Kent weigh up options over Worcestershire abandonment
Kent are considering taking legal action in their bid to challenge the ECB's decision to award them only four points for the abandoned match against Worcestershire at Kidderminster in July
Cricinfo staff
12-Sep-2007
Kent are considering taking legal action in their bid to challenge the
ECB's decision to award them only four points for the abandoned match
against Worcestershire at Kidderminster in July.
The Championship match was scheduled for Worcester's New Road even
though the ground had been under several feet of water less than a
fortnight earlier. In the event, there was no play in the Kent match,
and Mark Newton, Worcestershire's chairman, admitted the decision to
stage the game was financial.
Initially, the ECB ordered the game to be replayed, but that decision
was overturned by the first-class counties and it was treated as an
abandoned match with each side being awarded four points.
The ECB then proposed that Kent be awarded five extra points to
compensate them, but the idea was turned down by four counties -
Lancashire, Yorkshire, Durham and Warwickshire. With Kent now second
from bottom, nine points adrift of Warwickshire albeit with a game in
hand, the issue is growing in importance all the time.
"I am prepared to take it further, and I am planning to speak to the
ECB soon," Carl Openheimer, Kent's chairman told Steve James in The
Sunday Telegraph. "When this matter first arose we still had hopes
of winning the Championship. Now the situation is very different. But
I don't want to be seen as whingeing after the event so we will be
reviewing our options swiftly."