The Citizen (KZN)

ICC, umpires are allowing Test cricket to die

- @KenBorland Ken Borland

Cricket is, in many ways, a strange game but there is nothing as infuriatin­g than play not taking place when blue skies and bright sunshine are overhead. That was the case in Durban last weekend as the first Test between South Africa and New Zealand was allowed to just die with only 99.4 overs being bowled in the match.

As an endangered species, Test cricket needs to be given the utmost support and attention and I firmly believe that where there is a will, there is a way.

Notwithsta­nding the foolishnes­s of Cricket South Africa digging up the Kingsmead outfield in order to soften it two weeks later than they should have, meaning it struggled to cope with unseasonal heavy rain in Durban, the villains of the piece for me were English umpires Ian Gould and Richard Illingwort­h, who showed little in- terest in actually getting play underway, so fixated were they on a few damp patches on the outfield.

The umpires are the final arbiters of what is fair and safe in terms of conditions, but lines have to be drawn somewhere. Both teams were eager to play – in fact the Proteas were gathered on the side of the field shortly after play was finally abandoned on the fifth day eager to have a run-around and get some fitness in, but they were prevented from going on to the field because that would have made the umpires look bad.

I am certain that if it had been an ODI or a T20 match with similar soft areas of outfield, a plan would have been made and the umpires would have done everything in their power to get a game underway.

As usual, the accountabi­lity has been shifted to Kingsmead, who never wanted the outfield dug up in the first place. The Internatio­nal Cricket Council, as usual, passed the buck. There was absolutely no communicat­ion from the match referee, Andy Pycroft, to explain why play was not possible, and he declined to speak to the media. What’s the point of having a match referee if that is his attitude?

To make matters worse, the umpires were so apathetic when it came to making an effort that they actually banned the groundstaf­f from the field when groundsman Wilson Ngobese wanted to proceed with mopping-up operations, saying they preferred to allow natural processes like the sun and wind to run their course.

Week in and week out rugby players are busy making crunching tackles and sidesteppi­ng such collisions in often wet conditions, but how often do one of them turn an ankle? With both teams happy to play, the only conclusion is that Gould and Illingwort­h were being overly precious.

The future of Test cricket may not bother them or Pycroft, but what happened at Kingsmead under their watch was a fiasco and just another small nail in the coffin of the original format of the game.

Proteas captain Faf du Plessis spoke earnestly yesterday about how, for them, Test cricket was still the ultimate and it needed better treatment from the ICC.

“Test cricket is still number one for the players and a Test Championsh­ip is a step in the right direction.

“You ask any of the internatio­nal players and they will tell you that Test cricket is still the best thing to play and we need to play as many Tests as possible.

“You want to be able to say you’ve given everything on the field and that feeling of winning a Test can’t be copied, especially not by T20. I hope the ICC is looking at that,” Du Plessis said.

Sadly, the ICC are more interested in red tape and bureaucrac­y, and are way more likely to jump up and down about overrates, sponsors’ logos being too big or a player saying something even mildly controvers­ial in a press conference.

As usual, the administra­tors seem to think cricket fans are more interested in what they are up to than in the actual game they are meant to be serving.

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