Women’s T20 World Cup 2026: Kate Cross breaks silence after backlash over “ICC’s India bias” remarks

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England fast bowler Kate Cross has spoken out after she Alex Hartley were subjected to online abuse and death threats following their criticism of the ICC’s tournament scheduling policy during the ICC Women’s T20 World Cup 2026. Cross stressed that her comments were directed solely at the governing body’s playing conditions and not at the Indian women’s cricket team or its players.

Kate Cross’ controversial remarks triggers major controversy

The controversy began during an earlier episode of No Balls: The Cricket Podcast, where Cross questioned an ICC knockout-stage regulation that reserved a fixed semi-final slot for India if the team qualified for the last four.

Under the tournament playing conditions, India would automatically feature in the first semi-final, scheduled for Tuesday at 8:00 PM IST, regardless of their finishing position in the group stage. The arrangement was designed to ensure prime-time television coverage across the Indian subcontinent, one of cricket’s biggest broadcast markets.

While discussing the rule, Cross criticised the policy, arguing that no tournament should appear to be structured around the progress of a single team.

“Everyone can plan it based on when India are gonna play. It’s absolutely mental. I don’t understand how you can go into a tournament and the governing body would prioritise one team like that… I think it’s absolutely ridiculous,” she had said on the podcast.

Hartley added that such broadcast-driven scheduling has become common across both men’s and women’s ICC events, but Cross’s comments quickly spread across social media. Many users interpreted them as criticism of India rather than the ICC’s administrative decision, triggering widespread backlash.

Also READ: India secure LA28 Olympic berth despite failing to reach the Women’s T20 World Cup 2026 semifinal

Addressing the controversy on the latest episode of their podcast, Cross said the reaction had spiralled far beyond reasonable criticism. She revealed that both she and Hartley received abusive messages, including death threats, over comments that she believes were misunderstood.

“There’s been a little bit of confusion because what we said doesn’t warrant death threats and abuse,” Cross said.

Clarifying her stance, she added: “I want to clarify that this has nothing to do with India. I wasn’t slagging off India as a cricket team. I was just saying, ‘I don’t think that any tournament should be based on one cricket team getting through to a semi-final.’”

Cross reiterated that her concern was with tournament governance and competitive fairness rather than any participating nation. She maintained that her criticism was aimed exclusively at the ICC’s scheduling framework.

Hartley also revealed that she contacted an ICC official after the controversy to better understand the reasoning behind the playing conditions. According to the explanation she received, the semi-final schedule was designed to strike a balance between accommodating spectators attending matches in the United Kingdom and maximizing television audiences across different global markets, particularly in regions where cricket enjoys its largest following.

Ironically, the much-debated scheduling clause was never put into effect. India, led by Harmanpreet Kaur, failed to secure a place in the semi-finals after suffering key defeats to South Africa and defending champions Australia during the group stage. The team finished third in Group A, ending its campaign before the knockout rounds.

With India eliminated, the ICC’s pre-determined semi-final allocation became irrelevant. The knockout fixtures proceeded under the standard bracket, with Australia taking on the West Indies in the first semi-final, while hosts England to face South Africa in the second. Notably, Australia won their semi-final clash recently and secured a place in the tournament’s final.

Also READ: Australia storm into Women’s T20 World Cup 2026 Final with dominant win over West Indies

This article was first published at WomenCricket.com, a Cricket Times company.

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