Cricket Country Staff
Editorial team of CricketCountry.
World Twenty20 organisers have changed the bottled water supplier and called in food inspectors to check the spread of suspected gastro virus at the tournament, officials said on Monday.
Written by Cricket Country Staff
Published: Sep 25, 2012, 04:36 PM (IST)
Edited: Sep 25, 2012, 04:36 PM (IST)
Tim Southee had to undergo hospital treatment for dehydration © Getty Images
Colombo: Sep 25, 2012
World Twenty20 organisers have changed the bottled water supplier and called in food inspectors to check the spread of suspected gastro virus at the tournament, officials said on Monday.
Several players from New Zealand, Ireland, South Africa and Australia have reportedly been treated for stomach bugs since their arrival in Sri Lanka, with Kiwi Tim Southee even requiring hospital treatment for dehydration.
An International Cricket Council (ICC) spokesman said the brand of bottled water used by players and officials so far in the tournament had been replaced.
“Although there is no evidence to suggest that water was the cause of any illness, the product supplied for use in the tournament has been replaced,” the spokesman told AFP.
A Sri Lankan source connected with the tournament said public health inspectors had checked the food given to the players and found nothing untoward.
“If an entire team, or at least a majority, go down, we can understand that there is something wrong with the food and beverages department,” the source told AFP.
“Just a few players have been affected.”
No official complaints had been lodged by any of the teams, he added.
Among players who went down with gastro trouble over the past two weeks included New Zealand’s Daniel Vettori, Mitchell Starc and Brad Hogg of Australia, and Paul Stirling and George Dockrell of Ireland.
The 12-nation tournament, Sri Lanka’s biggest sporting event, opened on September 18 and runs till October 8.
ICC Twenty20 World Cup 2012: Match time table with group details
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