Australia pacer Pat Cummins urged game’s custodians to come out with an alternate option to strike a balance between bat and ball upon the game’s restart while accepting the health risk associated with the usage of saliva.
Cummins suggested external substances such as wax. The ICC’s Cricket Committee has already recommended a ban on the usage of saliva on the ball due to the risk of the Covid-19 spread.
“If we remove saliva, we have to have another option,” the 27-year-old was quoted as saying by cricket.com.au.
“Sweat is not bad, but I think we need something more than that, ideally. Whatever that is, wax or I don’t know what. If that’s what that science is telling us, that it’s high risk using saliva...as long as we’re keeping other options open, whether that’s sweat or something artificial.”
Cummins, currently world’s No 1 Test bowler, said sweat is a viable option to keep the ball shinning. “We have to be able to shine the ball somehow so I’m glad they’ve let sweat remain,” he said. “We’ve just got to make sure at the start of the spell we’re sweating and we’re nice and warm.”
Australian sports gear manufacturer Kookaburra had earlier this month claimed that it had developed a wax applicator which can keep the balls shinning without the usage of saliva or sweat. “Hopefully we’ll get to a stage where saliva is deemed safe. Hopefully, we can go back to that, to how it was,” Cummins said.
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