close
Friday April 19, 2024

Ice vests, coconut water as Pakistan Super League feels heat in UAE

By AFP
June 08, 2021

KARACHI: Pakistan Super League cricketers will have to contend with soaring temperatures and empty stadiums when the Covid-hit Twenty20 competition resumes far from home in Abu Dhabi on Wednesday (tomorrow).

With day-time temperatures hitting 40 degrees Celsius (104 Fahrenheit), some players will wear ice vests on the field, while bowlers have been told to drink coconut water, a natural coolant.

The T20 cricket league was halted in Pakistan in March after seven players and support staff tested positive for Covid-19. The PSL will now be completed in the intense heat of the Gulf summer but, with the earliest games starting at 5pm, PCB CEO Wasim Khan said the conditions weren’t “unplayable. There will be ice vests, packs, ice collars, regular drink intervals to make sure that players are kept safe and healthy,” said Khan.

“But it’s not in a position which is unplayable. It’s 38-40 degrees but by five o’clock in the evening it cools down a little bit,” he added. The United Arab Emirates will also host the remainder of the suspended Indian Premier League in September and October, while India is considering moving the October-November T20 World Cup to the Gulf country.

After exploring the possibility of resuming in the UAE, the Pakistan Cricket Board almost canned the PSL’s sixth edition entirely because of visa problems for players and camera crews travelling from Pakistan, India and South Africa.

All three countries are on the UAE’s “red list”, with direct scheduled flights banned and compulsory quarantine for passengers arriving on charters. “It’s tough to organise these matches under Covid... bringing crew and players from around the world and then following the stringent protocols,” said former Pakistan all-rounder Wasim Akram, president of defending champions Karachi Kings.

“Everybody has done a great job, and we are now about to start.” Still, he added, the compulsory quarantine was draining. “No matter how good the hotel is, this quarantine is very tough,” he said in a video message.

With a global cricket calendar badly affected by the coronavirus pandemic, several big names will miss the rest of the tournament including big-hitting West Indian Chris Gayle, and South African fast bowler Dale Steyn.