The series opener is set to be played from August 4 as things stand © Getty Images
Desperate to stage the remainder of the 2021 IPL, the BCCI has put in a late request to the ECB to prepone the start of the five-Test series by a week. ESPNcricinfo understands the request was put in this week and the ECB is yet to respond. As things stand, the first Test is scheduled to begin on August 4.
The motive behind the BCCI’s move is to carve out a longer window in September for it to be able to finish the remainder of the IPL, which was brought to a sudden halt due to growing number of Covid-19 cases among players and staff during the second leg of the tournament in Ahmedabad and Delhi.
At the moment, the series opener in Trent Bridge from August 4-8 will be followed by Tests at Lord’s (August 12-16), Headingley (August 25-29), The Oval (September 2-6) and Old Trafford (September 10-14). The request from the BCCI considers starting each of the remaining Test a week earlier too.
If the final Test ends on September 7, that would then give the BCCI a three-week window – the time the board feels it needs – to finish off the remaining 31 IPL games, before teams begin to converge for the T20 World Cup.
The BCCI is confident that it can include several double-headers to finish the tournament in this window. The T20 World Cup is due to begin from the middle of October and runs until November 14.
Such a scheduling change would cause significant disruption to English cricket. Not only would it throw hotel bookings, bio-bubble arrangements, broadcast schedules and ticket sales (pretty much the entire tour is sold out) into chaos, but it would also see the Test series starting only a week after the launch of The Hundred, which is scheduled to run from July 21 to August 21.
That would also all but close the window that had been allocated to allow England’s top players to make appearances. England’s Test players were meant to be available for up to three group games at the start of The Hundred, and then the Eliminator and the Final (scheduled presently between the second and third India Tests) if their teams get there.
As well as the counties, the ECB will also have a lot of explaining to do to all those fans who have already bought tickets for the India-England tour, which is the big-ticket series of the English summer.
Currently, days one and three are sold out with limited availability on days two and four for the Trent Bridge Test; at Lord’s, day one is limited while days two to four are sold out; The Oval is already sold out for the first four days; Headingley has availability on the first two days while the third and fourth days are sold out; at Old Trafford, only the first day has been sold out with availability over the next three days.
The requests brings into sharp focus the havoc the pandemic has wreaked on the cricket calendar. It is currently unclear, for instance, where the remainder of the IPL will actually be held. The UAE has been tipped as a frontrunner, and English counties and Sri Lanka have also expressed an interest.
Though the T20 World Cup is scheduled to be hosted by India, that destination has become less certain in the wake of the second wave of Covid-19 the country is currently in the grip of. Realistically, the BCCI has only two windows in which to finish the IPL, which fall on either side of the T20 World Cup.
Nagraj Gollapudi is news editor at ESPNcricinfo
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Source: ESPN Crickinfo