England players had no role in Pakistan pullout decision, says players' union

England cricketers had no role in the team's decision to abandon their tour of Pakistan next month, the players' union has said.

New Zealand returned home from Pakistan after abruptly abandoning their tour minutes before the opening fixture in Rawalpindi, citing a security alert from their government.

England followed suit this week, calling off their men's and women's teams tour of Pakistan, citing players' “mental and physical well-being”.

Team England Player Partnership (TEPP), which represents England's international players, said the cricketers were not asked for input.

“At no stage did TEPP inform the ECB that the players would not be touring,” TEPP chair Richard Bevan told website ESPNcricinfo in an article published on Friday.

“At no stage has the ECB ever asked TEPP or the teams, men and women, whether the tour should go ahead or whether players were prepared to tour Pakistan.

“It is 100 per cent incorrect to suggest TEPP intervened to say the players would not tour.”

Pakistan was shunned by other cricketing nations for almost a decade after the 2009 attack on the Sri Lanka team bus in Lahore but has recently been wooing back top international sides.

The England teams were each scheduled to play two Twenty20 international matches on Oct 13 and 14 in Rawalpindi, with the women's side due to stay on for a three-match one-day international series from Oct 17 to Oct 21.

Former players have criticised the England and Wales Cricket Board's decision.

“English cricket, the governing body and players, had a chance to do the right thing this week,” former England captain Michael Atherton wrote in The Times.

“They had a chance to repay a debt, uphold their honour and side with a cricketing nation that has undergone the kind of challenges others cannot even begin to contemplate.

“Instead, citing a mealy-mouthed statement, they did the wrong thing.”

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has expressed anger at the England and Wales Cricket Board's (ECB) decision to cancel the tour to Pakistan scheduled for November, according to a report published in The Times.

The ECB's decision had come three days after New Zealand abandoned their tour of Pakistan, citing a "security threat" minutes before the first ODI match was scheduled to start at the Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium — a move that shocked Pakistan's cricket fraternity and fans.

The men’s team of England was supposed to tour Pakistan after a gap of 16 years, whereas the women’s team was coming here for the first time to play two T20 matches.

Sharing reasons for the cancellation of the tour, the ECB cited concerns over the players’ mental and physical well-being. Interestingly, the ECB statement did not mention security as a grounds for the cancellation unlike the New Zealand cricket board.

'Damaged relations'

The Times report quoted the British premier and senior ministers of the Commonwealth Office as saying that the decision "has damaged relations between the UK and the Pakistan government".

The report, however, stated that the ECB was willing to continue with the tour but the Team England Player Partnership (TEPP) — a unit of the athletes' union representing England's central contracted players — intervened, which eventually led to the cancellation of the tour.Responding to The Times report, the TEPP spokesperson told The Daily Mail, that "the TEPP was not even asked about the tour going ahead".

"At no stage has the ECB ever asked Team England Player Partnership or the teams, men and women, whether the tour should go ahead or whether players were prepared to tour Pakistan," the spokesperson said.

He added that the ECB board met last Sunday to deliberate on the tour to Pakistan.

"That afternoon we were informed the tour had been cancelled. Team England Player Partnership was not asked for our input and we were not involved in the decision to cancel the tour," he underlined.

Not the UK govt's decision

A day after the ECB announced to call off the tour, British High Commissioner to Pakistan Christian Turner had released a video message, insisting the commission did not advise against England cricket's tour of Pakistan on security grounds.

He had emphasised that the decision to cancel the tour was taken by the ECB, "which is independent of the British government, based on concerns for player welfare".


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