Former England captain Kevin Pietersen ruled himself out yesterday of the lucrative Indian Premier League Twenty20 tournament, saying he needed a breather after a packed schedule in recent months.
Pietersen, 36, played for the Rising Pune Supergiants franchise in the 2016 edition but could only manage four games before missing the rest of the competition with a calf injury.
“FYI - I won’t be going into the IPL auction. My winter has been too busy with all my travel & I don’t want to spend April/May away too!,” Pietersen announced on Twitter.
The explosive batsman plied his trade in South Africa’s domestic T20 competition last year before playing a big part in taking Melbourne Stars to the semi-finals of Australia’s Big Bash League.
He also played for the Quetta Gladiators in the inaugural season of the Pakistan Super League in 2016 and is set to be part of the team once again for the upcoming tournament in February-March.
The tenth edition of the IPL is scheduled to begin in the first week of April and the auctions should take place at the end of this month.

Pietersen fined over Big Bash mic comment
Pietersen was charged with a code of conduct breach in Australia’s Twenty20 Big Bash League and fined, Cricket Australia said yesterday.
He was reported for breaching CA’s code of conduct in making a comment detrimental to the interests of cricket while playing for Melbourne Stars against the Perth Scorchers in a BBL semi-final in Perth on January 24.
The offence occurred during the Scorchers’ innings, when batsman Sam Whiteman was given not out following an appeal for caught behind by the Stars, and Pietersen commented on the umpire’s decision while wearing a microphone on-field.
Pietersen was heard to say during the television coverage when Whiteman appeared to edge a ball from paceman Scott Boland: “He says it could have been glove or pad, and I said: ‘well, he’s got big gloves and big pads to reach that’ – massive nick.”
After the match, Whiteman admitted he had hit the ball, while the match umpire Shawn Craig also conceded he had made an error.
Under the code procedure, match referee David Talalla considered the umpires’ report and the proposed sanction was a Aus$5,000 ($3,800) fine.
Pietersen accepted the charge but elected to dispute the sanction. The match referee set a hearing for Thursday and announced the decision was upheld yesterday.
Pietersen now has 48 hours to decide whether to appeal and have the matter heard by a CA code of conduct commissioner.
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