Business Day

Cummins: New type of spit and polish needed

- Nick Mulvenney Sydney

Australia fast bowler Pat Cummins believes Test cricket will be much the poorer if using spit and sweat to help shine the ball is banned without some form of replacemen­t in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Cricketers have long used saliva and sweat to shine one side of the ball, altering the aerodynami­cs in an attempt to generate movement in the air as it flies towards the batsman.

The Australian Institute of Sport (AIS)’s protocols for the return of sport in the country, however, specifical­ly rules out the practice because of the danger of transmitti­ng Covid-19.

Cummins, the world’s topranked Test bowler, says that such a radical change to the longest form of game would be unacceptab­le.

“As a fast bowler, I think you’ve got to be able to shine the ball,” he said on the website of his Indian Premier League (IPL) team, the Kolkata Knight Riders.

“Why everyone loves Test cricket is because it has so much art to it. You have swing bowlers, spinners, you have all these different aspects that make Test cricket what it is.

“I think if you can’t shine the ball, that takes away swing bowling, that takes away reverse swing bowling and I just don’t want to give batsmen another reason to score runs.”

Cricket boards are desperate to get players back on the field after social exclusion restrictio­ns are eased to get revenue flowing once more.

Cummins though, believes that the game at the top level will probably not resume while there are still concerns about the transmissi­on of the virus.

“Health is the absolute, the number one priority, but I’m kind of thinking that if we are in a position where we are worried about passing on the coronaviru­s ... I don’t think we would be playing in the first place,” he said.

Australian ball manufactur­er Kookaburra said last week it has developed a wax applicator that will enable cricketers to shine balls without using sweat or saliva.

Cummins believes some sort of alternativ­e is essential if the tried-and-tested methods of generating swing are outlawed.

“I want them to come up with another option. Whether it’s saliva or another substance, we need to shine the ball and make sure it keeps swinging,” he said.

Cummins became the most expensive overseas buy yet in the IPL when the Knight Riders paid $2.18m for him in the 2019 auction.

The money-spinning Twenty20 competitio­n was originally scheduled to start on March 29 but has been postponed indefinite­ly because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

 ??  ?? Pat Cummins
Pat Cummins

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