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This was followed by Sunrisers Hyderabad and Delhi Capitals reporting that Wriddhiman Saha and Amit Mishra were positive. Then more cases started coming in as Chennai Super Kings revealed that their batting coach Michael Hussey and bowling coach L Balaji had tested positive for COVID-19.
Sources say BCCI didn't reveal all the 'positive' cases as a number of groundsmen in Kolkata, Delhi and Bangalore had been hit by the virus. Some cameramen who had travelled from Mumbai to Ahmedabad by road also contracted the virus and were isolated.
In an interview to The Indian Express, Ganguly said, it will be difficult to ascertain how virus entered the bio-bubble.
“I don’t think so. The report we got is that there was no breach of the bubble. How it happened is very difficult to say,” said Ganguly.
Air travel from one city to another, outside catering of food inside team hotels and defective virus warning systems are seemingly some of the reasons for the bubble breach. In UAE, the teams remained in three cities - Dubai, Sharjah and Abu Dhabi and travelling was to a minimum.
Ganguly defended conducting the league in India.
“… when we decided all this, there was no (Covid spike) in India. Covid numbers (in India) were nothing. We started with Mumbai and finished there without any case,” Ganguly argued.
Ganguly gave examples of English Premier League where cases in the teams led to a lot of rescheduling and cancelling of the games.
“They have a six-month long season and that is not the case with us,” Ganguly said while adding that it’s too early to predict if T20 World Cup will be shifted to UAE.