India women cricketers happy to get "breathing space" in quarantine in New Zealand

The team members, who had to undergo a punishing 14-day hard quarantine in Australia back in September-October, are finding the Managed Isolation and Quarantine in Christchurch much more comfortable.

Published : Feb 03, 2022 16:29 IST , NEW DELHI

FILE PHOTO: The series against New Zealand before the World Cup will give India valuable time to get used to the "windy conditions".
FILE PHOTO: The series against New Zealand before the World Cup will give India valuable time to get used to the "windy conditions".
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FILE PHOTO: The series against New Zealand before the World Cup will give India valuable time to get used to the "windy conditions".

Members of the Indian women's cricket team are able to exercise and "breathe" during the mandatory Managed Isolation and Quarantine (MIQ) in New Zealand.

The team members, who had to undergo a punishing 14-day hard quarantine in Australia back in September-October, are finding the MIQ in Christchurch much more comfortable.

The quarantine facility has rooms big enough to accommodate fitness equipment and some of them also have balconies.

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The players were put up in tiny rooms of a quarantine hotel in Australia. The team had undergone a week of hard quarantine in Mumbai before its departure for New Zealand on January 24.

"The players are comfortable in MIQ. The team will start training in the nets after the completion of quarantine on Saturday. The fact that there are balconies attached with the rooms makes a huge difference," said a BCCI official.

"The food served in rooms is also good but the players are not allowed to meet each other," the official added.

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To reduce the risk of COVID-19, the one-off T20I and five ODIs between India and New Zealand have been moved to Queenstown.

The series begins on February 9 with the T20I and has been scheduled ahead of the ODI World Cup in March-April.

The series against New Zealand before the World Cup will give India valuable time to get used to the "windy conditions".

India, which finished runner-up in the last edition five years ago, is expected to go all the way this time.

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