OUR SCHEDULE AT ICC WORLD CUP 2023 TO CHANGE

World cup 2023 : Sri Lanka schedule to change again?

 

Hyderabad Police has raised concerns over providing security for back-to-back games, especially the Pakistan-Sri Lanka fixture.

With a month and a half to go for the start of the 50-over World Cup and less than a week for ticket sales to begin, there has been another request for a tweak in the schedule, which has already been changed once after the much-delayed original announcement.

The Hyderabad Cricket Association (HCA) has now written to the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) asking for a gap between two games, which it’s now scheduled to host on consecutive days. The Rajiv Gandhi Stadium in Uppal will stage the New Zealand-Netherlands match on October 9, with the Pakistan-Sri Lanka fixture scheduled the next day. The latter game was earlier marked for October 12, but was rescheduled to provide Pakistan with enough time between fixtures after their match with India was brought forward by a day. Hyderabad will also host the Pakistan-Netherlands game on October 6.

India will be hosting the World Cup from October 5 to November 19, and the original itinerary was released with just 100 days left for the tournament. The final schedules for the previous two 50-over World Cups (in Australia and New Zealand in 2015, and in the United Kingdom in 2019) were known more than 12 months before the events.

The original itinerary for the 2023 World Cup has already undergone a drastic change with as many as nine games being rescheduled. The much-looked-forward-to India-Pakistan showdown was initially pencilled at the Narendra Modi Stadium in Ahmedabad for October 15, the first day of the Navratri festival, which is celebrated with much fervour across Gujarat. The clash of dates prompted the game to be brought forward by a day.

Also, Kolkata was earlier scheduled to host the Pakistan-England fixture on November 12, coinciding with the Kali Puja, a major festival in Bengal. That game has now been marked for November 11.

These two modifications necessitated several other games to be moved to fit into the holes left in the schedule. For example, when the India-Pakistan game was moved to October 14, there were three matches on that day, prompting a change. Modifications were also required to ensure that teams had a fair gap between fixtures to accommodate travel, rest and training between matches.

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