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Four Tests in 18 months: New Zealand’s schedule a harbinger of what is to come

Abdullah719

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Meet New Zealand, the ghost Test cricket team. From March 2017 to October 2018, the side will play a paltry four Tests in 18 months. In the same period Joe Root, one of Kane Williamson’s biggest rivals for the mantle of the best Test batsman in the world, will play 21 Tests for England.

Understandably, senior players are privately bemoaning the paucity of five-day action. The little Test cricket that is being played is also being pushed to the margins of early December and the end of March, a soft flatbread to the 13 ODIs and 10 T20s that fill the meaty chunk of New Zealand’s summer.

In part this is all a quirk, more a reflection of irregularities in cricket’s playing schedule – unusually, New Zealand didn’t have a Test tour last winter – than any grand design. Yet really New Zealand’s summer fixture list is best understood as a glimpse of the future – not just for the country, but for the wider cricketing world.

This summer, New Zealand Cricket chose to scrap one Test against the West Indies, previously designated to be a three-match series. “It’s fair to say that hosting a Test match in New Zealand before Christmas is financially a challenge,” says David White, the organisation’s chief executive. It is a window into the economic obstacles to playing Test matches. For home boards, most Tests make a net loss of over US$500,000 – particularly significant given the sport’s lack of equitable revenue sharing. New Zealand Cricket’s annual revenue is US$35m; Cricket Australia’s is US$270m, almost eight times as much. For countries like New Zealand – really, all bar Australia, England and India, the sport’s economic Big Three – financial realities militate against staging more Tests.

And so New Zealand’s summer schedule is a harbinger of what is to come. White envisages that future summers will involve two tourists, each playing two Tests, three ODIs and three T20Is. “Two-three-three times two is our model,” he says. During New Zealand’s run of seven Test series unbeaten from 2013-15, coach Mike Hesson said his side had “earned the right” to play longer Test series. Now it is conceivable that they might not play a three-match Test series, let alone anything longer, ever again.

The same is true for other nations, too. The ICC is close to agreeing new leagues in Test and ODI cricket, beginning in 2019, introducing clear consequences – reaching the World Test final, or automatic World Cup qualification – that tours currently lack. Under the plans, series would ordinarily consist of two Test matches – though boards would be free to play additional games, meaning that the Ashes could remain a five-match series – and three ODIs. This being cricket, the nine teams in the Test league would only play six opponents over two years – three at home and three away – because of the overcrowded schedule and India’s unwillingness to pay Pakistan. New Zealand would only be guaranteed an average of six Tests a year, although White says that the board will endeavour to play around eight a year.

The new Test schedule reflects the format’s challenge to be commercially sustainable. Other things being equal, at the start of the decade broadcasters apportioned a worth of three points to each Tests, two to each ODI, and 0.75 to each T20 international. Today, each T20I is worth three points, ODIs are still worth two points – but Tests only one. All the while, domestic T20 club competitions are thriving. This month, broadcasting rights to the Indian Premier League were sold for four times the annual amount of the current contract for India’s home internationals: a seminal moment in cricket tilting from being a nation v nation game to more of a club v club sport.

So the international game, especially Test and ODI cricket, risks being cannibalised by T20 leagues. White believes the belated introduction of international leagues will make fans more inclined to watch, including games between other countries which will affect their position in the table. “If you’ve got context and narrative around all fixtures it’s going to add commercial value. There’s no question about that.” Heath Mills, chief executive of the New Zealand Cricket Players’ Association, says that, “We will likely end up playing less Test cricket” but “by playing less it could well become more valuable”.

“Nothing is more responsible for the good old days than a bad memory,” the American columnist Franklin Pierce Adams said. The same is true with New Zealand’s past in Test cricket: the team has always endured long fallow periods in their schedule. The 1980s team of Crowe and Hadlee played just 59 Tests all decade; in 2007, the team played two Tests. Generally, the side has played around eight Tests a year – 81 in the 1990s, and 80 in the 2000s. Though England have so far played 31 more Tests than New Zealand in the 2010s, New Zealand’s tally, of 66 Tests, will end up approaching their previous decade record of 81.

New Zealand Cricket is regarded as one of the world’s most astute boards even if, given the competition, that accolade feels like being one of Henry VIII’s preferred wives. Their template for internationals – the 2-3-3x2 structure – is at least a coherent answer to international cricket’s existential questions: how to fit everything in, in a way that fans can understand and gives matches proper context? And so, in New Zealand and beyond, a future beckons in which Test cricket must know its place.

https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2...lands-schedule-a-harbinger-of-what-is-to-come
 
Kane might as well retire from Tests and start playing T20 leagues like Gayle.
 
Meet New Zealand, the ghost Test cricket team. From March 2017 to October 2018, the side will play a paltry four Tests in 18 months. In the same period Joe Root, one of Kane Williamson’s biggest rivals for the mantle of the best Test batsman in the world, will play 21 Tests for England.

Understandably, senior players are privately bemoaning the paucity of five-day action. The little Test cricket that is being played is also being pushed to the margins of early December and the end of March, a soft flatbread to the 13 ODIs and 10 T20s that fill the meaty chunk of New Zealand’s summer.

In part this is all a quirk, more a reflection of irregularities in cricket’s playing schedule – unusually, New Zealand didn’t have a Test tour last winter – than any grand design. Yet really New Zealand’s summer fixture list is best understood as a glimpse of the future – not just for the country, but for the wider cricketing world.

This summer, New Zealand Cricket chose to scrap one Test against the West Indies, previously designated to be a three-match series. “It’s fair to say that hosting a Test match in New Zealand before Christmas is financially a challenge,” says David White, the organisation’s chief executive. It is a window into the economic obstacles to playing Test matches. For home boards, most Tests make a net loss of over US$500,000 – particularly significant given the sport’s lack of equitable revenue sharing. New Zealand Cricket’s annual revenue is US$35m; Cricket Australia’s is US$270m, almost eight times as much. For countries like New Zealand – really, all bar Australia, England and India, the sport’s economic Big Three – financial realities militate against staging more Tests.

And so New Zealand’s summer schedule is a harbinger of what is to come. White envisages that future summers will involve two tourists, each playing two Tests, three ODIs and three T20Is. “Two-three-three times two is our model,” he says. During New Zealand’s run of seven Test series unbeaten from 2013-15, coach Mike Hesson said his side had “earned the right” to play longer Test series. Now it is conceivable that they might not play a three-match Test series, let alone anything longer, ever again.

The same is true for other nations, too. The ICC is close to agreeing new leagues in Test and ODI cricket, beginning in 2019, introducing clear consequences – reaching the World Test final, or automatic World Cup qualification – that tours currently lack. Under the plans, series would ordinarily consist of two Test matches – though boards would be free to play additional games, meaning that the Ashes could remain a five-match series – and three ODIs. This being cricket, the nine teams in the Test league would only play six opponents over two years – three at home and three away – because of the overcrowded schedule and India’s unwillingness to pay Pakistan. New Zealand would only be guaranteed an average of six Tests a year, although White says that the board will endeavour to play around eight a year.

The new Test schedule reflects the format’s challenge to be commercially sustainable. Other things being equal, at the start of the decade broadcasters apportioned a worth of three points to each Tests, two to each ODI, and 0.75 to each T20 international. Today, each T20I is worth three points, ODIs are still worth two points – but Tests only one. All the while, domestic T20 club competitions are thriving. This month, broadcasting rights to the Indian Premier League were sold for four times the annual amount of the current contract for India’s home internationals: a seminal moment in cricket tilting from being a nation v nation game to more of a club v club sport.

So the international game, especially Test and ODI cricket, risks being cannibalised by T20 leagues. White believes the belated introduction of international leagues will make fans more inclined to watch, including games between other countries which will affect their position in the table. “If you’ve got context and narrative around all fixtures it’s going to add commercial value. There’s no question about that.” Heath Mills, chief executive of the New Zealand Cricket Players’ Association, says that, “We will likely end up playing less Test cricket” but “by playing less it could well become more valuable”.

“Nothing is more responsible for the good old days than a bad memory,” the American columnist Franklin Pierce Adams said. The same is true with New Zealand’s past in Test cricket: the team has always endured long fallow periods in their schedule. The 1980s team of Crowe and Hadlee played just 59 Tests all decade; in 2007, the team played two Tests. Generally, the side has played around eight Tests a year – 81 in the 1990s, and 80 in the 2000s. Though England have so far played 31 more Tests than New Zealand in the 2010s, New Zealand’s tally, of 66 Tests, will end up approaching their previous decade record of 81.

New Zealand Cricket is regarded as one of the world’s most astute boards even if, given the competition, that accolade feels like being one of Henry VIII’s preferred wives. Their template for internationals – the 2-3-3x2 structure – is at least a coherent answer to international cricket’s existential questions: how to fit everything in, in a way that fans can understand and gives matches proper context? And so, in New Zealand and beyond, a future beckons in which Test cricket must know its place.

https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2...lands-schedule-a-harbinger-of-what-is-to-come

Natural selection at work. I love following test cricket, but just like most i prefer to watch only a portion of the play. Tests should not be killed off. But at the same time test aficionados like us should value the financial contribution that T20s are making to keep tests alive in life support. Left to itself it will not survive beyond, England, Australia, India and possibly South Africa. I think in a decade England, Aus and India will be playing around 12+ matches a year and remaining teams will playing the bare minimum to keep them qualified as test nations
 
Tests are regarded as #1 but they are not popular or financially viable. 500k loss per test is crazy. In commercial terms you'd ditch the product.
 
Test schedules are getting more and more unfair

From March 2017 to October 2018, New Zealand will play just four Tests in 18 months. In the same period England will play 21 Tests (in 2016, England played 17 tests). India have a similarly heavy workload. The system, motivated by dollars, is rigged against star batsmen in the smaller teams; Kane Williamson's in his prime, for example, and won't get the same opportunities to jack up his statistics like his contemporaries do.
 
Tendulkar suffered from this in the 90s, India played very few tests during his monstrous peak

The system was always biased
 
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Feel for Kane Williamson. It's so unfair on him while Root, Kohli and Smith get to cash in on their peak.

Yasir Shah also misses out on many tests cos Pakistan doesn't play as often as India.

Imagine Tendulkar's stats if we had played as many tests as now and he had retired after WC 2011. Played just 67 tests out of 200 in 90s. Not hard to calculate but I bet his average would have been 62-65. Was almost 58 in 2011.
 
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Feel for Kane Williamson. It's so unfair on him while Root, Kohli and Smith get to cash in on their peak.

Yasir Shah also misses out on many tests cos Pakistan doesn't play as often as India.

Imagine Tendulkar's stats if we had played as many tests as now and he had retired after WC 2011. Played just 67 tests out of 200 in 90s. Not hard to calculate but I bet his average would have been 62-65. Was almost 58 in 2011.

I may be wrong. India and Pakistan have played similar amount of tests since his debut.
 
Cook Anderson etc have all benefited from this In no other era could you play 7-10 years of intl cricket and have 10k plus runs or 500 plus test wickets
 
Well i dont know why NZ arent playing more , pakistan dont play India and for some reason we denied to play bangladesh but there is absolutely no excuse for NZ.
 
Cook Anderson etc have all benefited from this In no other era could you play 7-10 years of intl cricket and have 10k plus runs or 500 plus test wickets

Spot on, Anderson wouldn't have taken more than 200 wickets playing for any other country, mostly because he's garbage outside england and would have been dropped a lot sooner but also because other countries don't play so many tests as England
 
Cricket: Williamson pushes lack of tests out of mind

New Zealand are determined to make the best of a lopsided international schedule this summer, even if it is badly skewed in favour of short form cricket.

There are just four tests this season, two against the West Indies in early December, then two to wrap up the summer against England in late March.

There are 29 - or possibly 30, depending on the identity of the teams to contest the T20 tri-series final at Eden Park on February 18 - limited-overs internationals, starting with the late inclusion of a trip to India beginning on October 22.

The lack of tests is disappointing but captain Kane Williamson has a simple view of the schedule: roll up the sleeves and make the best of it.

"The challenge of sport in general is getting the mind right," he said.

"Usually you have a few more tests and it's shared with one-dayers and tests. There's plenty of white ball cricket and it's important guys can refresh when needed, but in saying that there lies a really good opportunity for the one-day side."

Williamson is still smarting over New Zealand's awful Champions Trophy campaign in England in June, their most recent international cricket. But his own form was strong, 244 runs at an average of 81, but other players failed to deliver. It may seem a way off, but Williamson pointed out there's another World Cup on the horizon in 2019.

So while the schedule is certainly not to all tastes, Williamson's philosophy is make the most of it.

"Without a doubt. Whenever you have an opportunity to play for your country that's a big bonus, whether it's a test, one-dayer or T20.

"We've had good performances as a side in recent times - the Champions Trophy not being one of them. But not putting performances on the board we'd have liked can help with learnings moving forward. The large number of one-dayers is a good opportunity to build."

New Zealand have a mixed bag of opponents coming up with matches against India, West Indies, Pakistan, Australia (as part of the tri-series) and finally England.

Williamson steers away from talking in specific target terms, such as what he'd like a winning percentage to be over the summer.

"Winning and losing is the business you're in, but in terms of our focus, it's very much on how the team is tracking and hopefully results can take care of themselves."

Williamson, test average 51.16, ODI average 46.98, is the only batsman who ranks in the top six in all three forms of the game. Not Steve Smith, not Joe Root, not Virat Kohli.

So his own game is in good order and he feels fresh and ready to go, after his sojourn in the Caribbean Premier League.

Williamson, 27, took over as New Zealand captain from Brendon McCullum from the world T20 tournament in India in March last year.

He believes he is developing as a leader and decision maker.

"My captaincy is certainly a collective approach. The thought is what does this team need, how are we going as a group and how best to make sure it keeps moving in the right direction."

India are beckoning, New Zealand picking up a vacant slot in the Indian programme when Pakistan's bilateral tour there was cancelled, which was no surprise given the political climate between the neighbours.

"There's no bigger challenge than India in India."

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/sport/news/article.cfm?c_id=4&objectid=11928294
 
younis had to play 17 years or so to get to his 10k

I believe cook got them in a decade or so
 
Losing $500,000 US per Test...

Glad we cut the third Test with WI.
 
New Zealand playing just 4 Tests all home summer across 18 months

2 against WI and 2 against England.

We're scheduled to play 4 Tests across 18 months from March 2017 to October 2018. England and Australia will play more across 2 months than we will across a year and half.

The Boxing Day Test has been scrapped and we'll be playing an ODI with WI this year.

It wont be long before we're having 2 Test summers and then eventually none with all cricket being played being ODIs or T20Is.

It costs $1m to stage a Test and they're not lucrative either. Guess Kane's and Boult's Test records will take a hit and it's probably unlikely Kane will go on to surpass Crowe to become our best Test batsmen.
 
I fail to understand why don't Pakistan & New Zealand play regularly? I mean both have an exciting/talented set of players, both are not overly booked, both teams might be going through a bit of transition. So what exaclty is holding them back?

A reciprocal five-match test series in NZ and or Eng/Pakistan (I don't want to play anymore in the UAE :( ) would totally be a competitive contest and would bring in a lot of spectator interest from both sides.

Get on it on PCB! Come on Guys!! :livid: :69:
 
New Zealand ko deewar se lagaya ja raha hai!

:)) :)) - Nz kia sab ko Rozgaar deta hay? Aur Biryani Kaise milti hay NZ mein?

These factors are if not but as important as any other factor that might determine this.

#IOwnNewZealand
 
I fail to understand why don't Pakistan & New Zealand play regularly? I mean both have an exciting/talented set of players, both are not overly booked, both teams might be going through a bit of transition. So what exaclty is holding them back?

A reciprocal five-match test series in NZ and or Eng/Pakistan (I don't want to play anymore in the UAE :( ) would totally be a competitive contest and would bring in a lot of spectator interest from both sides.

Get on it on PCB! Come on Guys!! :livid: :69:
NZC doesn't want to host Tests.

We're playing a T20 tri series with England and Australia early next year

This summer, New Zealand Cricket chose to scrap one Test against the West Indies, previously designated to be a three-match series. “It’s fair to say that hosting a Test match in New Zealand before Christmas is financially a challenge,” says David White, the organisation’s chief executive. It is a window into the economic obstacles to playing Test matches. For home boards, most Tests make a net loss of over US$500,000 – particularly significant given the sport’s lack of equitable revenue sharing. New Zealand Cricket’s annual revenue is US$35m; Cricket Australia’s is US$270m, almost eight times as much. For countries like New Zealand – really, all bar Australia, England and India, the sport’s economic Big Three – financial realities militate against staging more Tests.
 
We're officially into 4 Test home summers

And so New Zealand’s summer schedule is a harbinger of what is to come. White envisages that future summers will involve two tourists, each playing two Tests, three ODIs and three T20Is.

Hesson wanted 3 match series, but our board doesn't even want to play those at home :)))

Looks like 2 match Test series it is for life until the format is dead for good.
 
NZC doesn't want to host Tests.

We're playing a T20 tri series with England and Australia early next year

Test cricket has lost it's charm and marketability because Boards have stopped playing them for an extended period of time. I assure you two competitive 5 match series each in International standard stadiums would garner much more interest and spectator support + financial benefits than having 5-6 small 2 match series against varying oppositions.

We need to create a rivalry based narrative in order for test cricket to come to the fore once again and there is no better way to do that unless and until we start playing these same extended series. We lose so much money hosting SL and God know who in the UAE; I won't ask NZ since it's the money they spent is their preogative but Pakistan should most definately give this concept a go with either NZ or SA.
 
Test cricket has lost it's charm and marketability because Boards have stopped playing them for an extended period of time. I assure you two competitive 5 match series each in International standard stadiums would garner much more interest and spectator support + financial benefits than having 5-6 small 2 match series against varying oppositions.

We need to create a rivalry based narrative in order for test cricket to come to the fore once again and there is no better way to do that unless and until we start playing these same extended series. We lose so much money hosting SL and God know who in the UAE; I won't ask NZ since it's the money they spent is their preogative but Pakistan should most definately give this concept a go with either NZ or SA.
I've given up on it, if the executives in charge are talking about it like that, there's no hope. Hesson has wanted to play 3 match series, but he cannot even get more than that at home. Two series with 2 Tests a summer is the future, but it wont be long before it's down to 1 match and then eventually no Tests and 3-4 LOI series a summer.
 
If we're phasing out Tests, can we at least get a proper T20 league?

It would be nice to have a local team to get behind. Just need NZC to really get behind the league and find some investors who have the money to bring the best players from around the world to play in NZ.
 
NZ needs 4 day tests; 100 overs daily Thursday to Sunday. And staying away from venues where there is a risk of washouts.
 
We play two ‘home’ tests a year.

So I would be a bit more grateful if I were you.:kp
 
Man as a Kiwi this breaks my heart.
Just 2 years ago our board was saying we deserve 3-5 test match series because we are a exciting Test team that is competitive..... now this?

Very sad for players like Boult and Williamson. Williamson could potentially challenge any batting record, now no chance with playing only 4 per year at home and at Max 4 overseas.
 
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Man as a Kiwi this breaks my heart.
Just 2 years ago our board was saying we deserve 3-5 test match series because we are a exciting Test team that is competitive..... now this?

Very sad for players like Boult and Williamson. Williamson could potentially challenge any batting record, now no chance with playing only 4 per year at home and at Max 4 overseas.
Under B-Mac the team was looking like one of the best in the world. They drew in England and were runner ups in the WC. But after he retired, the same players with the same team lacks penetration.
 
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Man as a Kiwi this breaks my heart.
Just 2 years ago our board was saying we deserve 3-5 test match series because we are a exciting Test team that is competitive..... now this?

Very sad for players like Boult and Williamson. Williamson could potentially challenge any batting record, now no chance with playing only 4 per year at home and at Max 4 overseas.
Yeah, his stats are going to take a big hit. You can only do so much in 2 Test match series, by the time you're aclimitzied and ready to perform, the series is over.

I guess at least he'll get the chance to improve as a LOI batsmen, since Test cricket will take a back seat to the other formats.

I do like the idea of a regular tri series in the summer though, as long as top teams are invited over.

Also, since we're saving money from hosting less Tests, I'd like to see a proper T20 league which casuals can really get behind like the IPL, BBL, PSL. It would do wonders for the sport in NZ, especially at a time where RL is doing so badly in Auckland.
 
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Kane might as well retire from Tests and start playing T20 leagues like Gayle.
We might as well stop playing Test cricket, we're not going to be any good playing 4-5 Tests a year. All we're doing is losing money that could be used to promote the game in the country at a time another is really struggling.
 
If we're phasing out Tests, can we at least get a proper T20 league?

It would be nice to have a local team to get behind. Just need NZC to really get behind the league and find some investors who have the money to bring the best players from around the world to play in NZ.

Thats part of the problem. NZ, WI, and SL are basically high performing Zimbabwes. Zimbabwe is a weak team and can't afford to play. NZ is a good team that also can't afford to play. There is probably not enough commercial interest in NZ to have a T20 league.

NZ, SL, WI are going to have to use their World Cup revenue to finance as many home Tests as possible. That and an India home series every 4 years.
 
Thats part of the problem. NZ, WI, and SL are basically high performing Zimbabwes. Zimbabwe is a weak team and can't afford to play. NZ is a good team that also can't afford to play. There is probably not enough commercial interest in NZ to have a T20 league.

NZ, SL, WI are going to have to use their World Cup revenue to finance as many home Tests as possible. That and an India home series every 4 years.
We could get sponsors from India, hell would be fantastic if they let Indian players particpate. The league would be of no threat to theres and they could treat it as a paid holiday.
 
We could get sponsors from India, hell would be fantastic if they let Indian players particpate. The league would be of no threat to theres and they could treat it as a paid holiday.

No point in even speculating on that. Might as well envision BCCI agreeing to share all their revenue with the PCB.

Apart from that, having to rely on Indian sponsorship is evidence that cricket really isn't a viable sport in NZ. Same with SL. Not really sure about the WI because all the islands combined would still have a pretty tiny economy. At any rate the CPL seems to be doing fairly well.

So if the NZC have to redistribute income from ICC events or LOI series to finance Test cricket, I don't see what the big problem is. Under the Test league every team will have 3 series per year. If NZ only plays 2 match series at home, thats 3-3.5 home Tests per year and if all of NZ away series are 3 match affairs that is another 4.5 Tests per year so the grand total is 7.5-8 Tests per year. Thats pretty fair when compared to what the Big 3 are likely to get. India would be playing 10.5 Tests per year based on their reported FTP (5 vs ENG, 4 each vs AUS and SA, 3 vs SL and NZ, and 2 vs BD).

I highly doubt any teams will play series outside the League because the various T20 leagues will take up all the time plus those series will be meaningless bilateral contexts without anything at stake.
 
Four Tests a summer not enough: Williamson

Captain Kane Williamson has expressed unease at the dearth of Test cricket for his high-flying Test team this summer.

A 2-0 series win over the West Indies kickstarted their home campaign and was followed by a tense 1-0 victory over England, courtesy of their dramatic drawn second Test in Christchurch.

That result lifts New Zealand past a beleaguered Australia into third place on the world Test rankings, trailing only India and South Africa.

Yet most of the home summer program comprised limited-overs cricket, which Williamson hopes won't become a regular pattern.

"We've played four (Tests) this year, I think there is a little bit of frustration," he said.

"But it's a year where there hasn't been a lot.

"I think there's eight next year, and maybe 10 after that, so there is a lot coming up.

"The team love playing Test cricket. Four, guys weren't ecstatic with."

By trumping England, Williamson marked the overall summer a success.

They whitewashed the West Indies in all three formats before doing the same against Pakistan in the one-day international series but losing the Twenty20 series.

Only one of five matches were won in the trans-Tasman T20 tri-series while England pipped them in the ODI series.

"The way the test team performed in the whites was superb, in a number of different situations," Williamson said.

"As a Test team we are growing and improving but certainly there's still work to be done."

New Zealand won't play for six months, when they conduct a full tour away to Pakistan.

The top Black Caps will have little respite, however, with Williamson among a group whose IPL contracts begin this week.

English county contracts await others.

http://home.nzcity.co.nz/news/article.aspx?id=266823&fm=newsmain,nrhl
 
Well this was a brilliant win for New Zealand and it is sad that they don't get to play more tests. Hopefully in the coming years as Williamson has said, they will get more tests to play.
 
Test cricket is a complete utter failure outside Eng and Aus. It's nothing but a leech that's feedng off the money from LOI. NZ should focus on more ODIs and T20s meanwhile. People have time to watch those.

Good to see people finally giving this junk of an antiquity the boot it deserves
 
The Christchurch Test had full crowds over the weekend, stop talking dribble. I went on Saturday and it looked sold out
 
Pak, NZ, SA and WI should play more tests against each other, with Pak still having routine matches against England. It would help all involved.

for me, Williamson is one of the best to watch and its sad to see him so rarely in the ultimate format.
 
The Christchurch Test had full crowds over the weekend, stop talking dribble. I went on Saturday and it looked sold out

Well tests still dont sell as well in NZ as they do in England or Aus, that much is true but India often has a long test schedule but their stadiums are even more empty than NZ and SA.

It is ultimately down to the deal struck by the so called Big Three but things are changing as the big three experiment was an utter failure. There will also be introduction of the 9 team tournament style calendar so more tests are coming for all.
 
The Christchurch Test had full crowds over the weekend, stop talking dribble. I went on Saturday and it looked sold out

That was an exception than the norm. It was a holiday/extended weekend. Once the holiday was done, it was an empty stadium.

In fact the 5th day which seems to have been the best cricket played in the NZ summer, no one to watch it.

NZ I am sure is losing money staging tests. The bill still have to be paid and money has to come from somewhere. Which is why they are slowly moving away from it and towards ODI and T20's.
 
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