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regular-article-logo Sunday, 03 November 2024

ODIs dying a slow death, says Usman Khawaja

According to Australia Test opener, cricketers 'are not like cars' and there is 'too much cricket rammed in'

Our Bureau Calcutta Published 23.07.22, 04:35 AM
Usman Khawaja.

Usman Khawaja. File photo

Australia Test opener Usman Khawaja believes ODI cricket is “dying a slow death” and hasn’t been surprised by England’s Ben Stokes’s decision to quit the format.

Khawaja is the latest cricketer to join calls for abolishing the format after former Pakistan captain Wasim Akram spoke on similar lines given the growing popularity of T20s around the world. Former England skipper Nasser Hussain also slammed the crammed cricket calendar.

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Calling playing three formats as “unsustainable” for him, Stokes, who is also England’s Test captain, said cricketers “are not like cars” and there is “too much cricket rammed in”.

“I think personally oneday cricket is dying a slow death,” Khawaja, who has represented Australia in 40 ODIs since making his debut in the format in 2013, told reporters in Brisbane on Friday.

“There’s still the World Cup, which I think is really fun and it’s enjoyable to watch, but other than that, even myself personally, I’m probably not into one-day cricket as much either.”

Khawaja argued that 50- over format has lost its relevance, of late, as the T20 World Cup in knocking on the doors. “Right now it feels like it’s not really that important because of the T20 World Cup,” Khawaja said.

“Something has to give, because you can’t have all three formats all together playing all the games; you’re going to have to decide and choose.”

However, the 35-year-old was of the opinion that despite a choc-a-bloc international calendar, Test cricket will continue to remain the pinnacle of the sport.

“You’ve got Test cricket, which is the pinnacle, you’ve got T20 cricket which obviously has leagues around the world, great entertainment, everyone loves it, and then there’s one-day cricket, and I feel like that’s probably the third ranked out of all of them,” he said.

Khawaja felt while it was not impossible to be a three-format player, it is gradually becoming exhausting for everyone. “Not impossible, very tough. So much travelling. If you’re playing all three forms of the game, you’re not at home at all really,” he said.

“There’s a lot of cricket going on. Yes, you get to pick and choose, I guess, in certain respects what you want to play but look it can be very tough.”

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