«There’s no one in the changing room that has any issue with Josh playing the IPL and we all wish him really, really well,» Malan said. «But hopefully things work out moving forward so that, when these sorts of opportunities do come across our desk as an Ireland international cricket side, we can have our best teams playing for us.»Hopefully that inspires the next generation as well, seeing a Josh Little at the IPL. Maybe we can find another Josh Little playing in the middle of Malahide.»Malan perhaps did not intend to scorch the international game any further with his remark, but it does increasingly feel that the uber-carrot of an IPL deal is a far more realistic means for Little to help inspire a generation than any exploits he could yet produce for his country.According to a report in the , Little’s Test career may now be over before it has begun, with the bowler said to be angry at being described as an «unsustainable investment» by Richard Holdsworth, Cricket Ireland’s performance director, after featuring in just «two [actually three] out of 23 days» of international cricket in the past four months.Each of those three days with Ireland occurred at Chelmsford earlier this month, for which Little broke off from his IPL stint to aid their optimistic but not unrealistic challenge of winning three games out of three against Bangladesh, and so leapfrog South Africa in their bid for automatic World Cup qualification.In the event, a first-match washout wrecked their chances, and thereafter Ireland cut a discombobulated outfit, theoretically playing a home ODI series but in fact finding themselves outgunned on and off the field by a raucously pro-Bangladeshi fanbase than outnumbered their supporters by approximately 3000 to 30.Holdsworth also happens to have been the first person to say the quiet bit out loud, namely that this Test does not constitute a «pinnacle event», given Ireland’s financial future is effectively resting on their forthcoming World Cup qualifiers. The 50-over event is now looming for them in Zimbabwe next month, with the 20-over version for European teams following soon afterwards in Scotland.Related

  • Ben Stokes reaps rewards of IPL gymwork after playing the 'John Terry role' at CSK

  • England and Ireland's Lord's appetiser lingers in shadow of future feasts

  • Stokes confident he can be England's Ashes allrounder after 'working nuts off' at IPL

  • One year of Bazball: Have England changed the Test game?

  • Tongue set for debut as England leave Woakes out

And while Holdsworth is entirely within his rights to prick the pomposity of a format that has let Ireland down right from the moment they were handed Full Member status in 2017 (one Test per year of status is pitiful by any standards), it hardly adds much heft to a spectacle that is already grotesquely overshadowed by the Ashes, and facing further complications due to rail strikes that are likely to affect the attendance at an underwhelmed Lord’s.There’s no question that Ireland have the pride and the talent to put up a fight this week. Harry Tector, the ICC’s No. 7-ranked ODI batter is a truly thrilling prospect, while several of their players — Curtis Campher, Lorcan Tucker, Balbirnie and Stirling among them — were in the runs even in defeat in Sri Lanka last month.But against England’s Bazballers, in an Ashes summer, with the dice so grossly loaded against them that they can neither put out their best team nor practise adequately in the (traditionally) best format, it’s asking an awful lot of Ireland — and a beleaguered Test game — for the coming contest to be even moderately compelling.

Об авторе

+300
+500
+1200
+1500
+750
$
ПРИСОЕДИНЯЙТЕСЬ СЕЙЧАС
Бонус для друзей
Бесплатные ставки на спорт
Бонус