Daily Mail

ECB CHIEF PROMISES: TESTS ARE NOW OUR TOP PRIORITY

- By LAWRENCE BOOTH

Tom Harrison has called for the English game to undergo a ‘reset’ in the wake of the ashes debacle and insisted: ‘our priority is Test cricket.’

after a year in which England lost a record nine Tests to india, new Zealand and australia — where they are 3-0 down playing the fifth match of the series — the ECB chief executive said the function of the county system was to ‘narrow the gap between Test and first-class cricket’.

He described England’s experience in australia as a ‘brilliant opportunit­y for us to come together as a game and really sort that once and for all’.

once managing director ashley Giles and performanc­e director mo Bobat have presented their end-of-tour report to the performanc­e cricket committee, chaired by former Test captain andrew strauss, Harrison will then take his recommenda­tions to the board.

They are likely to include the retention of Joe root as Test captain, though Harrison would not be drawn on the future of others, including head coach Chris silverwood and Giles.

instead, Harrison said the focus should be on the Hobart game. ‘if we do manage to win this match, then 3-1 represents a better story than might be the case,’ he said.

Whatever the result, Harrison, who has staked his reputation on the success of the Hundred, the domestic summer’s third limitedove­rs competitio­n, said he would push for ‘the right balance of red and white ball’.

He added: ‘There is a debate about whether we play more red-ball cricket through the summer. Let’s find a way to be able to do that. These are the questions we need to ask. The pitches we play on, the ball we use.

‘We are trying to replicate conditions in Test cricket as much as possible. We do it really well in the white-ball game. We are currently not doing the right thing with respect to red-ball cricket. We want to be successful at white-ball cricket, of course we do. But we absolutely need to be successful at Test cricket.’

Harrison said governing bodies had to work together to manage an overcrowde­d schedule but expressed little confidence that it would happen in 2022, when the iPL expands to 72 matches and boards try to squeeze in series postponed during the pandemic.

But he tried to draw succour from the ashes reaching its final Test without interrupti­on. He said: ‘We can take some satisfacti­on from this being the first five-match Test series played in this pandemic.’

Harrison was speaking after a report by the Digital, Culture, media and sport select committee warned cricket to clean up its act on racism or risk losing public funding in the wake of the azeem rafiq scandal.

‘We welcome the scrutiny,’ he said. ‘it’s been a difficult few months for us. We have the opportunit­y to come out of this crisis with a roadmap that demonstrat­es that we are absolutely serious about tackling discrimina­tion, not just racism.’

Despite the committee’s conclusion that the domestic game had a ‘deep-seated’ problem with racism and England’s position at the bottom of the World Test Championsh­ip, Harrison said he intended to take his share of a £2.1million bonus awarded to a handful of ECB executives for pushing through the Hundred.

‘That is a question about an employment contract,’ he said. ‘The board set the criteria on which we are judged and that’s a matter for them.’

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