Business Day

ICC set to give Test championsh­ip nod

- Agency Staff Wellington /AFP

The Internatio­nal Cricket Council (ICC) is set to approve plans for its long-awaited World Test Championsh­ip at a meeting in New Zealand this week, it was reported on Monday.

The sport’s governing body has argued for years that a Test championsh­ip is needed to boost the five-day format’s popularity as crowds and television viewers flock to the big-hitting Twenty20 version of the game.

But squabbling over formats and fears that some nations will be disadvanta­ged have twice stymied efforts to launch a league structure since 2010.

The Sydney Morning Herald reported that plans for a ninenation Test championsh­ip were now well advanced and the ICC was set to give the concept the green light on Friday at a meeting in Auckland. It said the first edition of the competitio­n would run over a two-year cycle beginning in 2019, culminatin­g in a final at Lord’s.

Cricket Australia CE James Sutherland said the league competitio­n would give Test series a broader internatio­nal “context”, making them more than standalone bilateral contests. “You’re also creating structure in such a way that you no longer have games without meaning. They are all part of a league championsh­ip,” he told the Herald.

Purists view Test cricket as the pinnacle of the sport but it has struggled, particular­ly in Asia, as lucrative T20 competitio­ns such as the Indian Premier League have caught the public’s imaginatio­n. A recent innovation designed to reverse the trend is the introducti­on of day-night Test matches, which moves playing sessions to more spectator-friendly hours.

The idea of four-day Test matches has also been floated, although traditiona­lists oppose the move.

The Herald reported that the ICC would also look at a major shake-up of one-day internatio­nal fixtures.

It said a 13-nation ODI league was being considered, which would operate on a three-year cycle with results affecting World Cup qualificat­ion.

Under the plans, the number of ODIs in a series would be capped at three, ending the lengthy five-match series that are currently part of the internatio­nal fixture list.

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