The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Rashid takes it as red but retains Twenty20 vision

- BY RORY DOLLARD

Adil Rashid is glad he decided to recommit to redball cricket but believes English cricket will have to get used to the idea of Twenty20 specialist­s.

Rashid has had a turbulent 2018, initially making the surprise decision to play only limited-overs cricket for Yorkshire before being handed a controvers­ial Test recall.

Even his county struggled to hide their surprise at that turn of events and a parting of the ways seemed inevitable until the legspinner agreed a new threeforma­t deal at Headingley last month.

Rashid’s experience­s somewhat over-shadowed England team-mate Alex Hales’ decision to take a similar path at Nottingham­shire, and the 30-yearold expects it to become a more familiar route as the game continues to develop and diverge.

“There’s always the ultimate goal of playing Test cricket, playing for your country, but as time goes on things may change,” he said.

“There are Twenty20 competitio­ns all around the world. More competitio­ns keep coming each year and it may happen down the line that people just want to be T20 players.

“I think coaches, players, teams have got to start accepting that’s going to happen, that it’s a reality. It’s happening in other parts of the world, the West Indies for example, and if it happens then it happens. It’s about accepting it.” Rashid is currently as central to England’s plans as he has ever been, a central cog in the 3-1 victory over Sri Lanka in the one-day series, a certainty for Saturday’s T20 internatio­nal and set for a major role in next month’s three-match Test series on spin-friendly surfaces.

It was, though, just three months ago that his former Yorkshire team-mate and Ashes-winning England captain Michael Vaughan labelled his Test recall “a stab in the back for the county game”.

That may have been the most colourful criticism but it was not the only one, yet Rashid insists he was able to brush off any negativity and focus on his own game.

“At the time I didn’t really feel much, I wasn’t really taking note of what people were saying,” he said.

“I don’t follow what people say about me, good or not so good.

“It doesn’t faze me in the sense that I knew what my task ahead was and what I want to achieve. There are no regrets.”

 ??  ?? Turbulent: Adil Rashid
Turbulent: Adil Rashid

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