Cricket Ireland in talks with BCCI over India touring in 2026
CI chair Brian MacNeice met with players to address concerns about lack of fixtures
Matt Roller
19-Sep-2025 • 5 hrs ago
India have toured Ireland on three occasions since 2018 • Sportsfile/Getty Images
Cricket Ireland (CI) hopes that India's men will tour for a white-ball series next summer on their way to England.
India will travel to England for five T20Is and three ODIs from July 1-19 next year, and ESPNcricinfo understands that CI officials have held discussions with their BCCI counterparts over a potential visit before that tour begins. India's men have toured Ireland three times for short T20I series in the past seven years (in 2018, 2022 and 2023) and attracted strong crowds at Malahide on the outskirts of Dublin.
Paul Stirling, Ireland's captain, said on Tuesday that he was "disappointed" that his side had played so little home international cricket this summer, and described them as "underprepared" to face England in their ongoing T20I series. Brian MacNeice, CI's chair, said after Friday's washout in Malahide that he had met players and staff to address their concerns.
"I opened the meeting by saying, as far as I'm concerned, the quantum of cricket that we're playing in '25 isn't good enough to prepare you guys to play international cricket and to be competitive at ICC tournaments," MacNeice said. "I'm not hiding from that.
"We mapped out our views and thoughts on what the schedule for '26 and '27 looks like, and I wanted to get their input not just on the international schedule, but also the domestic schedule… It was a really positive session yesterday. There's more work to be done, honestly, but it was a good session."
Sunday's third T20I against England will be Ireland's ninth and final home men's international of the 2025 summer, with four of the first eight lost to weather. Their slimline fixture list is, in essence, the result of the high costs they incur while converting club grounds into international venues and the relatively low value of their broadcast rights deals.
"[The players] understand the challenges that we're facing and some of the reasons why we had what we had, but they also are very clear about what we're trying to achieve. I think they're fully bought into that," MacNeice said.
Per the ICC's Future Tours Programme, Ireland are due to host New Zealand (one Test), Bangladesh (three ODIs and three T20Is) and Afghanistan (one Test, three ODIs and three T20Is) next summer. "There's still a couple of variables that have to be figured out before we lock in the final schedule, but we'll be hosting Test cricket here next year," MacNeice said.
MacNeice also said that Ireland's new stadium project at Abbotstown on the outskirts of Dublin is "very much on track", and said that he has held positive meetings with senior ECB officials this week around the 2030 men's T20 World Cup, which Ireland, England and Scotland will co-host.
He confirmed that he would be "very supportive" of a proposal for a two-division World Test Championship featuring Ireland, and said that the process of hiring a new chief executive to replace Warren Deutrom is going "really well", with the hope of making a recommendation for his successor to the board in late October.
MacNeice was appointed chair of the board for the planned European T20 Premier League (ETPL) on Thursday, with Deutrom becoming the league's director. The ETPL was due to launch in 2025, but its inaugural season was postponed to 2026 after it struggled to find buyers for franchises.
Matt Roller is a senior correspondent at ESPNcricinfo. @mroller98