Flower seeks more influence on fixtures

12 April 2012

England team director Andy Flower admitted he would like a greater input into future itineraries following the announcement of the 2010 summer's international fixtures.

Once again England face a crammed schedule with six Tests, 13 one-day internationals and two Twenty20 contests.

Asked if he would like to have more input into the fixture list, Flower replied: "That would be nice, yeah. I have had very little input. The schedules are heavy but these are the schedules we are given so our job is certainly not to moan about it, it is to get on with it and win."

As it is, England's international season will begin three weeks later following the unpopular early start this summer.

The first npower Test against Bangladesh at Lord's will start on May 27, exactly 21 days after this year's unseasonably early start for the Wisden Trophy match with West Indies.

England's elite players are also set for a lengthy rest period in modern terms when they finish the winter tour of South Africa on January 18, with the next international fixture not until the opening one-day contest against the Bangladeshis on February 28.

That means a rest period of around a month for the men who feature in all forms of the game for England. The scheduling means that the most likely time for England's contracted players to feature in the Indian Premier League will be for a three-week window between March 24, the end of the Bangladesh tour, and April 30, when the ICC World Twenty20 tournament opens in the Caribbean.

As previously announced, England face Australia in a five-match NatWest Series, starting in late June, and follow that with a similar three-match campaign against Bangladesh, who will return to Britain after competing in the Asia Cup.

England close their summer with four npower Tests, two Twenty20 internationals and five one-dayers against Pakistan. Lord's and Headingley, meanwhile, will be Pakistan's temporary homes for Tests against Australia prior to their commitments against England - the sides also contest two Twenty20s.

In domestic cricket, the Rose Bowl will host Twenty20 finals day on Saturday, August 14 while the controversial new 40-over final at Lord's will be held on Saturday, September 18.

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