‘Puts you in tough situations’ – Malan questions emphasis on Tests in ECB contract system
“It seems heavily led towards red-ball cricket when you have players that play one or two formats of the white-ball game,” Malan said. “They are decisions that I don’t make but ultimately, it puts you in tough situations if you’re not contracted and you’re losing finances playing in tournaments in the winter.”
England’s contracting system had increasingly rewarded performances in Test cricket above white-ball cricket, recognising the number of earning opportunities that white-ball specialists have outside of international cricket through the proliferation of short-form tournaments during the English winter; of the 18 players awarded full contracts this winter, only three – Moeen Ali, Jos Buttler and Adil Rashid – appear unlikely to play Test cricket over the next 12 months.
“As players, we’d like to be rewarded for our performances for England. You’d guess that’s what contracts are for”
Malan wants more recognition for white-ball cricket
“Hopefully, white-ball cricket can get recognised as Test-match cricket does,” he said. “You have players here who have been leading wicket-takers for England that don’t have a contract, but those are decisions that I don’t make. Keysy and I have had that chat already.
“As players, we’d like to be rewarded for our performances for England. You’d guess that’s what contracts are for; and if you’re ranked top five in the world for three years, you’d hope you’d get recognised with a white-ball contract, but that’s just how it works. It’s still an honour to play for England, and you want to play and win as many games as you can for England.”
“It is what it is; we’re all flexible. As soon as we get a good start, the whole team pretty much pads up and waits for a nod.”
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