Business Day

As cricket chases a sugar rush, let’s cut Tests to four days

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The simplest, most direct route into India’s Test team is through the IPL, as counterint­uitive as that sounds. Explosive individual performanc­es in the world’s biggest T20 League, and the world’s second-most valuable sporting league, count for just as much, if not more, than seasons of hard toil and graft in the Ranji Trophy.

The required batting and bowling skills may be different for the two formats, but not quite as different as was initially believed, it seems. A solid batting defence and the ability to bowl a repetitive line and length to build pressure were prerequisi­tes for Test success for more than a century, but things are changing. Quickly.

Test batters are quickly forgiven (if they are even criticised) nowadays for edging an airy drive into the slip cordon if they have already scored a run-a-ball 60. Bowlers conceding five runs an over, who might previously have been scorned, are praised if they have taken a few wickets.

“Temperamen­t” is seen as more important than technique in India where a young batter such as Sarfaraz Khan can’t break into the Test XI with a first-class average of 70 because he flunked in the IPL. Cricketers with more razzmatazz than runs and wickets catch the selectors’ eyes more readily.

The same may happen, quite soon, in SA cricket with the preeminenc­e of the SA20. The current revolution in Test cricket thinking was started by England and is almost certain to catch on everywhere else. The traditiona­l attraction of the attritiona­l cricketer to the five-day game is rapidly fading.

It is just one of the reasons SA should reassert itself at the forefront of the campaign for fourday Test matches. It would not even require the rewriting of any official legislatio­n. Test matches can be as long as a host nation desires, or as short — provided they are sanctioned by the ICC. Lest anyone forget, SA hosted Zimbabwe for an official fourday Test match seven years ago. It ended in less than two.

Four-day fixtures would allow three-match series to be completed in three weeks, each starting on Thursday and finishing on Sunday.

The concept of finishing matches in empty venues on a Monday is horse-and-wagon logic. Test matches don’t last five days any more, especially in SA.

If the “big three” still want to play their vainglorio­us fivematch series between each other over five days, so be it.

Only a tiny minority of those matches creep into a fifth morning anyway, but India, Australia and England can afford the financial indulgence, so let them. Common and financial sense dictates that everyone else should cut a day from Tests to play meaningful series.

Another fascinatin­g and fastdevelo­ping change in the game’s landscape concerns which, and when, players switch their format focus. Until now, the popular convention has been for the best players to retire from Test cricket in their 30s to “cash-in” on the T20 circuit for the rest of their careers.

T20 franchises, mostly IPL owned, have moved away from this logic by increasing­ly signing up young players before they are even in contention for Test selection, and more young players than before are driven by the money.

But here’s the thing. Most of those players still dream about playing Test cricket, and even if they don’t, they still recognise it as the truest test and purest form of the game.

The time will come when the game’s most dynamic players will become very rich on instant noodles before switching, belatedly, to better food. It’s a far more natural and healthy order of events.

Most people are more likely to survive perfectly well on processed food and sugar in their early years before the need for a healthier diet later.

David Miller has enjoyed a magnificen­t internatio­nal career and his only regret, even more than not winning a World Cup, is not playing a Test match. He has played more ODIs than anyone in history without experienci­ng the five-day format. Or four-day. There is an increasing number of white-ball specialist­s in the world, but the most profession­al cricketers still know where the peak of the mountain is.

Test cricket has been in full bloom in recent weeks, and there are three more contests between India and England to look forward to over the next four weeks, with their series tied at one game apiece.

The one bud that failed to blossom was the Proteas, in New Zealand.

They are a doughty bunch of cricketers, they will continue to fight hard, and they deserve respect and support, but they may always be remembered as the “victims” of an administra­tion that categorica­lly refused to compromise on its sugar-first priorities. If and when the best young players decide to change diet in the years to co me, it may be too late.

 ?? NEIL MANTHORP ??
NEIL MANTHORP

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