Hyderabad: The inaugural season of Euro T20 Slam has been postponed to 2020, organisers of the tournament confirmed on Wednesday.
The tournament was scheduled to begin from August 30 this year, but now the competition will be played next year.
However, the organisers of the tournament have not given a reason for the postponement of the tournament.
"The Board of the Euro T20 Slam, funding partners and franchise owners of this exciting new T20 tournament have reluctantly come to the decision that staging of the event will not be possible in 2019," Prashant Mishra said in an official statement on the behalf of the board of Euro T20 Slam.
"We want to ensure that the inaugural staging of the Euro T20 Slam provides the best springboard to making this a true flagship event on the global cricket calendar. As such, we believe the right course of action is to postpone the Slam to a further date. This will give us the necessary breathing space to ensure we are ready to go," he added.
Chief Executives of both Cricket Ireland and Cricket Scotland expressed their disappointment over this decision, but they added that they understand the circumstances the decision was taken under.
"We are deeply disappointed with the decision, however, fully empathise with the rationale that has led to the tournament's postponement. The excitement and energy that the Euro T20 Slam had generated since it was announced has demonstrated a high level of interest amongst the Irish public in seeing world-class cricket hosted here in Ireland. We hope that that interest will carry on until 2020 when the Slam will finally get underway," Cricket Ireland Chief Executive Warren Deutrom said in a statement.
"While this was a very difficult decision to make at this late stage, we believe that it is the right one and one which leaves us with a great opportunity to launch the Euro T20 Slam next year with its deserved noise level. Cricket Scotland has no regrets about trying to find innovative ways to drive cricket forward, popularise the game, and attract more investment into the sport," Cricket Scotland Chief Executive Malcolm Cannon said.
Earlier, several prominent current and former cricketers were drafted into the six teams for the Euro T20 Slam.
In the six teams, two each are based in Ireland, Scotland, and the Netherlands. Each team has one designated 'icon player' and one 'marquee player'.