Michael Hussey tests positive for Covid-19 for second time

Chennai Super Kings batting coach and former Australian batsman Michael Hussey has tested positive for COVID-19 for the second time. The former left-handed batsman had initially tested positive alongside few staff members of the CSK contingent after which he was put into isolation. 

As per the BCCI’s protocol a person needs to be tested negative twice before leaving the isolation. 

Though, CSK CEO Kasi Viswanathan had earlier said that Hussey had tested negative while according to a report in the Australian, Hussey’s second test came out to be positive.

The ex-Aussie cricketer said that he is resting well and also appreciated the efforts by the CSK. “I’m resting well and I’m feeling stronger. I’m hugely appreciative of what CSK have already done and are doing for me,” Hussey told Sydney Morning Herald recently.

“It’s horrific what’s taking place in India at the moment with the pandemic and I’ve been blessed with the great support I have received. I’m grateful for all the messages of support from cricket fans in India and Australia,” he added.

The IPL 2021 was suspended with immediate effect for an indefinite time on May 4 after there was a rise in COVID-19 cases within the franchise teams. SRH’s Wriddhiman Saha, DC’s Amit Mishra, KKR’s Varun Chakravarthy and Sandeep Warrior and CSK’s bowling coach L.Balaji had tested positive for COVID-19. 



 

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Lasith Malinga might play for Sri Lanka in World T20

Sri Lanka fast bowler Lasith Malinga might be seen donning the Sri Lankan jersey in the World T20 slated to take place in India in later this year. "We will talk to Lasith soon. He is in our plans for the forthcoming T20 tours, including the T20 World Cup coming up in October," said national selection committee chairman Pramodya Wickramasinghe. Wickramasinghe further said that they are looking for a long term plan. "We are working out a long-term plan aiming at the 2023 (50-over) World Cup. There, our main focus is to adjust ourselves to forming an accurate average in terms of two main aspects. Those are the age and the fitness," Wickramasinghe told Morning Sports. The right-arm fast bowler who had bid adieu to ODI cricket was released by the Mumbai Indians franchise ahead of the mini auctions that took place in February in Chennai. He has scalped 170 wickets in 122 matches that he has played for the side. With two back-to-back World T20s lined up in 2021 and 2022, Sri Lanka are seeking services of an experienced player. "There are two back-to-back T20 World Cups that are coming up, this year and next year. We are going to discuss our plans with him when we meet him in the next couple of days," said Wickramasinghe. Malinga too has shown his interest in being a part of the setup. “I also am keen to know how the selection committee is going to get the services of a senior player like me for the national side,” Malinga said.

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Ramiz Raja is wrong. Only more Tests can help Zimbabwe improve their game

Comments made by former Pakistan opener and now a renowned commentator Ramiz Raja over Pakistan’s complete annihilation of Zimbabwe in a two-match long series has spa rked a new debate on social media. Whether big teams should play Test matches against lower-ranked teams such as Zimbabwe is being discussed profusely. Organising such ‘one-sided Test matches will compel people to watch football or other sports over cricket due to lack of competitiveness between two sides, argued Rameez. He also rebuffed the argument that weaker teams will improve by playing against stronger teams, saying that the Zimbabweans did not improve their performance one bit from the first Test of the series. Raja’s point echoed among many other social media users who went on to say that Zimbabwe should not play Test cricket at all. To this Jarrod Kimber, one of the most followed non-cricketer cricket writers critiqued that teams such as New Zealand, which appears to be one of the best Test team in terms of performances, took 30 long years to taste their first win. However, their journey was not curtailed and their improvement can be established with them reaching the finals of the first World Test Championship. To be fair to Raja though, Zimbabwe were really not up to the mark to challenge Pakistan even for an hour of play. But, the larger question should not be reduced to whether Pakistan or any other team should play Zimbabwe or Ireland. It should have been centred around what the cricketing world has done for Zimbabwe when their own society and repetitive governments failed to let them breathe fresh air? On the point of whether playing regularly against better teams would improve their qualities or not, can Raja be confident that Babar Azam become a world-beater batsman by just hammering around the bowlers from Zimbabwe and Ireland? The answer to that question is clearly no. Raja would do well to go not so far back in time and see how Pakistan fared on the tour of Australia. A player of the quality of Babar Azam was being found out in the first half of the Test series. There were questions marks about his credentials in the longest format before he proved his mastery with the bat when offered an opportunity to bat higher up the order. He would do well to go back and listen to what Ricky Ponting said of the Pakistan bowling attack as well. It would be a tough pill to swallow for Raja as Ponting had said that the Pakistan bowling attack that was playing down under in that series was probably the worst one to have toured down under in a ‘long time.’ Should the ICC or Australia have stopped playing cricket, at least against Pakistan and especially in Australia? Needless to say, Pakistan would dominate the home series on their home pitches or in the UAE. The point of killing competitiveness in Test cricket also appears hollow as great teams such as England, India and Australia have been trounced inside two days on many occasions in the last few years as well. Zimbabwe’s problem is structural and unlike Ireland where the cricketing system can be separated from the problems and complexity of the society, the impact of government and its policies become heavy on the health of the game in Zimbabwe. To prevent the fake ‘quality of Test cricket’ by cancelling or avoiding these one-side matches will be an embarrassment for the game of cricket that wants to achieve global status. Rather than calling off these matches, the International Cricket Council should take the obligation to help these struggling nations such as Zimbabwe and upcoming ones such as Ireland and Afghanistan. It should also put the onus on ‘The Big Three’—India, Australia, and England to increase their involvement in the game with these nations that will work in favour of the overall wellbeing of the game and will propel the grand old bat and ball stop to finally achieve the status a global sport. India have not played a series against Zimbabwe since 2016 while a Test series between the sides dates way back to 2005. Australia last hosted Zimbabwe in 2003 for a Test series while England too hosted the Chevrons way back in 2003 only. Yes, Zimbabwe have not been lucky enough to produce players such as Rashid Khan, Mohammed Nabi or Sandeep Lamichhane who can steer their sides on their own but the ICC and the big daddies of the game can’t be abdicated from the larger responsibilities of allowing and helping the game grow beyond its existing limits. On the contrary, these heavyweights have consolidated their power and control over the ICC in such a manner that it is shrinking the game itself other than in their own backyards, let alone helping it to flourish.

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With Covid-19 restrictions imposed, PSL likely to be shifted from UAE

The Pakistan Super League that was earlier postponed due to rise in COVID-19 cases within the teams was supposed to take place in the UAE. But the chances of holding the tournament in UAE have diminished after the government announced a ban on travellers from Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Nepal and Bangladesh due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The ban on the travellers will be effective from Wednesday. “The PCB was expecting things to be finalised in next 24 hours due to the Eid holidays in both countries but now with this ban imposed by the UAE government till May 12, the only option available to the PCB is to hold the matches in Karachi,” a source said on Monday. The PCB was earlier in talks with the Emirates Cricket Board to seek permission from the government for the same. The remaining PSL is scheduled to begin on June 1. It was earlier decided that all the matches would take place in Karachi including the final slated to take place on June 20 but the PCB wasn’t in favour of having the tournament in Pakistan after the kind of experience they had in March. The source further added that Sri Lanka can be an option for hosting the event. “Their is one more suggestion to have it in Sri Lanka if not in UAE, but that will require a lot of logistical and other issues and will also be dependent on clearance from the government,” another source said. Former Pakistan captain Javed Miandad has advised the PCB that the tournament shouldn’t take place at this struggling time. “I think this is not the right time to be playing cricket when all the focus is on saving lives from this dreaded virus,” Miandad told a cricket website