The Phnom Penh Post

Lights out in India pink ball debut

- Faisal Kamal

INDIA’S experiment with the pink ball in the Duleep Trophy domestic championsh­ip met with major embarrassm­ent after floodlight failure interrupte­d play for over an hour in the day-night match on Tuesday.

The Duleep Trophy, a four-day triangular competitio­n which traditiona­lly heralds the start of the Indian cricket season, is seen as a possible precursor to day-night Tests in cricket’s biggest market.

But the first match on the outskirts of the capital New Delhi witnessed three of the six light towers go out twice in the post-dinner session, forcing the players to leave the field.

The first interrupti­on happened just after the dinner interval when play was delayed by 17 minutes due to insufficie­nt light, while the second break stretched to about 50 minutes.

‘Pretty exciting’

The organisers refused to answer any queries after the fiasco as play carried on well past 9pm, the original time for end of play.

“There was some problem in t he main electrica l circuit of t he floodlight­s, which was tripping,” a ground officia l said on t he condition of remaining anonymous.

Earlier the players taking part in Tuesday’s match, between teams that have been rebranded India Red and India Green, were excited at the prospect of the longest format of the game also being played after dark in India.

“I think it is pretty exciting and something to look forward to,” said veteran all-rounder Yuvraj Singh, who has enjoyed great success for the national team under lights in ODI and T20 cricket.

“The New Zealand-Austra lia Test match [t he first day-night Test played in Adelaide in November last year] I saw was prett y exciting. The ball was swinging a bit much. It will be challengin­g if it swings a lot, play- ing under lights,” added Singh, who is captaining India Red.

Suresh Raina, the captain of India Green who is trying to force his way back into the Indian team, was similarly enthusiast­ic.

Eager fans

“The Duleep Trophy has not been played with the pink ball before and it’s a good challenge.

“All the boys are keen [to perform] and this is a good platform ahead of t he season,” Raina said.

Singh’s team won the toss and chose to bat first in the afternoon in front of a cheering crowd who had filed in to watch a piece of cricketing history.

“It’s a novel idea. Local people are eager to watch the pink ball game under lights. We are just hoping that all goes well,” Rajeev Tyagi, one of the ground’s administra­tors, said before the floodlight failure.

India had been expected to stage their first day-night Test during a tour by New Zealand starting next month. But the plans were shelved to give more time for trials of the pink Kookaburra ball.

Designers say the pink ball is far more visible under lights than the red ball that has traditiona­lly been used in Tests. The white ball used in limited-overs cricket is not viable for Tests as it clashes with the players’ white clothing and sight screens, as well as being less durable.

The Australia-New Zealand match is the only Test so far to have been played under lights. But Pakistan are also set to stage day-night contests against Australia and the West Indies in the Gulf later this year.

India, who have just been toppled by Pakistan at the top of the rankings, are about to embark on an extensive round of Test match cricket by hosting series against New Zealand, England, Bangladesh and Australia.

While India’s ODI and T20 matches are usually played in front of packed houses, Tests are only rarely sold out.

 ?? AFP ?? Cricketers walk back to the pavilion as some of the stadium lights go out during a Duleep Trophy match in New Delhi on Tuesday.
AFP Cricketers walk back to the pavilion as some of the stadium lights go out during a Duleep Trophy match in New Delhi on Tuesday.

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