News Analysis

Overton's shock decision sounds alarm bells for England schedule

An active Test cricketer choosing T20 franchise over Ashes tour is unprecedented development

Matt Roller
Matt Roller
01-Sep-2025 • 2 hrs ago
Jamie Overton has announced he is stepping back from red-ball cricket, Headingley, September 1, 2025

Waving goodbye: Jamie Overton's announcement came as a shock to the England set-up  •  Getty Images

Has a single training session ever revealed so much about the state of English cricket? England's preparation for Tuesday's ODI against South Africa started at 9am in Leeds with one-third of their squad still in London after playing in the Hundred final. Then, two hours later, one of the few players present told the world he was quitting red-ball cricket indefinitely.
Harry Brook said he was "a little bit shocked" to learn of Jamie Overton's decision, barely two months before an Ashes series for which he would very likely have been picked. But a glance around Headingley would have confirmed that things are not what they used to be: cricket's scheduling has never been perfect, but gaps between series have never been shorter.
Brook's own schedule has been packed enough. Since the start of England's home summer on May 22, he has played six Tests, six white-ball internationals and nine Hundred games: the tournament itself began just 24 hours after Brook's involvement in the epic fifth Test against India. His post-match media commitments finished late on Saturday night at The Oval after a washed-out Eliminator; his pre-match press conference for an ODI series barely 36 hours later.
It is just another example of a fixture list that is fundamentally flawed, and gives players little chance of performing at their best. "In an ideal world, we'd have liked to meet up yesterday and train yesterday, [then] train today and go into the game as a group," Brook said. "But nobody is short of cricket, that's for sure."
South Africa's own preparation has been slightly smoother, despite the dislocation of a long-haul flight from Cairns last week following their brief tour to Australia. "The first couple of days were about the guys recovering, getting over jetlag," Temba Bavuma, their captain, said. "We've had our practice sessions - gym, on the field - and a bit of leisure for the boys."
Even still, there are other "distractions" - as Bavuma put it - lingering in the background. "Guys always have one eye on what is happening in the Hundred, with the final happening yesterday, there's the auction [next Tuesday] with the SA20… That's the life of an international cricketer. It's just part of the package."
Bizarrely, in light of England's last-minute preparation, South Africa did not consider David Miller for selection since he was playing alongside Brook at Northern Superchargers at the start of their preparation period, though he remains in their longer-term plans. After losing one key pillar of their middle order to the franchise circuit in Heinrich Klaasen, they cannot risk losing another.
The ECB's financial clout has staved off the same threat for a long while, but Overton's announcement was a landmark moment. A handful of England players have skipped tours to maximise their franchise earnings in the past, but an active Test cricketer effectively opting out of an Ashes tour to play T20 instead is unprecedented.
It took Rob Key, England's managing director, by surprise: he described the news as "unexpected" and "sad to see" while effectively confirming that he would have been named in the squad to tour Australia. "He would have been part of our red-ball plans for the foreseeable future… It serves as a reminder of the cricketing landscape we now operate in."
It is also further confirmation that Key's grand plan to create a stable of all-format fast bowlers to emulate Australia's 'big three' is a chimera: Mark Wood last played in February, Brydon Carse had to withdraw from the Hundred to manage his body, and Gus Atkinson's stock as a white-ball bowler has fallen sharply. Remarkably, Jofra Archer has become England's most durable quick across formats.
Overton can hardly be blamed for his decision. He toiled hard against India at The Oval but his body struggled to cope, and he would likely have carried the drinks in Australia in any case. That would have meant sacrificing the majority of his lucrative Big Bash contract with Adelaide Strikers - and, had he played, risking an injury that could have ruled him out for some time.
The pull of the Ashes will remain strong enough for the majority of England players but, at 31, Overton has decided that the potential benefits do not outweigh the drawbacks. He described it as "accepting reality" in a Telegraph interview; that alone should prompt a minor rejig of England's contract system, addressing the imbalance between annual retainers and tour fees.
Brook is viewing this week's series as a chance to "create an environment where we're working towards something" in the same way that Eoin Morgan did before the 2019 World Cup, putting his focus on the same event in 2027. It is an admirable ambition, but the gradual erosion of the relevance of bilateral international series may soon wear them down entirely.
It will be easy enough to ignore the warning signs on Tuesday, when two strong sides face off in front of a good crowd at Headingley and the cricket itself takes over. But if England learned anything at all from Monday morning's thinly-attended training session, it is that they too are vulnerable to the same forces that have already reshaped the rest of the global game.

Matt Roller is senior correspondent at ESPNcricinfo. @mroller98