Former England batsman feels his country's cricket board must find a solution to allow players to participate in the cash-rich Twenty20 league
David Lloyd
Bangalore: Former England cricketer David Lloyd believes the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) needs to compromise and allow its players to participate in the Indian Premier League (IPL) to have any chance of mastering the T20 format.
David Lloyd
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"Our biggest problem is that we are busy playing elsewhere while the IPL is on. The tournament is in full flow here and the England team is in the West Indies," Lloyd was quoted as saying by iplt20.com yesterday.
"We have to find a solution to this situation. Sit all the concerned parties in one room and work out a system that is beneficial to everybody involved. If we can have a five-week window for the IPL, that would help.
"But our domestic season spans from April to September and for that window to be created, the domestic season would have to be halved, which is not going to happen," he added.
Lloyd said ECB must work out a solution and, if needed, "compromise" for the sake of its players.
England and Sunrisers Hyderabad's Ravi Bopara during the IPL match against Mumbai Indian at Wankhede on Saturday. Eoin Morgan and Ravi Bopara are the only players from England in IPL-8. Pic/Suresh KK
"You have to find a compromise. I know that the ECB is looking to revamp the structure in 2016. Our new chief executive and chairman will be sitting down with commercial partners and television companies to discuss how we can maximise global events.
There should be a will within the governing bodies to work out a way that benefits the game and the players," he said.
'A fantastic concept'
Asked if England's mindset towards Twenty20 as a format on the whole needs to change, he said: "Twenty20 is a fantastic concept. We have not got there yet in the United Kingdom.
We do (play) Twenty20 cricket but it is not concentrated into a fine package. It drags on for three months and thus loses its impact. Another thing is that watching cricket in the UK is quite expensive.
"I know the cost of living is lower in India but still a minimum of 200 rupees for a ticket is quite affordable. You get to see the best players in the world for three hours for that amount. I think it is good," he added.
The 68-year-old also said that the England players need to be good enough to play in IPL and believes that at present only a handful of them are.
"First, they have to be good enough to get into a franchise. We only have maybe six cricketers who the franchises would be interested in. I am getting a bit technical here but a major reason why we lag behind in the shorter formats of cricket is because we have not grasped bat speed," he said.