Durham: Throw out Tykes
Durham chief executive David Harker has called on the ECB to throw Yorkshire out of the Twenty20 Cup after their clash was postponed on Monday.
The quarter-final did not take place due to a problem over the eligibility of Yorkshire youngster Azeem Rafiq.
He said: "Any solution which doesn't have Durham automatically proceeding to the finals day is going to disadvantage us and that can't be right."
Tykes chief blasts ECB
Stewart Regan blames the ECB for the late postponement of the Twenty20 Cup quarter-final clash with Durham.
The match was called off five minutes before the scheduled 5.10pm start because of a problem with the eligibility of 17-year-old Azeem Rafiq.
Tykes chief executive Regan said: "We provided everything we could over the weekend. In an ideal world, the match would have been called off sooner."
Regan: ECB were aware
Yorkshire chief executive Stewart Regan revealed he was contacted by the ECB last Friday amid concerns over the eligibility of youngster Azeem Rafiq.
ECB chief David Collier insists the governing body only became aware of the problem surrounding the academy player on Monday morning - the day of the Twenty20 quarter-final with Durham.
Regan said: "The ECB said they would try and register him retrospectively."
Chief Regan takes blame
Yorkshire chief Stewart Regan has taken the blame over the eligibility debacle which forced the postponement of their Twenty20 quarter-final at Durham.
Regan confirmed they had failed to correctly register the player at the centre of the allegation - 17-year-old Azeem Rafiq - as a first-teamer.
He told Radio Five Live: "Ultimately, the buck stops with me. I'm responsible for running the club."
ECB set for Thursday meet
The ECB's Discipline Commission hearing into allegations that Yorkshire fielded an ineligible player will meet on Thursday at Old Trafford.
The Twenty20 cup quarter-final was postponed on Monday after Yorkshire's failure to register Azeem Rafiq as a first-class player.
The panel will be chaired by Judge Edward Slinger, with James Pickup QC and Simon Schanschieff also sitting.
Russell wants place
Glamorgan chairman Paul Russell says his club are ready to take Yorkshire's place in the Twenty20 Cup if the Tykes are thrown out of the competition.
Durham's clash with Yorkshire failed to take place on Monday because the visitors fielded an ineligible player.
Russell, whose team were the only third-placed team to miss out on the quarter-finals, said: "Glamorgan would seize the chance (to replace them)."