Rob Walter Highlights Benefits of Testing Inexperienced Players Against Strong Opponents
Rob Walter says just under half of the contracted players are currently in the country. He described that presence as a massive positive for development.
Expanding international experience
Walter stressed the value of giving a large number of players international experience at different levels. The goal is to strengthen the whole system, not only a small group of stars.
Programs and tours are being used to expose more players to high-level cricket. That exposure helps build depth across formats and squads.
Managing competing demands
Walter acknowledged the international game pulls players in multiple directions. Teams must manage workloads and availability carefully.
He said the priority is ensuring readiness. Whoever the team faces, a number of cricketers must be internationally ready.
Using tours and opportunities wisely
Walter said the board will use whatever opportunities and tours it can. The emphasis is on doing so as smartly as possible.
That approach also highlights the benefits of testing inexperienced players against strong opponents. Tough assignments accelerate learning and reveal preparedness gaps.
- Just under half of contracted players are in the country.
- Many players are receiving international exposure at varied levels.
- The aim is system-wide strengthening, not elite concentration.
- Player availability and competing demands are ongoing challenges.
- Tours are chosen and used strategically to build readiness.
Speaking to Filmogaz.com, Walter linked these measures to long-term depth. He argued that testing inexperienced players and facing strong opponents yields clear benefits.