Cricket Country Staff
Editorial team of CricketCountry.
International Cricket Council (ICC) president Alan Isaac has welcomed Australia's decision to play its first-ever game against Afghanistan in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) in August.
Written by Cricket Country Staff
Published: Jul 02, 2012, 07:13 PM (IST)
Edited: Jul 02, 2012, 07:13 PM (IST)
Afghanistan world has already played a high quality match against Afghanistan in Sharjah in early 2012 © AFP
Dublin: July 2, 2012
International Cricket Council (ICC) president Alan Isaac has welcomed Australia‘s decision to play its first-ever game against Afghanistan in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) in August.
“This fixture supports ICC’s initiative to provide more opportunities for our top ranking Associate/Affiliate Member (AM) teams to play against better opposition. It aligns perfectly with the ICC Strategic Plan to build a bigger, better global game by developing more competitive teams at the highest level,” said Issac, who was at Dublin to watch Afghanistan play Ireland.
Australia will play the emerging Afghanistan cricket team in the Middle East in July in the latest step that recognises Afghanistan’s increasing importance in world cricket.
The game has been organised as a warm-up for the Australia-Pakistan series, which immediately precedes the ICC World Twenty20 tournament in Sri Lanka, in which Australia, Pakistan and Afghanistan are all competing in September-October.
Issac said the cricket world has already seen Pakistan play Afghanistan in Sharjah in 2012 in a high quality match and commended Australia for creating this opportunity.
“It has always been willing to contribute to development by playing against AM (affiliate members) nations as it recently showed when it played against Ireland.”
“Furthermore, a Combined AM XI played a first-class fixture against England in Dubai, and Bangladesh will soon play against Scotland, Ireland and Netherlands during the Northern Hemisphere summer, while England will continue the rotation of playing Scotland and Ireland in alternate years. I am optimistic that the implementation of the Future AM Tour Schedule (FATS) will lead to even more competitive fixtures between the Full Members and our AM nations,” he said. (IANS)
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