LA Olympics 2028: Cricket to begin on 12 July, medal matches on July 20 and 29
A total of six teams each in men's and women's sections and 180 players will compete in the T20 format
PTI
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A total of six teams each in men's and women's sections and 180 players will compete
LOS ANGELES, 15 JULY
Cricket's much-hyped return to the Olympics at LA Games will
take shape at the Fairgrounds Stadium in the city of Pomena -- about 50km from
Los Angeles -- from July 12 with the medal matches scheduled on July 20 and 29,
2028.
A total of six teams each in men's and women's sections and
180 players will compete in the T20 format in the quadrennial showpiece, which
hosted cricket for the first and only time in 1900.
There are no matches scheduled on July 14 and 21 and most of
the the matchdays will be double headers, according to the competition schedule
released by the organisers.
The only time the gentleman's game was played at the
Olympics was in Paris way back in 1900. Only two teams, Great Britain and
France, competed in a two-day match with the former winning the gold medal.
With a total of 90 athlete quotas allocated in the men's and
women's sections, the 12 competing teams can name 15-member squads.
Cricket's growing popularity can be gauged from the fact
that three venues in the United States -- Grand Prairie, Lauderhill, and New
York -- organised several matches of the 2024 T20 World Cup, jointly hosted by
USA and the West Indies.
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) had approved
cricket, baseball/softball, flag football, lacrosse (sixes) and squash as five
new sports to feature at the 2028 Games.
"When the world comes here for these Games, we will
highlight every neighbourhood as we host a Games for all and work to ensure it
leaves a monumental legacy.
"We are already delivering that legacy as we announce
there have been more than one million enrollments in PlayLA. I want to thank
LA28 and the International Olympic Committee for making these programs possible
and for their continued work to host the greatest Games yet," said Los
Angeles Mayor Karen Bass in a statement.
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