Former England captain Alastair Cook has once again taken a sharp dig at his former teammate Kevin Pietersen over the debate surrounding young batter Jacob Bethell and his IPL stint with Royal Challengers Bengaluru.The debate began after Cook suggested that Bethell should consider cutting short his IPL 2026 stay and return to county cricket, arguing that sitting on the bench was not helping the youngster’s development. Despite Bethell’s sensational 45-ball century during the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026 semi-final, Cook felt the left-hander needed regular game time rather than spending another season largely unused in the IPL setup.Speaking on the Stick to Cricket podcast earlier, Cook had praised Bethell’s talent and backed him as a future top-order player for England.“For that top order batting, the way he played at Sydney, against that attack, in those conditions…I’ve looked at a player there, and I’m certain this bloke can open. If he can bat three, he can open,” Cook said.He also questioned the value of remaining on the IPL bench during a crucial development phase.“(But) it’s not ideal, is it? Bethell shouldn’t really be it because he’s not opening. He’s sitting at the IPL not doing anything. Ideally, he could come back and open for Warwickshire to help England,” he added.However, Pietersen strongly disagreed and launched a blunt response on social media, insisting Cook had “absolutely NO IDEA” what being part of the IPL environment feels like. “Alastair Cook has absolutely NO IDEA what it’s like to be in the IPL…What’s it’s like to always be around the best players in the world. So his opinion on Jacob Bethell doesn’t matter at all. Stay in India, Jacob. I know, even though you’re not playing, you’re learning and will be a way better player,” Pietersen wrote on X.Weeks later, Cook revisited the topic on the Stick to Cricket podcast and delivered another pointed response, suggesting the IPL’s financial pull makes criticism difficult.“I just gave my opinion and I can justify it by saying that at the time he wasn’t playing. Last year as well, he went to the IPL and didn’t play either, so he’s already had that benefit once or twice. In my opinion, he could have come back and actually played some cricket. Ironically, since all this has come out, he’s now played a bit,” Cook said.Cook further stressed that development ultimately depends on playing matches rather than only observing from the sidelines.”Well i get the other argument of learning from it but there’s got to be a stage where you have to play like you can’t just learn from it and i know that IPL’s a great tournament but it’s also then no one publicly ever gonna say the IPL’s not the place to be because everyone knows it lines everyone’s pockets,” he added.








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