Samit Patel retires after ECB ban for playing disapproved league
Former England all-rounder, 41, unable to play T20 Blast for 12 months after competing in World Legends Pro T20 League in Goa
Hızlı Bakış
- Former England all-rounder Samit Patel, 41, has retired from domestic cricket after being banned from the T20 Blast for 12 months due to his participation in the disapproved World Legends Pro T20 League in Goa.
- Patel, who played 60 times for England and made 629 appearances for Nottinghamshire, admitted he "probably wouldn't have played" had he known the consequences.
- He joins Ravi Bopara as the only players to feature in every year of the Blast since its inception in 2003.
Yapay zekâ özeti
Neden Önemli?
Samit Patel played 60 times for England between 2008 and 2015, making 629 appearances for Nottinghamshire over 22 years. He and Ravi Bopara are the only two players to have featured in every year of the T20 Blast since it began in 2003.
Samit Patel has announced his retirement from domestic cricket, saying he "probably wouldn't have played" in a disapproved T20 league earlier this year had he known it would result in a ban.
Former England all-rounder Patel, 41, and Australian bowler Peter Siddle are both unable to play in the T20 Blast this summer after competing in the World Legends Pro T20 League in Goa.
The England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) says players cannot play domestic cricket for 12 months if they have participated in a "disapproved" league such as this.
As a result, Patel has retired from domestic cricket in England but says he will still be playing franchise cricket elsewhere in the world.
"I probably wouldn't have played it [the World Legends League]," Patel told BBC Sport's Strategic Timeout programme. "There was a lot of uncertainty about whether we could play or not but we can't get past that now. It just brought this stuff forward for me."
Patel played 60 times for England between 2008 and 2015 and made 629 appearances for Nottinghamshire over 22 years. He then joined Derbyshire on a two-year white-ball deal in 2024 and was out of contract when he left the club at the end of last year's T20 Blast, but said he would have liked "one more year" of domestic cricket if he had not been dealt the ban.
"I would have played this summer," he said. "I had some chats with some counties, we weren't quite at a contract signing but we were in talks, so probably would've got a last-minute deal somewhere."
Patel and Ravi Bopara, who also retired earlier this year, are the only two players to have featured in every year of the Blast since it began in 2003.
Açık Sorular
- What specific criteria does the ECB use to determine if a league is 'disapproved'?
- Will other players face similar bans for playing in the World Legends Pro T20 League?






