Eden Gardens faces another ICC inspection

NEW DELHI, (Reuters) – The International Cricket  Council (ICC) will visit Kolkata’s Eden Gardens next Monday to find out if it can host its three remaining World Cup games and  has said the India-England match will be moved to Bangalore.

Cricket’s governing body announced last week it would take  the Feb. 27 clash between India and England away from the venue  because of a delay in renovation work.

The ICC said yesterday it had accepted the Indian board’s  (BCCI) proposal to move the match to Bangalore, adding it would  make a further check on progress in Kolkata next week.

“In a letter to the BCCI yesterday the ICC outlined a  schedule of works that needed to be carried out at Eden Gardens  ahead of the ground’s other scheduled fixtures on 15, 18 and 20  March,” read an ICC statement.
“An inspection team will visit Kolkata again on 7 February  to assess progress in line with that schedule.”

Kolkata’s race against time is mirroring Delhi’s struggle to  get ready for last year’s Commonwealth Games when most of the  venues missed several deadlines and it took a mad, last-minute  scramble by the red-faced government to salvage the event.

The Wankhede Stadium in Mumbai, which hosts the April 2  cricket final and two other World Cup matches, and all three  venues in Sri Lanka have been cleared subject to completion of  work within two weeks.

With the Feb. 27 game shifted to Bangalore, Eden Gardens has  been left without a match featuring the home side. India spinner  Harbhajan Singh said he was sad he would not be playing in  Kolkata.

“It’s very unfortunate but I guess it’s beyond our control,”  Harbhajan told Reuters. “As a player I will play on whatever  ground I’m asked to.

“But it would have been nice to play in front of a 100,000  crowd. This is India’s best ground,” said the spinner who  claimed a test hat-trick against Australia at Eden Gardens in  2001.