and exits per sections, cutting capacity at their stadium from 80,000 to 15,000, face masks for all spectators and food being ordered from and delivered to seats.

Although no decisions have yet been announced by the England and Wales Cricket Board, there are fears this could be the first season since the Second World War without any county cricket at all. Surrey are well-placed financiall­y, at least initially,to survive such a campaign after declaring a pre-tax profit of £6.3million for the 2019/20 financial year, with Lancashire the only other county not to have to put its players on the British government’s ‘furlough’ job retention scheme.

And just as Miami owner Stephen Ross declared Tuesday the NFL will definitely stage a season, Gould said: “We’re optimistic there will be a season. Not just an internatio­nal season, but a county season.”

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