Oman Cricket: Oman pacer Bilal Khan picked by Sharjah Warriors for inaugural ILT20 tournament in the UAE

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Oman Cricket
Oman Cricket
The Oman Cricket Board, officially known as Oman Cricket, is the governing body for cricket in Oman, headquartered in Muscat. It represents Oman in the International Cricket Council, having achieved affiliate status in 2000 and associate membership in 2014. The board is also a member of the Asian Cricket Council.

Photo Credit: Oman Cricket

Bilal Khan has been the main spearhead of Oman cricket team for the past few years. The 34-year-old fast medium pacer has been instrumental in many a victories for Oman and is now set to showcase his mettle at the region’s biggest and inaugural T20 international franchise competition – the International League T20 (ILT20), which began on January 14.

Picked by Sharjah Warriors, one of the six franchises in the ILT20, Bilal is the only Omani player to feature in such a top-class international T20 league.

 Having been with the squad since the start of the tournament began last week, Bilal said: “I am super excited to be part of the Sharjah Warriors squad. The team includes some of the world’s top stars and I am happy to be part of a team set-up that have greats like Moeen Ali, Marcus Stoinis and Chris Woakes among others.

“It is a great learning curve for me. Rubbing shoulders with such stars definitely will improve my bowling skills.”

Bilal, who is yet to feature in the team’s playing XI, is hopeful of being picked in the forthcoming matches.

Sharjah Warriors have so far played three matches and have failed to open their account.

The tournament, which began on January 14, has managed to attract some of the biggest stars and has a lot to offer for the players.

With each team allowed to pick nine overseas players, the ILT20 has given a good opportunity for cricketers from Associate Nations like Oman and Namibia.

Bilal said: “I have been working hard over the past many years and I am indebted to my national team coach Duleep Mendis, bowling coach Aavishkar Salvi and our trainer Evert for their full support.

“Sharjah Warriors head coach Paul Farbrace of England and team’s bowling coach G Jayakumar of India have backed my bowling during the nets and practice games. I feel confident of producing a good spell for the team in the upcoming games.”

Bilal is not new to franchise cricket as he had in the past played in Afghanistan’s Shpageeza Cricket League in 2017-18 and 2022 with Speenghar Tigers and Amo Sharks respectively.

For Bilal, the home ground in Sharjah brings back good memories as one of his three five-wicket match hauls in his ODI career was achieved at the same venue last year in a match against Namibia.

“I have very good memories of Sharjah cricket stadium. I hope to put up some strong performances if given a chance and I am looking forward to my first match with Warriors. I had played two practice games where I picked up two wickets so far. The coaches are happy with me and I am proud of the fact that I am playing along with world-class stars,” said Bilal.

Warriors is a Capri-Global-owned Sharjah-based franchise and includes England quartet of Moeen Ali, who is the skipper, Chris Woakes, Danny Briggs and Dawid Malan, Afghanistan quartet Mohammad Nabi, Rahmanullah Gurbaz, Noor Ahmad and Naveen Ul Haq, Australia’s Marcus Stoinis and West Indies’ Evin Lewis.  

The  local players from UAE are Karthik Meiyappan, Muhammad Jawadullah, Alishan Sharafu and Junaid Siddique and Namibia’s JJ Smit is the other Associate Nation player.
The six-team franchise-style league is being played over a 34-match schedule at Dubai, Abu Dhabi and Sharjah. The final is scheduled to be played on February 12, 2023.

Besides Capri Global owned Warriors the other franchise teams are owned by Reliance Industries (MI Emirates), Adani Sportsline (Gulf Giants), GMR Group (Dubai Capitals), Knight Riders Group (Abu Dhabi Knight Riders), and Lancer Capital (Desert Vipers).

While there are four local players in each squad, teams are allowed to field as many as nine overseas players in their starting XI, compared with the usual four foreigners per side seen in established T20 franchise leagues. 

A number of the international stars have agreed deals worth $450,000 per season to play in the tournament, with the salary cap the second highest after the powerhouse Indian Premier League (IPL).

The league is sanctioned – but not owned – by the Emirates Cricket Board (ECB), and is being run by ECB vice-chairman Khalid al-Zarooni and general secretary Mubashshir Usmani. 

Name of Author: Oman Cricket

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