The England cricket season 2026 commenced with the County Championship on Good Friday to add a new chapter on the subject of how cricket is changing. See how this season is different:
* The three-year Kookaburra ball trial has been dumped and English cricket returns exclusively to the Dukes ball. In 2023, the ECB had advised to use the Australian Kookaburra balls in two rounds of the championship matches, increasing to four rounds in 2024. The purpose was to help English bowlers to prepare better for overseas assignments, particularly Ashes tours. At present, seven of the Test playing countries use Kookaburra balls. The experiment failed to serve the purpose and is called ‘the worst idea ever.’
*A new condition wrt the substitutes: Now a player can be replaced by a fully playing sub i.e. he will not be just a covering fielder. It covers sickness and significant life happenings such as the birth of a child or a family illness and, of course, injury. In the recent past, the players were denied permission to leave the match to witness the birth of a child, but now he can be replaced. Now the substitute will be allowed to bat and bowl, which will prevent the devaluation, as one team is reduced to less than 11 players.
The most recent instance which catapulted the change is of the New Zealander cricketer Blair Tickner, who was playing for Derbyshire in 2024. During the match, he received a message that his wife Sarah had been diagnosed with leukaemia. No substitution was allowed to let him go, and he felt ‘uncomfortable’ leaving Derbyshire with ten men. Now a player can leave. We shall take up his story in detail, ahead.
Then there was the curious case of the Middlesex opener, Sam Robson in the last season. The medical team didn’t help him with the provisional date of the birth of his first child, which he wished to attend. The result was that awaiting birth, he missed a number of championship matches, which wouldn’t have happened under the new guidelines.
This amendment was introduced on the advice of the ICC this season and is on trial. If the feedback is positive, there may be a possibility of introducing a similar condition into Test cricket.
Naturally, the replacements would be like-for-like, and, in genuine cases only. The player replaced by illness or injury will serve an eight-day ‘stand down period’, but can play in the Hundred during this period.
Before this change, during a four-day County Championship match, the replacement was permitted only in the case of concussion or call for international duty, whereas for an injury or illness only a substitute fielder was allowed. Now it is for the authorities to ensure that the relaxation is not misused and is legitimate.
Australia, South Africa and India are already experimenting with injury replacements and the ECB has now allowed substitutes for life events.
Now let us go back to the story of New Zealand right-arm seamer Blair Tickner. He was in the Derbyshire squad for the County Championship match against Sussex. Almost at the same time, his wife Sarah was visiting a local hospital to collect the results of some blood tests. He called her to enquire and she, tearfully, informed that she had been diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia. Tickner immediately rushed to the hospital, was there most of the day and in the evening went to the stadium only to collect his car, parked there.
A surprise awaited him there as he was still playing in the match. Everyone agreed that he should be replaced as he had played no part in the game, but guidelines didn’t permit. He batted the same evening and was 22 not out at stumps and scored a career-best 47 the next day. Believe it, he played the rest of the match.
Also Read: Live Cricket Score
Incidentally, the first substitution under the new guidelines took place on the very first day of the season. Essex became the first team in England to name an injury replacement when skipper Tom Westley broke his finger while batting (28*) and was ruled out of the game against Hampshire. Noah Thain took his place on the condition that Thain, a former England Under-19 all-rounder, would not bowl as Westley was unlikely to bowl for the rest of the match.