Five USA players get 12-month contracts; three pull out of Global T20 Canada - 7 minutes read


Five USA players get 12-month contracts; three pull out of Global T20 Canada

The USA men's national team players are starting to reap the rewards of gaining ODI status, with a total of 17 players awarded central contracts through funding supplied by the recent investment deal signed with American Cricket Enterprises. However, it has also sparked a tipping point in the club v country debate as some have pulled out of the Global T20 Canada after signing a USA Cricket retainer, while others have opted to forgo a central contract to keep their options open for franchise cricket.

According to multiple ESPNcricinfo sources, two key USA players have turned down central contracts: Ali Khan and Hayden Walsh Jr. They are they only two USA players who were drafted in both the Global T20 Canada - where they will be teammates at Vancouver Knights - and in the Caribbean Premier League. Ali Khan is returning to Trinbago Knight Riders while Walsh Jr. has switched from St Kitts & Nevis Patriots to Barbados Tridents for the 2019 season. Accepting a USA contract would have opened up the possibility that they would be denied No-Objection Certificates (NOCs) to participate in these, and other, T20 leagues. However, both Ali Khan and Walsh Jr can play for USA on a match-fee basis, even though they chose not to accept a contract.

Conversely, five USA players have received one-year central contracts while 12 others have received three-month deals. The five players to secure one-year deals are batsmen Steven Taylor, Xavier Marshall, Monank Patel and Aaron Jones, and medium pacer Jessy Singh. Both Taylor and Jones had recently lost their central contracts with Jamaica and Barbados respectively in the Cricket West Indies Professional Cricket League after not being retained in April's PCL draft.

However, USA captain Saurabh Netravalkar and vice-captain Jaskaran Malhotra were not given one-year deals. Instead, they have been given three-month contracts along with the majority of those who made up USA's squad from WCL Division Two in Namibia this past April that secured ODI status for the country through 2022. The only player not offered a contract from that squad was Roy Silva, the 39-year-old allrounder.

Consequently it means that Taylor, Singh and Timil Patel have withdrawn from the Global T20 Canada which starts on July 25 in Brampton, Ontario. It represents a shift in priorities for Taylor, who in the summer of 2015 had withdrawn from USA's squad for the T20 World Cup Qualifier in Ireland to take up a rookie contract with Barbados Tridents and had stated ambitions to one day represent West Indies.

Two other USA players taken in the Global T20 Canada, fast bowler Kyle Phillip and batsman Sunny Sohal, were not offered USA Cricket contracts and have remained in the tournament. The availability of Netravalkar, Marshall and Jones for the CPL - drafted by Guyana Amazon Warriors, Jamaica Tallawahs and St Kitts & Nevis Patriots respectively - is unclear.

Aside from that group, six other players have been given three-month contracts by USA Cricket in the buildup to the T20 World Cup Qualifying. They are former South African international Rusty Theron, former USA vice-captain Timroy Allen, Hampshire medium pace allrounder Ian Holland, former Guyana Under-19 batsman Akshay Homraj, left-arm spinning allrounder Nisarg Patel and batsman Sagar Patel.

The three-month contracts are dated to begin on July 22 when all contracted players will fly to Los Angeles for the start of a three-week training camp at Woodley Park, the site of USA squad trials that were held last month. The training camp is in preparation for the next round of 2020 T20 World Cup Qualifying, when USA travels to Bermuda to take on the host side, Canada and Cayman Islands in a double round-robin event from August 18-25. The top two teams advance to the global T20 World Cup Qualifier in the UAE from October 11 to November 4.

Following the conclusion of the qualifier in Bermuda, USA's next action is their first home ODIs against Namibia and Papua New Guinea from September 7 to 14.

The series was originally announced by the ICC in May to be hosted at Church Street Park in the Raleigh, North Carolina suburb of Morrisville. But USA Cricket officials have confirmed that Raleigh will no longer host the matches. A new turf facility paid for by ACE funding which is nearing completion in the Silicon Valley town of Morgan Hill, California, is a leading candidate. If the facility does not receive clearance from the ICC in time, then Woodley Park in Los Angeles is the most likely alternative. The most recent international cricket to take place at Woodley was in November 2016 when USA hosted WCL Division Four. ACE hired a full-time groundsman for Woodley Park in June, brought in from India, to get the pitches at the facility back into suitable condition.

After the completion of USA's home ODIs in September, all USA contracted players who are not part of CPL squads are expected to be flown to Bangalore for another three-week camp at India's National Cricket Academy. The camp will serve as their final preparation for the T20 World Cup Qualifier in the UAE in October.

Source: ESPN Cric Info

Powered by NewsAPI.org

Keywords:

5 USACanada national cricket teamUnited States men's national basketball teamOverseas Development InstituteContractInvestmentContractCricketBusinessPlanetary boundariesGlobalizationCanadaCricketCricketESPNcricinfoHayden Walsh, Jr.United States national cricket teamTwenty20Canada national cricket teamVancouverKnights (cricket team)Caribbean Premier LeagueAli Khan (American cricketer)Trinbago Knight RidersCourtney WalshSt Kitts and Nevis PatriotsBarbados TridentsUnited States national cricket teamContract5 USASteven Taylor (American cricketer)Xavier MarshallAaron Jones (cricketer)Fast bowlingJessy SinghJamaica national cricket teamBarbadosWest IndiesChampions League Twenty20Pacific Coast LeagueUnited States national cricket teamICC World Cricket League Division TwoNamibia national cricket teamOne Day InternationalRoy SilvaAll-rounderJatinder SinghTimil PatelTwenty20Canada national cricket teamBramptonUnited States men's national soccer teamICC World Twenty20ICC World Cup QualifierIreland cricket teamBarbados TridentsLimited overs cricketWest Indies cricket teamUnited States national cricket teamGentlemen v PlayersTwenty20Canada national cricket teamFast bowlingBatting (cricket)Sunny SohalUnited States national cricket teamCricketSimon Jones (cricketer)Caribbean Premier LeagueGuyana Amazon WarriorsJamaica TallawahsSt Kitts and Nevis PatriotsUnited States national cricket teamCricketICC World Twenty20South Africa national cricket teamRusty TheronUnited States national cricket teamCaptain (cricket)Timroy AllenHampshire County Cricket ClubFast bowlingIan HollandGuyana national cricket teamEngland under-19 cricket teamBatting (cricket)Batting (cricket)Los AngelesWoodley Park (Los Angeles)ICC World Twenty20United States men's national soccer teamBermudaCanada national cricket teamCayman IslandsRound-robin tournamentRound-robin tournamentICC World Twenty20ICC World Cup QualifierUnited Arab EmiratesBermudaUnited States national cricket teamOne Day InternationalNamibiaPapua New GuineaInternational Cricket CouncilRaleigh, North CarolinaMorrisville, North CarolinaCricket (insect)Artificial turfSilicon ValleyMorgan Hill, CaliforniaWoodley Park (Los Angeles)Los AngelesCricketUnited States national cricket teamGroundskeepingWoodley Park, Washington, D.C.India national cricket teamOne Day InternationalBangaloreIndia national cricket teamNational Cricket AcademyICC World Twenty20ICC World Cup QualifierUnited Arab Emirates