Eastern Eye (UK)

Moeen: Fix hectic schedules to save ODIs

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ENGLAND all-rounder Moeen Ali has warned that other players could follow teammate Ben Stokes in quitting ODIs and that the format could become obsolete if nothing is done to fix the game’s hectic calendar.

Stokes, England’s Test captain, announced his shock retirement from 50-over cricket at the age 31 last month. He cited an “unsustaina­ble” schedule that has come under strain because of the emergence of franchise-based Twenty20 leagues.

The Internatio­nal Cricket Council’s (ICC) insistence on one global event every year has further added to the workload.

“At the moment it’s not sustainabl­e, in my opinion,” Ali said on the sidelines of The Hundred, where he is leading Birmingham Phoenix. “Something has to be done because I fear losing the 50-over format in a couple of years because it’s almost like the long, boring one… the 50 overs is just in the middle. There’s no importance given to it at the moment.”

Other England players including Jos Buttler and Joe Root have also voiced concern about scheduling while India spinner Ravichandr­an Ashwin has questioned the format’s relevance.

“Internatio­nal cricket in all three formats is by far the best cricket to play,” added Ali, who quit Test cricket last year.

“But I do worry there are so many tournament­s out there that players are retiring more now – and you’ll see more retiring soon – because of overlappin­g schedules.”

The ICC last week said it hoped to retain the sport’s allformat players despite mounting criticism, with chief executive Geoff Allardice stressing that most players still wanted to play in World Cups and ICC events.

 ?? ?? FORMAT FEARS: Moeen Ali
FORMAT FEARS: Moeen Ali

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