The Gold Coast Bulletin

Fears for Test cricket as big money offers threaten long game

- DANIEL CHERNY

Australian cricket’s player chief fears market forces might leave only three nations playing Test cricket in a decade as cricketers “follow the money” on the franchise circuit.

With a second Indian Premier League window being explored, and the prospect of a Saudi competitio­n offering unfathomab­le riches for players, the primacy of central contracts is eroding.

Australian Cricketers’ Associatio­n boss Todd Greenberg notes that New Zealand, the West Indies and South Africa have all been weakened by the cash available in short-form cricket, and said on Thursday that Australian cricket authoritie­s would “be crazy” to think top Aussies might not also soon turn down the chance to play Test cricket given the prizes at stake elsewhere.

It is already happening on a limited-overs front, with Tim David and Daniel Sams both turning down internatio­nal white-ball opportunit­ies to play franchise cricket, while David Warner, who is retiring from Test cricket at the end of this series against Pakistan, may miss white-ball matches against the Windies to play in the UAE’s ILT20 league instead.

However the situation is more dire elsewhere, with the Proteas set to send a badly undermanne­d team to NZ for Tests later this summer as the South African board prioritise­s its Indian-backed Twenty20 competitio­n.

The Windies will also send a depleted team Down Under next month with former captain Jason Holder putting ILT20 commitment­s in the UAE ahead of a Test series.

Greenberg said it was incumbent on Australian authoritie­s to try to save Test cricket elsewhere.

“My message is, ‘we’re under pressure.’ And pressure might be a good thing, because it will lift all of our opportunit­ies up and make us the best we can be, but other countries are really struggling,” Greenberg told this masthead at the MCG during day three of the Boxing Day Test.

“And we can’t play against ourselves. So I’d like to think that Test cricket is more than just Australia, England and India in 10 years’ time. We want to make sure that Pakistan and South Africa and New Zealand and others can continue to play against us.

“I worry that countries like South Africa and New Zealand in 10 years may no longer be able to afford to have their best players playing and disappeari­ng because of the push and pull of global leagues. So that is a concern. And I don’t think I’m being an alarmist. I think I’m being a realist.”

Greenberg said that while he didn’t think there was an imminent threat of Australian Test guns turning down central contracts while still in their prime, that could easily change over the next decade.

“We’re already seeing countries all over the world and particular­ly in New Zealand, South Africa, where that’s already happening. And so my message is, ‘it’s not happening here at the moment, and it might not feel like it’s going to happen here at the moment, but it’s happening in other countries in our sport.’ So we’d be crazy not to think that those pressures aren’t going to be applied to us at some point in time.”

 ?? ?? Tim David of the Hurricanes
Tim David of the Hurricanes

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