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Sourav Ganguly confident of hosting IPL 2021, Ranji Trophy in bio-secure bubble

After successfully organising the 13th edition of the Indian Premier League outside India, the BCCI President Sourav Ganguly has said that the flagship tournament will return to India next year and it will be played during its usual schedule between April-May. Along with the IPL, BCCI is also gearing up to hold the domestic Ranji Trophy and host England in February next year by creating a bio-secure bubble for players. He also said that the experience of hosting the IPL in a coronavirus-free environment by creating a bio-secure bubble has helped the board in containing the worries it had on hosting tournaments in the country.

"The UAE was only for the IPL. We will host England in India. We will host domestic cricket in India. Ranji Trophy, we will create a bio bubble and we will do it. We’ll be fine. ISL is starting in November in Goa. The worry is not there anymore and the IPL has helped a lot,” Ganguly said to India Today.

Ganguly also shared the BCCI’s plans to develop women's cricket in India and said that they are considering the move of organising a separate IPL for women, just like the men’s IPL with seven to eight teams in the next two years.


“At the present moment, there are only three teams in the women’s IPL and I believe that in a couple of years’ time we will be good enough to have a separate IPL with seven teams, eight teams like the franchise-based teams for the women as well,” Ganguly added.

 


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'Loss of steam' key reason for RCB exit - Simon Katich

Calling the lack of steam in the batting department of the Royal Challengers Bangalore unit as the main reason for the team’s exit from the tournament and also for its continuous losses, coach Simon Katich said that the team lost the plot after the early brilliance. "We felt we were on track till the 10-game mark heading into the last four blocks of games. Looking back, we think we ran out of a bit of steam probably with the bat and that's one area that faded a bit after a really good start to the tournament," Katich was quoted as saying by PTI. The Australian further credited his opponents in Sunrisers Hyderabad for playing outstanding cricket and making RCB look clueless. "Credit to Sunrisers, they squeezed us beautifully, and then we were always playing catch-up. We felt if we could get 150, we could be in the game with two leggies (Yuzvendra Chahal and Adam Zampa) in the team,” said Katich. “The wicket was slow and offering a bit of turn. To stack our batting and get 130 was disappointing," he added. Explaining why Virat Kohli opened the innings even when Aaron Finch was available and why did RCB chop and changed, Katich said, "Look, it was settled (batting line-up). Aaron Finch didn't get dropped till the 11th game,” he said. “But then he didn't get the runs we expected. Josh Phillippe came in, got an opportunity, and going into play-offs we thought Virat will open, and unfortunately, it didn't work," Katich added. Praising the young Devdutt Padikkal, who scored 473 runs in this season, Katich said that he was one for the future. "A great sign for the future is Devdutt Padikkal. He was magnificent at the top of the order. He played some great knocks to set us up," said Katich.