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Players could quit Tests for high IPL pay - Kirsten

Gary Kirsten said if players are paid substantially more for playing in the Twenty20 league then there will be others like Andrew Flintoff who will quit Tests

Cricinfo staff
27-Jul-2009
Gary Kirsten: "We should be going on tour and playing six Twenty20 games and one or two 50-over games"  •  Getty Images

Gary Kirsten: "We should be going on tour and playing six Twenty20 games and one or two 50-over games"  •  Getty Images

Gary Kirsten, India's coach, has joined the debate on IPL's threat to Test cricket and said if players are paid substantially more for playing in the Twenty20 league then there will be others like Andrew Flintoff who will quit Tests.
"It's a natural progression that the guys are then going to say 'I'm not interested in bowling 25 overs in a day when I can bowl four overs in a six-week period and earn three times as much'," Kirtsen said. "The worrying side that I'm seeing is that a guy like Andrew Flintoff, a high profile cricketer, has now made the decision to leave Test cricket, because he feels that he can get more out of his body and earn much more money by moving away from Test cricket and playing ODIs and Twenty20 cricket. He's perfectly right in his decision. Why not?"
Kirsten said if countries wanted Test cricket to remain as the No. 1 format then priorities had to be sorted. "India plays six Tests this year. Is that sufficient or are there other priorities? I don't know."
Kirsten also said the number of Twenty20s per tour should be increased in place of ODIs. "It's quite interesting that we've got a Twenty20 World Cup in April next year in the West Indies and Team India don't play one Twenty20 game until that tournament starts. What should be happening is that we should be going on tour and playing six Twenty20 games and one or two 50-over games. I think that's going to happen. It's just a matter of time."
New Zealand players have decided to forgo next year's IPL for a Test series against Australia at home. Daniel Vettori, the New Zealand captain, said while the national side had to be the players' priority, it was difficult for them to continue to turn down the money.