England skipper Joe Root has apologised to Moeen Ali for saying that the all-rounder has “chosen” to go home after the second Test despite it being agreed upon as part of the national team’s rotation policy, according to multiple reports.

After taking eight wickets and top-scoring with an 18-ball 43 in England second innings on Tuesday in the second Test in Chennai, his first match since Ashes 2019, Ali chose to stick to the original plan and left for United Kingdom for a 10-day break.

Root’s comment though meant that the all-rounder received flak.

Advertisement

According to a report in Mirror, Root apologised to Ali at the team hotel for making the rotation policy decision sound like a personal choice. A report in The Guardian said that the captain spoke to Ali in private and acknowledged his mistake.

Following a 317-run loss to India in Chennai on Tuesday, Root had said:

“Moeen has chosen to go home. It’s obviously been a very tricky tour for him. As we mentioned at the start (of the winter), if players feel like they need to get out of the bubble, then that’s been an option. It is really important that we stand by that.

Advertisement

“With Moeen it wasn’t more asking if he wanted to stay, it was a decision he had chosen. Of course we wanted as many players available for as long as possible, but you also want them to be very comfortable here.”

Jos Buttler, an all-format player like Ali, went home after the first Test and will be back in India for the tour’s limited overs leg. Ben Stokes and Jofra Archer were rested for the recent Test series in Sri Lanka.

There was an intense debate around Jonny Bairstow’s unavailability for the first two Tests in India but he too was rested after the Sri Lanka tour as the ECB has a clear rotation policy in place with cricketers having to spend months in a bio-bubble due to the Covid-19 pandemic. Bairstow is in India now for the last two Tests and the white-ball leg of the tour.

With PTI Inputs