Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Pink ball and that dicey twilight hour

- Abhishek Paul abhishek.paul@htlive.com

NEW DELHI: The early morning session of a Test match is when things can get very hurried for a batsman. The bowlers are fresh and so is the red ball, ready to pose tough questions along the corridor of uncertaint­y.

Even the smell of lacquered leather can’t be counted out with a healthy bouquet of bouncers. All of that makes caution the motto for batsmen in the first hour or so.

For day-night Tests, the same reverence is reserved for the second session, when the much dreaded “twilight phase” unfolds.

Since the first day-night Test was played in 2015, the twilight hour has been bugging batsmen; it is when the nature of the light changes and the eyes have to make the difficult transition from sunlight to floodlight.

For a small taste of what that feels like, recall what it’s like when you are driving a car as the sun sets and headlights begin to come on.

The weather changes too but the dew has still some time to set in. Unlike a day-night ODI, the pink ball used in a day-night Test is shinier and harder to spot cleanly.

“It (twilight phase) kind of plays on the batsman’s mind,” Rohit Sharma said ahead of the third India-England Test in Ahmedabad, which will be a day-night affair.

“I have played only one pink ball Test which was against Bangladesh back in 2019. I did not bat in that time (twilight phase)…I have heard from the players and I have tried to understand what really happens from batsmen who have played; it’s challengin­g and the weather and light suddenly changes. You just have to be extra cautious. You have to be focused a little more than you are during that time, when you are starting your second session. Around 5-5:30.”

A good example of the perils of the twilight hour came during the first day-night Test hosted by India against Bangladesh in Kolkata in 2019. At least four Bangladesh batsmen were hit on the head under lights.

Cheteshwar Pujara later pointed out that visibility might have been the cause. “During the sunlight it’s easy to see the ball, whether it’s red or pink. But when it comes to picking the ball under lights, it is a little challengin­g for the batsman,” he had said then. Does the pink ball favour pacers or spinners? In that Test against Bangladesh, which lasted two days and 47 minutes and ended in an innings win for the hosts, all the Bangladesh wickets fell to pacers.

However, apart from the Kolkata match, in the two daynight Tests played in Asia (Dubai) spinners were in charge with 46 wickets.

New pitch at Motera

The newly-laid pitch at the refurbishe­d Motera stadium is untested, though Sharma believes it will help spinners.

Turn or no turn, the issue of visibility remains a problem for batsmen when the light conditions change. It led to Sachin Tendulkar giving an important piece of advice to Virat Kohli before the game against Bangladesh.

“He made a very interestin­g point: ‘with the pink ball you will have to treat the second session like a morning session (of a regular Test). When it is getting darker, the ball starts to swing and seam. The first session, you invariably play like you would from lunch to tea in a (day) Test. The second session will be like a morning session and the last session will be like an evening session (of a regular Test),” Kohli had said in 2019.

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