England Players Cleared: ECB Finds 'No Misconduct' in Noosa Drinking Trip

The England cricket team can breathe easy after the ECB's investigation. Officials found no evidence of misconduct during their team-building break in Noosa. This comes despite social media videos showing player Ben Duckett in a drunken state. The ruling allows the team to focus on their final Ashes Test in Sydney without disciplinary concerns.

Key Points: ECB Clears England Players of Misconduct After Ashes Trip

  • ECB inquiry clears England team of misconduct during Ashes tour trip to Noosa
  • Investigation found no red flags from team security personnel in Australia
  • Videos surfaced of batter Ben Duckett appearing drunk after late-night partying
  • Verdict brings relief to squad ahead of final Ashes Test in Sydney
2 min read

Relief for England players as ECB rules 'no misconduct' in Noosa trip

The ECB has ruled 'no misconduct' by England players during a team-building trip to Noosa, ending an inquiry into alleged excessive drinking.

"The procedure of the inquiry was not disclosed to the public, and the verdict was drafted against 'beer drinking' and no other misconduct. - The Daily Mail report"

London, Dec 30

The England team heaved a collective sigh of relief as the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) has given the players a clean chit in the case of alleged excessive drinking during a team-building trip to Noosa between the second and third Tests in The Ashes tour 2025-26.

Multiple reports had claimed that England players had indulged in excessive drinking during the trip organised as a team-building exercise for the players to recover from the defeat and get ready for the next match.

However, there are reports now claiming that the ECB has not found any misconduct on the part of the English players during the trip.

Although several videos of top-order batter Ben Duckett emerged on social media that showed him drunk and almost out of his senses after partying till late in the night, the ECB has concluded that there was 'no misconduct' and therefore no disciplinary action will be taken against the players.

As per a report in The Daily Mail, if the ECB had found anything to be of concern, it would have been identified and resolved immediately rather than waiting for the Ashes loss.

"The procedure of the inquiry was not disclosed to the public, and the verdict was drafted against 'beer drinking' and no other misconduct," claimed the report.

According to reports, top ECB official Rob Key claimed that the reason for the 'no misconduct' verdict is that nothing was flagged by the security apparatus around the team in Australia.

"The England cricket team had security personnel assigned for the trip to Noosa, who were also authorised to intervene if any misbehaviour or red flag activities appeared. However, they weren't needed to jump in, and the break was more like a bachelorette party," the report said.

Nevertheless, this will give the England team much relief as it heads for Sydney for their next and last assignment Down Under -- the fifth and final Test of the series starting on January 4.

England, after slumping to an unassailable 0-3 deficit, salvaged some pride and avoided a whitewash against Australia by winning the fourth Test in Melbourne within two days. Ben Stokes and his boys would like to end the series on a high note by making it 3-2 by winning the final encounter in Sydney.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Honestly, after a tough loss, a team needs to unwind. As long as they weren't breaking laws or disrespecting the host country, it's their private time. The 'bachelorette party' comparison is funny though! 😄 Hope they focus on the Sydney Test now.
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Arjun K
The security personnel didn't flag anything, so the ECB's decision makes sense. But the videos of Duckett... not a good look for a professional athlete. Our Indian team also parties, but rarely do we see such public displays. Image matters.
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Sarah B
As a cricket fan living in India, I find this whole episode a bit overblown. They won the next Test, didn't they? Sometimes team bonding over drinks works. The real story is England fighting back to avoid the whitewash. Respect for that spirit!
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Vikram M
The board has given a clean chit, so case closed. But let's be real, if they were 3-0 down in an Ashes series, maybe less partying and more net practice was needed? Just saying. Anyway, all the best for Sydney. Hope it's a good match.
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Kavya N
It's their culture, I guess. In India, we might go for a team dinner, but such public drunkenness would not be tolerated by the fans or the media. Different standards. But good they got the relief before the final Test. 🏏

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