Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Day-night, 4-day Tests need India’s backing

- IAN CHAPPELL

England have joined a gradually expanding band of Day-Night Test converts, with the concept having already been successful­ly trialled in Australia and by Pakistan in the UAE.

New Zealand are hoping to be the fourth country to join the list in 2018, so the question arises; “When will India schedule a DayNight Test match?”

The timing would be perfect for India. They currently have a strong Test side consistent­ly performing well. Test cricket in India needs resuscitat­ing, as it does in most countries outside England and Australia.

First of all it was ODIs that captured India’s imaginatio­n following the World Cup win in 1983 and then their MS Dhoni-led victory in the inaugural T20 tournament fuelled the highly successful IPL revolution.

The game is in an extremely strong financial state in India, which in turn ensures they’re the powerhouse in world cricket. However, with power comes leadership responsibi­lities and lately the BCCI has struggled to maintain a high standard.

A successful Day-Night Test experience would not only enhance the five-day game in India, it could also do wonders for the BCCI’s public relations image.

It’s crucial for the game that the Indian administra­tive body is seen as a good corporate citizen. Despite occasional murmurings about Test cricket being important, the message emanating from India’s administra­tion seems to be the glorified stature of IPL and their proposed expansion of the glitzy tournament will only serve to confirm this

opinion.

I suspect there are many administra­tors — not just in India — who believe the game can survive on T20 alone. I tend to disagree, whilst admitting it’s becoming ever harder to predict what might happen in the future with technology moving at space travel speed. If cricket in the future is played by two teams featuring artificial­ly intelligen­t players and adjudicate­d by robot umpires, it’s hard to imagine they’ll be programmed to play five days.

However, that’s no excuse for not trying to preserve Test cricket so that players in the near future will at least have the choice of enjoying the game’s ultimate challenge. Test cricket is often largely neglected in the officials’ inordinate haste to fill the coffers via the introducti­on of T20 leagues.

Sure, it’s wise to capitalise on the popularity of the T20 phenomenon and enhance the financial security of the game, as well as expand it’s popularity but at the same time the longer version needs constant nurturing.

If administra­tors still retain hopes of preserving Test cricket, then DayNight games are one way of enhancing the nurturing process. Playing under lights, combined with a move to four day games —Thursday to Sunday — to enhance the product for television, would be the ideal format for an exciting World Championsh­ip, which would inject muchneeded life into the longer version.

However, like most things in the game of cricket it won’t become a reality unless it gets the seal of approval from India.

Day-Night Tests in India’s traditiona­l cricket season (winter) would be ideal.

In the eastern regions in particular, it gets dark early and this allows for a number of hours of floodlight play as compared with say England where the natural light lingers. The prospect of heavy dew is an irritant but this problem could be overcome by smart scheduling and improvemen­ts in technology.

Day-Night Tests are one step in the process of dragging the longer version of the game into the 21st century. The credibilit­y of Day-Night Tests will only be enhanced by the strong backing of cricket’s most powerful body.

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