<p>Pakistan pace bowling legend Wasim Akram feels ODI cricket has become "run-of-the-mill" stuff now and wants the administrators of the game to scrap the format for good.</p>.<p>Akram's comments came close on the heels of England all-rounder Ben Stokes' sudden retirement from ODIs, which has triggered a serious debate over the existence of 50-over cricket.</p>.<p>"I think so (ODIs should scrapped). In England you have full houses. In India, Pakistan especially, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, South Africa, one-day cricket you are not going to fill the stadiums," he said in Vaughany and Tuffers Cricket Club podcast.</p>.<p>"They are doing it just for the sake of doing it. After the first 10 overs, it's just 'OK, just go a run a ball, get a boundary, four fielders in and you get to 200, 220 in 40 overs' and then have a go last 10 overs. Another 100. It's kind of run-of-the-mill."</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/cricket/three-formats-unsustainable-for-me-ben-stokes-announces-retirement-from-odi-cricket-1127808.html" target="_blank">'Three formats unsustainable for me': Ben Stokes announces retirement from ODI cricket</a></strong></p>.<p>Akram supported Stokes' decision to quit from ODIs, citing "unsustainable" workload.</p>.<p>"Him (Stokes) deciding that he is retiring from one-day cricket is quite sad but I agree with him," said the left-arm pacer, who scalped 502 wickets in 356 ODIs during his career, besides bowling Pakistan to victory in the 1992 Cricket World Cup final.</p>.<p>"Even as a commentator … one-day cricket is just a drag now, especially after T20. I can imagine as a player. 50 overs, 50 overs, then you have to pre-game, post-game, the lunch game," added the cricketer-turned-commentator.</p>.<p>Akram said the 50-over game has no future in front of the ever-growing T20 format.</p>.<p>"T20 is kind of easier, four hours the game is over. The leagues all around the world, there is a lot more money - I suppose this is part and parcel of the modern cricket. T20 or Test cricket. One-day cricket is kind of dying.</p>.<p>"It is quite tiring for a player to play one-day cricket. After T20, one-day cricket seems it is going for days. So players are focussing on more shorter format. And longer format obviously (with) Test cricket," he said.</p>.<p>For Akram, Test cricket remains the pinnacle of the game for a player.</p>.<p>"There's a battle within the battle in Test cricket. I always preferred Test matches. One-day used to be fun but Test matches were where you were recognised as a player … where people still pick you for the world XIs," he said.</p>.<p>"OK money matters - I understand where they are coming from - but they should also remember if they want to be recognised as one of the greats of the game."</p>.<p>Akram also called on the administrators of the game to consider a complete overhaul of the overall schedule.</p>
<p>Pakistan pace bowling legend Wasim Akram feels ODI cricket has become "run-of-the-mill" stuff now and wants the administrators of the game to scrap the format for good.</p>.<p>Akram's comments came close on the heels of England all-rounder Ben Stokes' sudden retirement from ODIs, which has triggered a serious debate over the existence of 50-over cricket.</p>.<p>"I think so (ODIs should scrapped). In England you have full houses. In India, Pakistan especially, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, South Africa, one-day cricket you are not going to fill the stadiums," he said in Vaughany and Tuffers Cricket Club podcast.</p>.<p>"They are doing it just for the sake of doing it. After the first 10 overs, it's just 'OK, just go a run a ball, get a boundary, four fielders in and you get to 200, 220 in 40 overs' and then have a go last 10 overs. Another 100. It's kind of run-of-the-mill."</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/cricket/three-formats-unsustainable-for-me-ben-stokes-announces-retirement-from-odi-cricket-1127808.html" target="_blank">'Three formats unsustainable for me': Ben Stokes announces retirement from ODI cricket</a></strong></p>.<p>Akram supported Stokes' decision to quit from ODIs, citing "unsustainable" workload.</p>.<p>"Him (Stokes) deciding that he is retiring from one-day cricket is quite sad but I agree with him," said the left-arm pacer, who scalped 502 wickets in 356 ODIs during his career, besides bowling Pakistan to victory in the 1992 Cricket World Cup final.</p>.<p>"Even as a commentator … one-day cricket is just a drag now, especially after T20. I can imagine as a player. 50 overs, 50 overs, then you have to pre-game, post-game, the lunch game," added the cricketer-turned-commentator.</p>.<p>Akram said the 50-over game has no future in front of the ever-growing T20 format.</p>.<p>"T20 is kind of easier, four hours the game is over. The leagues all around the world, there is a lot more money - I suppose this is part and parcel of the modern cricket. T20 or Test cricket. One-day cricket is kind of dying.</p>.<p>"It is quite tiring for a player to play one-day cricket. After T20, one-day cricket seems it is going for days. So players are focussing on more shorter format. And longer format obviously (with) Test cricket," he said.</p>.<p>For Akram, Test cricket remains the pinnacle of the game for a player.</p>.<p>"There's a battle within the battle in Test cricket. I always preferred Test matches. One-day used to be fun but Test matches were where you were recognised as a player … where people still pick you for the world XIs," he said.</p>.<p>"OK money matters - I understand where they are coming from - but they should also remember if they want to be recognised as one of the greats of the game."</p>.<p>Akram also called on the administrators of the game to consider a complete overhaul of the overall schedule.</p>