Sean Abbott alone will decide whether he wants to return to first class cricket at the Sydney Cricket Ground on Tuesday, two weeks after his short-pitched delivery felled Phillip Hughes at the same wicket, according to his state team.
Abbott has drawn sympathy from the global cricketing community, though former players and pundits have cast doubts on his ability to play at the highest level again.
New South Wales chief executive Andrew Jones said it would be Abbott's call if he wanted to play against Queensland, as it would be for the team mates who witnessed batsman Hughes' sickening injury in close during the Sheffield Shield match against South Australia.
"He's in the same boat as everybody else," Jones said in comments published by News Ltd media.
"It's a matter for him to see what he wants to do so we'll let him make that decision.
"We'll just regroup then and confirm where everybody is at and if everyone's comfortable to play or not comfortable to play or where individuals are at, and go from there."
The wicket where Hughes was struck will not feature again at the SCG over Australia's summer of cricket, having been "retired" by groundskeepers.
Hughes made his first-class debut for New South Wales before switching to South Australia.
Trauma experts told Reuters the impact of Hughes's death might not sink in for Abbott for weeks, but also said a return to his natural environment of training and competition, surrounded by supportive team mates, could help him recover quicker from any psychological damage.
Hughes's grieving teammates at South Australia, who were also at his funeral in his rural home-town of Macksville, have not yet decided on whether they will play Tasmania in the next round of the Sheffield Shield next week.
"I wouldn't recommend (the players) stay away (from the sport) at all, actually," Michael Burge, director of the Australian College of Trauma Treatment.
"They just need to be taking into account that they may be a little bit awkward or not quite on their game as they were for a few weeks.
"(They should) give themselves some self-latitude, some tolerance and compassion to be, perhaps, less than their best."
Image: Sean Abbott
Photograph: Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images
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