Ashton Turner likely to miss Sri Lanka and Pakistan T20Is with finger fracture

no image

Ashton Turner might not take part in Australia’s home T20 series against Sri Lanka and Pakistan after sustaining a fracture to his right index finger in training during the Marsh Cup. Turner started the Marsh Cup brightly, scoring a 49-ball 52 in Western Australia's 125-run victory over Victoria.

Australia’s hero in the record ODI run chase in Mohali earlier this year, Turner was part of Australia's most recent T20Is too, against India in February and his renowned finishing skills made him a certain figure for the series against Sri Lanka and Pakistan. 

However, Turner, who returned from shoulder surgery at the beginning of the season, picked up the finger injury ahead of the Marsh Cup game against New South Wales, which means he is unlikely to be in contention for Australia's T20Is against Sri Lanka and Pakistan.

"Ashton sustained a fracture to his right index finger at training this week. After reviewing the injury with specialists, he will require a period of approximately four-six weeks before being able to return to play," WACA sports science medicine manager Nick Jones said, reported Cricbuzz.

His Mohali heroics brought up the thought of him being preferred for Australia's World Cup squad, but after missing the cut, he took the decision to undergo significant shoulder surgery to enable him to field and eventually bowl to full capacity. He returned just ahead of the Marsh Cup and now he is set to be sidelined for four to six weeks.

Comments

Leave a comment

0 Comments

read previous‌IPL 2025 | Jasprit Bumrah set to miss first few games for Mumbai Indians
Indian star pacer Jasprit Bumrah is likely to miss the initial few games of the 2025 Indian Premier League for the Mumbai Indians. After missing the entirety of the recently-concluded Champions Trophy, the Gujarat-based bowler might miss MI’s initial three games and join the setup in April.
PCB gives June 2020 deadline to BCCI to confirm participation in Asia Cupread next
Pakistan Cricket Board has stated that BCCI need to give a clarification on where they stand and if they want to come to Pakistan for the Asia Cup by next year’s June. PCB CEO Wasim Khan has also added that they don’t have any problems playing India in a bilateral series at a neutral venue.
View non-AMP page