Bristol: The International Cricket Council (ICC) has responded to the most talked subject of the 2019 World Cup- washouts. ICC was at the receiving end for not having plan B for the 2019 World Cup matches after three matches rained out due to persistent rain within a week in England and Walse World Cup.
ICC CEO Dave Richardson explained why the governing body didn't keep reserve days despite knowing the fact that rain could affect the spirit of the World Cup.
Also Read: 2019 World Cup: Three rained out matches in a week, the most in single edition
Here is the complete excerpt from ICC's media release:
"Factoring in a reserve day for every match at the ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup would significantly increase the length of the tournament and practically would be extremely complex to deliver.
It would impact pitch preparation, team recovery and travel days, accommodation and venue availability, tournament staffing, volunteer and match officials availability, broadcast logistics and very importantly the spectators who in some instances have travelled hours to be at the game. There is also no guarantee that the reserve day would be free from rain either.
Up to 1200 people are on site to deliver a match and everything associated with it including getting it broadcast and a proportion of them are moving around the country so reserve days in the group stage would require a significant uplift in the number of staff. We have reserve days factored in for the knock-out stages, knowing that over the course of 45 group games we should play the large majority.