Cricket South Africa very upset with England Cricket Board for abandoning tour midway

Cricket South Africa very upset with England Cricket Board : The leader of CSA’s interim board has slammed England for abandoning their tour of South Africa. The interim board chairman Zak Yacoob said that the tourists had a negative attitude. Eoin Morgan’s squad were scheduled to leave the country on Thursday with half of the six white-ball games they were supposed to play postponed indefinitely.

Yacoob said the postponement of the three-match series, at England’s request, had caused CSA reputational damage and warned the body would defend itself against “lies” as to the reasons behind the cancellation. The ECB said in a joint statement with CSA on Monday that the decision to postpone the tour was over concerns about the “physical and mental wellbeing” of the touring party.

An unnamed South Africa player and two hotel staff members contracted COVID-19 inside the bio-secure environment. Two members of the England touring party initially returned positive test results as well, but these were later cleared as negative.

“The fact is that they (the England team) were very negative,” Yacoob told reporters on Thursday, referring to the tourists’ attitude.

“We have gone into our protocols and we think they have been very good. There may have been an issue of psychological troubles, where people (in the England team) may have been nervous about false positives.

“We do not wish to blame the English, but we wish to say absolutely that any notion that they went away because there was a fault on our side is completely wrong.

“In fact, we were too lax with their desire to do things which in our strict view they should not be doing (such as allowing players to golf). If they say lies about us, we will defend ourselves.”

Cricket South Africa confident that Sri Lanka will tour as scheduled

England’s summer of cricket went off without a hitch with the players kept in tight bio-secure bubbles. In South Africa, the players were allowed out of their hotel to play golf, at the request of the ECB, due to fears that another month cooped up would have a negative effect on their mental health.

Reuters has contacted the ECB for reaction to Yacoob’s comments.

The saga has called into question future tours to South Africa, with Sri Lanka scheduled to play two tests in the country, the first starting on Boxing Day, and Australia due to arrive for three tests in February and March.

Yacoob says he is “95 percent” sure the Sri Lanka series will go ahead, but adds it is less clear when it comes to Australia.

My understanding of cricket politics is that the three most powerful nations, Australia and England, and you know who the third one is (India), want to do things their way and want to ensure the less powerful nations play ball with them,” he said.

“So it depends on what Australia thinks is in its political interest at the time, based on what has happened with England.

“Australia is a powerhouse in cricket, and those types of people are usually a law unto themselves.”