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Pink ball Test cricket : Will it work or is it destined to be a failed experiment?

Abdullah719

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Many thanks to [MENTION=53290]Markhor[/MENTION] for this well-written piece on the future of day-night Test cricket.


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Since the rise of the unstoppable juggernaut known as Twenty20 cricket, the future of Test cricket and its relevance has been subject of fevered debate. The format, outside of Australia and England, has struggled to draw crowds with fears Tests fails to attract a younger generation living in a world of instant gratification that is at odds with the values of the longest format. Some have called for greater context to bilateral series, with this year a controversial system of two tiers of Test cricket mooted. Recently, the ICC proposed plans for Test conferences along the lines of Major League Baseball. One idea has though gained momentum.

On the 29th of October, 2012, the ICC announced new playing conditions that would pave the way for day-night Test cricket. The idea being with play scheduled for evening hours, fans could attend the matches after work. But day-night first class cricket is not a new concept. Australia’s Sheffield Shield experimented with yellow and orange balls in the 1990s. Since then numerous attempts have been made to manufacture a ball that would be: a) visible and b) durable.

Kent batsman Joe Denly after the first ever pink ball county match in 2011 said he “picked the pink ball well from ball one” and he clearly did, given his knock of 69 in that innings. However, others including Australia’s David Warner said that visibility of the pink ball was most difficult at twilight – the period between dusk and darkness, and could not decipher which was the shinier side of the ball, key for a batsman to predict how a ball will swing. Fellow countryman Mitchell Starc has been a vocal critic of the pink ball citing that he “could not see a thing” whilst fielding on the boundary in day night first class matches prior to the inaugural day-night Test in Adelaide between Australia and New Zealand.

One issue that came out after the Adelaide Test was the green thread used to stitch the ball together didn't stand out as clearly as the white stitch used on the red ball. Therefore, the manufacturer, Kookaburra, earlier this year released a new prototype – this time the pink ball would have an all-black seam, including the closing seam which has been usually white.

This ball was put to the test in India’s first ever pink ball experiment at Eden Gardens between club teams Mohun Bagan and Bhowanipore. The visibility issue was markedly improved. Wicketkeeper Wriddhiman Saha said the ball “glowed like radium” and given the quality of slip catching during the match, fielders didn’t seem to have much problems sighting the ball.

Durability, however, is another matter. The Adelaide Oval laid out a grassy wicket after concerns on a more abrasive wicket - the pink ball would discolour quickly, as evident during a Prime Minister’s XI match against New Zealand at Canberra which served as a dress rehearsal to Australia’s first day night Test. At Eden Gardens, a grassy wicket was also used to improve durability, with the seam remaining intact even after 75 overs according to Aakash Chopra who was part of the Star Sports commentary team. Conversely in Dubai, the pink ball had to be changed after merely three overs in Pakistan's 2nd innings on the 4th day of their first ever day-night Test vs West Indies in Dubai. Only one ball in the duration of the Test lasted 80 overs. So, it must be asked how pink ball Test cricket can be sustainable if wickets must be tampered with in order for the ball to last?

What about the effects on the seamers? The latest pink Kookaburra has extra shine meaning in theory it’ll swing conventionally for longer, but will reverse less. John Hastings after Victoria's opening match of the Sheffield Shield season against Queensland at the MCG last year said the pink ball led to a “boring brand of cricket” and after 15 overs stopped swinging. This is hardly an issue limited to the pink ball, however the prodigious swing under lights during the Adelaide Test was not evident in Dubai barring a few initial overs with the new ball. The ball softened quickly and offered no conventional or reverse swing.

In Asia and the UAE especially, the dew factor is another obstacle in the way of the pink ball’s success. Pakistan fast bowler Wahab Riaz commented: "It is difficult and we are having problems with it, especially under the lights," Wahab said. "In the third session there is a lot of dew and the ball gets wet, the seam gets swollen too. When we bowled with the same ball the next day, the ball was very soft and it doesn't do anything off the pitch.”

The effect of the pink ball on spinners is also to be evaluated. Yasir Shah found in training he gained extra bounce from the pink ball. However, the dew factor and playing at night meant the pitch in Dubai didn’t deteriorate particularly and not a great deal of turn was extracted. But in theory, more shine on the ball means more drift and dip for the spinners, but less turn.

With all this being said, the sample size of pink ball matches is small. The balls are continuing to be refined in response to player feedback. The administrators and television companies are firmly behind the idea to revive a declining format meant to be the pinnacle of the sport. However, the idea that we need separate statistics for pink ball Tests as mooted by various ex-cricketers is absurd. Test cricket has evolved throughout time, from the age of matting wickets and uncovered pitches, from 8 ball overs to 6 ball overs, and will continue to evolve with day night cricket being the next step.

Surely, in a world where we can put a man on the moon – it cannot be beyond the wit of man to produce a durable and visible cricket ball at night!
 
Pink ball Cricket may never permit spin or reverse swing. Which makes it like 80% of Red Ball Tests in Australia, New Zealand, South Africa and England.

Consequently I think it will be fine in those four countries.

Batsmen don't like Tests in which 250 plays 250 plays 240 plays 220.

They prefer 500 plays 400 plays 300 plays 300.

But the viewing public loves those lower scoring matches. Which is why the Adelaide Test attracted more TV viewers and more spectators than a 5 day red ball Test, even though it only lasted three days.

My hope is that the Pink Ball will allow series of four 4 Day/Night Tests instead of three 5 Day Tests.

The formula of huge scores with Red Balls is killing Test cricket.
 
Excellent piece as usual!

There are many scientific ways to check or improve quality of cricket balls. Unfrotunately, these companies will not use those. I object to (as did Fazeer in his interview) to "lesser" series being used o refine this ball.

The refinement needs to be done in a lab and in unofficial games.
 
Excellent piece as usual!

There are many scientific ways to check or improve quality of cricket balls. Unfrotunately, these companies will not use those. I object to (as did Fazeer in his interview) to "lesser" series being used o refine this ball.

The refinement needs to be done in a lab and in unofficial games.

Did you notice my comment that I doubt that a Pink Ball will ever take serious spin or any reverse swing?

The white ball has basically not improved in 39 years. And I don't think that the Pink Ball will either.

We should accept it as it is, and use it on greentops in Australia, England, New Zealand and South Africa.
 
Did you notice my comment that I doubt that a Pink Ball will ever take serious spin or any reverse swing?

The white ball has basically not improved in 39 years. And I don't think that the Pink Ball will either.

We should accept it as it is, and use it on greentops in Australia, England, New Zealand and South Africa.

It is not clear at this stage whether what you say will still hold for the next few years as this ball evolves but my issue is that it should be a finished product when handed to any bowler in a series.

As for only using in some series, that is not fair to those nations. ALL play one Test or more with it or no one does.
 
It is not clear at this stage whether what you say will still hold for the next few years as this ball evolves but my issue is that it should be a finished product when handed to any bowler in a series.

As for only using in some series, that is not fair to those nations. ALL play one Test or more with it or no one does.

I am a huge admirer of your posts, but I just can't agree with this.

Cricket is a game. It's entertainment.

Those of us who love Test cricket - and I absolutely love it - cannot be elitists cherishing a game which is played at times when most potential spectators or TV viewers are at work or at school.

Test cricket is just a form of First Class cricket, and First Class cricket - and for that matter Tests - can last 3, 4 or 5 days.

I think we have a responsibility to make Test cricket more accessible, which means playing in the evenings and playing shorter Tests.

I agree that the Pink ball behaves differently to the Red ball. But the Red Kookaburra in combination with grassless wickets has led to disgraceful changes in Test cricket anyway, with massive scores being amassed.

In reality, the Adelaide Pink ball Test was compelling viewing because it had a traditional low-scoring nature, in which no team was dismissed for less than 200 or for more than 300 in an innings and scoring a 50 was great and a century would have been truly special.

I don't think the Pink ball will "improve". In fact, I think Kookaburra are trying to make it much worse, by mimicking the stupid inflated scores of the Red Kookaburra.
 
I am a huge admirer of your posts, but I just can't agree with this.

Cricket is a game. It's entertainment.

Those of us who love Test cricket - and I absolutely love it - cannot be elitists cherishing a game which is played at times when most potential spectators or TV viewers are at work or at school.

Test cricket is just a form of First Class cricket, and First Class cricket - and for that matter Tests - can last 3, 4 or 5 days.

I think we have a responsibility to make Test cricket more accessible, which means playing in the evenings and playing shorter Tests.

I agree that the Pink ball behaves differently to the Red ball. But the Red Kookaburra in combination with grassless wickets has led to disgraceful changes in Test cricket anyway, with massive scores being amassed.

In reality, the Adelaide Pink ball Test was compelling viewing because it had a traditional low-scoring nature, in which no team was dismissed for less than 200 or for more than 300 in an innings and scoring a 50 was great and a century would have been truly special.

I don't think the Pink ball will "improve". In fact, I think Kookaburra are trying to make it much worse, by mimicking the stupid inflated scores of the Red Kookaburra.

I do want Pink Ball to succeed. But I want a level playing field for all. Unless we can come up with a ranking system that somehow takes into account issues with Pink Ball, I would like more work done on this
 
I do want Pink Ball to succeed. But I want a level playing field for all. Unless we can come up with a ranking system that somehow takes into account issues with Pink Ball, I would like more work done on this
Good point.

But if you think about it, in terms of Red Ball cricket, England and West Indies use the Dukes Ball which behaves very differently to the balls used everywhere else.

But we don't insist on a level playing field there!
 
Good point.

But if you think about it, in terms of Red Ball cricket, England and West Indies use the Dukes Ball which behaves very differently to the balls used everywhere else.

But we don't insist on a level playing field there!

You know what? You are 100% correct. But with red balls there is some sort of equality in build quality and the differences are well known and documented.

Pink Ball not so.
 
A good read.

I think lots of work needs to be done and plenty of research if pink ball cricket is to become a success and a regular feature.
 
I think the pink ball has been pretty poor so far and does not offer anything to the bowlers also the lack of durability does not help and supposedly its a very difficult ball to maintain the condition of as well, who ever is designing these balls has some serious work to do.

The pink ball concept is a good one in theory but has be a failure in practice
 
Philander lukewarm on pink ball

Cape Town - South Africa fast bowler Vernon Philander has given pink ball cricket a slightly lukewarm thumbs up, but feels the future will see more day-night Tests.

Philander, who was man of the series in his side's two-one win over Australia, enjoyed the pink ball match in Adelaide, but would have liked more practice.

Australia won by seven wickets on day four, in large part due to their players using the pink ball domestically rather often.

Philander said: "I think we have to get used to the pink ball. We need to experiment with it a bit more.

"Obviously had two warm-up games but I don't think that was sufficient time to get to get used to it, as a bowler.

"But there's definitely a future for the pink ball Test."

Proteas skipper Faf du Plessis was more upbeat about the match. When asked about the experience, he said it surpassed their admittedly low expectations.

He said: "(It was) a lot more positive than I thought it would be before we played it, and I think there's a real future for it."

The next day-night Test will again be in Australia, against Pakistan in December.

http://www.sport24.co.za/Cricket/Proteas/philander-lukewarm-on-pink-ball-20161127
 
Now that the WC is over and we're moving on to Test cricket I thought it might be a good idea to revisit this subject. Well so far we've had 11 day/night test matches in 3.5 years (5 in Australia, 2 in Dubai, and 1 each in England, South Africa, New Zealand and the WIs). The next two pink ball tests are also scheduled to be played in Australia in December.

It seems Australia are very keen on the concept, most others are willing to try it and as usual India will be last to accept anything new (just like DRS).

So where does it go from here?
 
Now that the WC is over and we're moving on to Test cricket I thought it might be a good idea to revisit this subject. Well so far we've had 11 day/night test matches in 3.5 years (5 in Australia, 2 in Dubai, and 1 each in England, South Africa, New Zealand and the WIs). The next two pink ball tests are also scheduled to be played in Australia in December.

It seems Australia are very keen on the concept, most others are willing to try it and as usual India will be last to accept anything new (just like DRS).

So where does it go from here?

DN tests won't do anything in the UAE. However they can be good in SL, Bangladesh, India, Pakistan. In my eyes, they have a good future.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr"><a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/SouravGanguly?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#SouravGanguly</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/BCCIPresident?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#BCCIPresident</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/SGanguly99?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@SGanguly99</a> sets sight on getting India to play day-night Tests<br><br>Read: <a href="https://t.co/WRbdKtJ0Dq">https://t.co/WRbdKtJ0Dq</a> <a href="https://t.co/m5PZtqdjf7">pic.twitter.com/m5PZtqdjf7</a></p>— TOI Sports (@toisports) <a href="https://twitter.com/toisports/status/1184467328261484544?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">October 16, 2019</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
It won't work in the sub continent or UAE due to dew at night. We saw this problem against WI in UAE. Day-night tests in Australia are fine though as it makes the game more exciting on those flat decks. Also in Australia a lot of the time it is too hot to play during the day, day night tests will help solve that problem. We saw in the Ashes 2017/18 that England had to bowl a full day in 48 degree heat.
 
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Pink Ball in its short history has produced some interesting moments. India out on 36 & England 58. A Test match in PE got over in 2 days. SL beat PAK after getting out on 96. D Bishoo wreaked havoc with 8 wickets. Triple Centuries by D Warner & Azhar Ali and a 100 by Yasir Shah!
 
This match was looking really interesting until India imploded. A fan of pink ball myself
 
Would love for the concept to succeed outside Australia. So far, the results are rather mixed. I actually feel it should work in most countries other than England and New Zealand, where evenings are either too cold or the sun doesn't go down till very late at night.

I think if boards allocate a certain period every year for the pink ball test at one venue, it should work. In my view, I'd say the following grounds should be dedicated to host pink ball tests just as Adelaide:

India - Kolkata
Pakistan - Lahore
South Africa - Johannesburg
West Indies - Port of Spain
Sri Lanka - Colombo (the Premadasa)

I don't want to tamper with established fixtures in the calendar which already draw a good crowd (such as the new year's test at Cape Town) or tests at Barbados. You want to cultivate local cricket fans in big towns.
 
Would love for the concept to succeed outside Australia. So far, the results are rather mixed. I actually feel it should work in most countries other than England and New Zealand, where evenings are either too cold or the sun doesn't go down till very late at night.

I think if boards allocate a certain period every year for the pink ball test at one venue, it should work. In my view, I'd say the following grounds should be dedicated to host pink ball tests just as Adelaide:

India - Kolkata
Pakistan - Lahore
South Africa - Johannesburg
West Indies - Port of Spain
Sri Lanka - Colombo (the Premadasa)

I don't want to tamper with established fixtures in the calendar which already draw a good crowd (such as the new year's test at Cape Town) or tests at Barbados. You want to cultivate local cricket fans in big towns.

I think that the Pink Ball is a huge success, and it will be extremely good to see it in Lahore.

The Pink Ball acts much more differently, and it is a great advantage for teams that have consistent and accurate fast bowlers. For spinners, it's a mixed bag. If you bowl in good areas, you can get a few wickets, but it's mostly about being economical as a spinner.

For batsmen, it's easier to see the ball in the later hours, allowing them to score more runs against the older ball, but it is an equally greater challenge facing the new ball. It nips around under lights, and also swings in unpredictable ways. It is a revolution to the dying world of test cricket, and it was much needed.
 
Ideally the pink ball should become the standard ball in ODIs to make ODIs great again. The white ball is pathetic. Doesn't swing, doesn't seam, might as well play with a tennis ball.
 
I think that the Pink Ball is a huge success, and it will be extremely good to see it in Lahore.

The Pink Ball acts much more differently, and it is a great advantage for teams that have consistent and accurate fast bowlers. For spinners, it's a mixed bag. If you bowl in good areas, you can get a few wickets, but it's mostly about being economical as a spinner.

For batsmen, it's easier to see the ball in the later hours, allowing them to score more runs against the older ball, but it is an equally greater challenge facing the new ball. It nips around under lights, and also swings in unpredictable ways. It is a revolution to the dying world of test cricket, and it was much needed.

It's not been a success outside Australia though.

The test at Kolkata was promising but the fact it was so one-sided made it hard to judge the quality of cricket.

The tests at Edgbaston and Auckland were not really successful due to the weather. The sun actually set around 8 pm at Birmingham, allowing barely half an hour of play under lights.
 
I remember when the white ball came about. It swung more than the red ball. Now the white ball Is a dud
 
The tests at Edgbaston and Auckland were not really successful due to the weather. The sun actually set around 8 pm at Birmingham, allowing barely half an hour of play under lights.

Correction: 9 pm. The concept can't be successful in England, as if you play the test during periods when the sun sets a bit early, it will be too cold for the crowd to enjoy the cricket.

The problem in the subcontinent is dew, it was hard to see if the test at Kolkata successfully countered the dew issue given that Bangladesh were completely abysmal, which meant the dew had no real impact on the outcome.
 
Thoughts on Pink-ball test cricket?

Curious to hear thoughts on Pink-ball test matches. In my opinion, the idea could be put on hold for now as it increases the luck factor in test cricket.

Toss becomes potentially more important. Then there is that twilight time, when teams rather declare early to expose the opposition's top order to bad light (?) than put more score on the board. Pink ball is any way more difficult to see for batsmen and does weird things at times like grips more as Root mentioned. There is also the dew factor.

On the other hand it supposedly encourages more people to watch test cricket.
 
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Pink Ball in its short history has produced some interesting moments. India out on 36 & England 58. A Test match in PE got over in 2 days. SL beat PAK after getting out on 96. D Bishoo wreaked havoc with 8 wickets.

Add England's 81 to the list of such interesting moments.
 
It can work but it should not be played in India. They are a disgrace at promoting it in this fashion. It is good watching in Australia.
 
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