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ECB urges BCCI to establish national disability cricket teams

Gould’s letter, also addressed to Cricket Australia CEO Nick Hockley, PCB COO Salman Naseer, and CSA CEO Phletsi Moseki, emphasized the need for a coordinated strategy across different forms of disability cricket

ECB urges BCCI to establish national disability cricket teams PHOTO: AFP

The England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) has proposed to the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) the establishment of two national disability cricket teams in India. This initiative aims to promote cricket among differently-abled communities and foster a more inclusive environment.

ECB secretary Richard Gould wrote to BCCI secretary Jay Shah, suggesting the creation of one team for visually impaired (blind) cricketers and another combined team for physically challenged, intellectually challenged, and hearing-impaired players.

Currently, the Differently Abled Cricket Council of India (DCCI) is a subcommittee of the BCCI, but the BCCI does not independently organize tournaments for differently-abled cricketers.

Gould’s letter, also addressed to Cricket Australia CEO Nick Hockley, PCB COO Salman Naseer, and CSA CEO Phletsi Moseki, emphasized the need for a coordinated strategy across different forms of disability cricket.

“We propose boards operate two international teams -- a blind XI as a standalone format and then a pan-disability format with squads consisting of deaf, intellectually impaired, and physically disabled cricketers. We would be keen and willing to host the inaugural pan-disability tournament involving our five nations in 2025. The ICC are keen to show collective support for this approach to ensure any steps are member-driven,” Gould wrote, as quoted by India Today.

He further highlighted the current lack of structure, regulation, and support in global disability cricket, stating that there are many different codes of disability cricket, but a lack of coordination and strategy across them.

“Global disability cricket is unstructured, unregulated, and often unsupported. There are many different codes of disability cricket -- blind, deaf, intellectual impairment, and physical disability and there has been widespread lack of coordination and strategy that sits across all four,” he further added.

The ECB secretary proposed hosting an inaugural pan-disability tournament involving five nations in 2025. This proposal comes at a crucial time, as discussions are set to take place during the upcoming ICC Annual Conference in Colombo.

Gould is expected to participate in the Chief Executives Meet, where this topic will likely be on the agenda. Ravi Chauhan, head of the DCCI, is also expected to be present in Sri Lanka to participate in these discussions, acting as a bridge between his committee and the BCCI.

“This has not been an area of sport we have collectively prioritised and although financial restraints are felt as prevalently now as ever, now is the time for us to come together to turbocharge the disability game,” Gould wrote.

The potential impact of this initiative is significant, with approximately 1.3 billion people living with various disabilities globally, representing an untapped market for cricket.