The Herald (South Africa)

Pink the new red in cricket

Day-night format fast increasing in number

- Telford Vice

WITH Zimbabwe set to join the day-night test club against South Africa at St George’s Park on December 26‚ how long before pink balls outnumber red in proper cricket?

A long time yet‚ Stephen Cook hopes.

“It’s good that we’re playing [a day-night test in South Africa] because we’re staying up with the curve and being proactive rather than falling behind‚” the opening batsman said yesterday.

“But it should be an everynow-and-then test match – one in the summer. Then it can keep being special and different.

“If you start playing too much of it, I think it will lose its sparkle quickly.”

That is not to say Cook is not a fan of the pink ball. Why would he not be, having seen and hit it well enough to score 104 in the third test against Australia at the Adelaide Oval in November last year?

“These days not many people can sit through a whole day of test cricket‚” Cook said.

“So if they come after work and watch one or two sessions, maybe we can grow the popularity.”

Australia and New Zealand contested the first day-night test in Adelaide in November 2015‚ and the Ashes test at the same venue ending yesterday was the seventh.

None have been drawn‚ two have been decided inside three days‚ and four have gone to five days – three times in the last four day-nighters.

That progressio­n would not surprise Cook‚ who said: “We went on an A tour [to Australia in August last year, before the senior tour] and I found it very difficult to pick up the ball.”

In four innings facing the pink ball on South Africa A’s visit‚ Cook eked out 58 runs in four innings. Two ended in ducks‚ the others in scored of five and 53.

“After that they changed the colour of the stitching [from green to black] and a couple of other details‚” he said.

“By the time the test squad got to Australia we were playing with a ball that behaved more like the traditiona­l one.

“I think‚ because of the research and developmen­t‚ the ball’s quality is getting better and better.

“It doesn’t get as soft and you can see it better. Yes‚ it swings. But not all the time, like it did at first.

“There are subtle difference­s but it’s not a completely different format of the game.”

Dilip Jajodia‚ who owns the company that produces balls used in major matches in England‚ said in a video interview with the website of London’s Evening Standard newspaper in August that the concept was not the finished article.

“There’s not enough [pink-ball] cricket being played around the world to make large quantities to be able to fine-tune it‚” Jajodia said.

“We’re still sort of developing on the hoof.”

Pink and orange‚ he said‚ were good options.

“We have tried yellow. When the ball goes up in the air‚ under lights‚ it’s very good.

“But when the pitch is a grey‚ slightly beige colour‚ the yellow doesn’t stand out enough.”

Traditiona­lists who brand Jajodia Frankenste­in bent on creating monsters in many colours‚ should know that a smartly knotted tie hung around his neck as he spoke.

It was a Marylebone Cricket Club member’s tie.

 ??  ?? STEPHEN COOK
STEPHEN COOK

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