SA vs ENG | England ban football warm-ups after Rory Burns injury

no image

England Cricket Board have banned football as a warm up activity before training sessions as Rory Burns is ruled out of the series for a football injury during training. The decision came on the back of the fact that previously numerous players have been injured while playing football in training.

As England has suffered yet another blow, which is rather a serious one, on their South Africa tour with inform opener Rory Burns ruled out of the series with an ankle ligament injury. The opener, who has amassed 91 runs in the first two innings of the series, injured the injury after landing awkwardly while playing football during a training session. 

The injury triggered England’s team management to ban football from training sessions. According to ESPNCricinfo, it was Ashley Giles and Chris Silverwood's collective decision to do away with football warm-ups.  According to them, this activity has been a source of injuries which includes the likes of Jonny Bairstow, James Anderson and Joe Denly amongst others in the list of victims.

The team management is yet to decide whether to name a replacement for the opener with Jonny Bairstow as the only reserve batsman in the squad. With the English squad size already 18 by now, a replacement isn’t likely but if considered Dawid Malan, James Vince and Keaton Jennings will be the players hoping for a call up.

Meanwhile, Jofra Archer may also have played his final game in the series. He will undergo a second scan on his sore right elbow on Friday after the first one proved inconclusive.

Comments

Leave a comment

0 Comments

read previousNZ vs ENG Preview | New Zealand and England to lock horns in the penultimate of three-match ODI series
The in-form New Zealand will face England in the second ODI of the three-match series, at Seddon Park in Hamilton, on October 29. The Blackcaps will aim an unassailable lead with a win in this game, while the English side will look forward to levelling the series with a win in this clash.
Scarcity of young batsmen in BBL a growing concern for Australian cricketread next
Nine years since its inception, the Big Bash League (BBL) is now bigger, grander and more glamorous than ever. However, there is one big problem - the tournament is not unearthing talent anywhere near the number it would have liked to, which, now, is a growing concern for the country.
View non-AMP page