Saeed Ajmal: Worcestershire expect to lose spinner for season

Image source, Getty Images

Image caption, Director of cricket Steve Rhodes says he is hopeful Worcestershire can secure Ajmal's services "for periods next season"

Worcestershire are resigned to losing spinner Saeed Ajmal for the rest of the season once he leaves for international duty with Pakistan later this month.

Ajmal will play in three more T20 Blast games and the County Championship game with Leicestershire, starting on 13 July, before joining up with Pakistan.

Worcestershire had hoped Ajmal might return once his country's mini-series with Sri Lanka is over on 30 August.

Director of cricket Steve Rhodes said: "It is doubtful he would come back."

He added to 91热爆 Hereford & Worcester: "It will be very difficult. The guy has been on the go non-stop for a hell of a period of time and Pakistan have got important cricket coming up.

"I know their board wanted him to have a bit of a breather. But the way things work out it would only be for two Championship matches.

"What I would say is I'm hopeful we can try our best to secure Saeed to come back for periods next season. I know he enjoys his time here but we shouldn't take that for granted."

Ajmal is the Championship's leading wicket taker, with 56 victims in eight matches this summer at 15.91, to inspire four of his side's five victories.

The wily 36-year-old Punjabi has also claimed eight scalps in Twenty20 cricket, at a miserly economy rate of just six an over, to help his team top the North Group in the T20 Blast, as well as Division Two in the Championship.

But Rhodes admits that, although Ajmal will leave a big hole, the arrival of 28-year-old New Zealand international left-arm paceman Mitchell McClenaghan as his replacement will help plug the gap.

"It is going to be a struggle," added Rhodes. "But we are very lucky with Mitchell McClenaghan coming in."

Worcestershire's hopes of guaranteeing a top two place in the North Group to ensure their first-ever Twenty20 home quarter-final rest largely on how they perform in this weekend's two home games against Yorkshire and Lancashire.

In what will be his last two T20 appearances at New Road, Ajmal is likely to prove a big factor, but Worcestershire will again be without new England Test all-rounder Moeen Ali.

"Both games will be really tough," said Rhodes. "Yorkshire are going well. And Lancashire are a team you must respect, with some terrific players.

"It is quite tough for us when we haven't gone Moeen playing for us. But we will just try and approach the game like we have with every single game, to make sure we are doing our job right.

"Hopefully if we can do that, then it should be good enough to take care of the opposition."