DeadlyVenom
Senior Test Player
- Joined
- Jul 17, 2010
- Runs
- 27,941
- Post of the Week
- 1
I've recently had a bearish attitude towards the future of test cricket. It probably stems from the steep decline in Pakistan's quality and the decline in interest in the test game in Pakistan. As Pakistan does not have the monetary clout to contend with potential Indian isolation, I have reluctantly felt that Pakistan must de-prioritise its focus on Test cricket to try to raise money and be competitive in the shorter formats. Much of this stems from the toothless actions of the ICC but also from the PCB's incompetence. I think other boards apart from the Big Three are in a similar position.
However, the events of these two test matches kicked me out of my malaise and helped me rekindle my love for the long format (as a fan, from a business perspective, it still seems doomed). I reached out today for the remote control as soon as I woke up before remembering it was all over yesterday.
Some interesting takeaways from me:
1. Sporting pitches make for exciting cricket - it is common sense but it lost on administrators across all formats. You can understand a little bit in LOIs but flat pitches in Test Cricket is criminal ( Ramiz Raja are you listening).
2. We had two games that were riveting with a good balance between bat ( Ollie Pope, Steve Smith etc) and Ball ( Joseph, Hartley)....both concluded within 4 days. Is it time to just go for shorter matches.
3. The most important thing for...every single fan comment, forum post, post on X, post on facebook, general day to day comment said the same thing - I hope Joseph is protected from leagues. The visible ratio of "fans" that want the player to remain in international cricket far outweighs anything else. I haven't seen one comment saying I wish he plays for Melbourne Reds, or Peshawar Zalmi, or New York Abu Dhabi Giants, or I wish the Indian conglomerates sign him for 6 different leagues...so how exactly are the finances so skewed in the favour of many of these artificial leagues. Are we cricket fans living in a bubble, or are the leagues operating in a bubble?
Now how can the ICC capitalise on this:
1: Shorten test cricket to four days ( I know this may be controversial given the overall positive tone of the post towards tests).
2: Schedule games on the same time where possible. For instance yesterdays series could all collectively be marketed as WTC round 5 or something. Try to play as much test cricket in the same window to keep fans engaged.
3: Make all series 3 matches. Oh is India v England more profitable than India v Bangladesh? Doesn't matter. They should both be 3 tests, find a way to make India V Bangladesh or the collective product more marketable. Man City v Liverpool doesn't get more matches than Man City v Luton.
4: Wishful thinking - but ensure that India v Pakistan is a valid WTC fixture. If either side don't play. dock points.
5: Make Classic test matches packaged and readily available viewing on streaming platforms to engage younger viewers. I think tiktoks of epic test battles would engage younger viewers.
We were fortunate that somehow all the stars aligned and the events of yesterday took place. Now is the time to build on top of it.
However, the events of these two test matches kicked me out of my malaise and helped me rekindle my love for the long format (as a fan, from a business perspective, it still seems doomed). I reached out today for the remote control as soon as I woke up before remembering it was all over yesterday.
Some interesting takeaways from me:
1. Sporting pitches make for exciting cricket - it is common sense but it lost on administrators across all formats. You can understand a little bit in LOIs but flat pitches in Test Cricket is criminal ( Ramiz Raja are you listening).
2. We had two games that were riveting with a good balance between bat ( Ollie Pope, Steve Smith etc) and Ball ( Joseph, Hartley)....both concluded within 4 days. Is it time to just go for shorter matches.
3. The most important thing for...every single fan comment, forum post, post on X, post on facebook, general day to day comment said the same thing - I hope Joseph is protected from leagues. The visible ratio of "fans" that want the player to remain in international cricket far outweighs anything else. I haven't seen one comment saying I wish he plays for Melbourne Reds, or Peshawar Zalmi, or New York Abu Dhabi Giants, or I wish the Indian conglomerates sign him for 6 different leagues...so how exactly are the finances so skewed in the favour of many of these artificial leagues. Are we cricket fans living in a bubble, or are the leagues operating in a bubble?
Now how can the ICC capitalise on this:
1: Shorten test cricket to four days ( I know this may be controversial given the overall positive tone of the post towards tests).
2: Schedule games on the same time where possible. For instance yesterdays series could all collectively be marketed as WTC round 5 or something. Try to play as much test cricket in the same window to keep fans engaged.
3: Make all series 3 matches. Oh is India v England more profitable than India v Bangladesh? Doesn't matter. They should both be 3 tests, find a way to make India V Bangladesh or the collective product more marketable. Man City v Liverpool doesn't get more matches than Man City v Luton.
4: Wishful thinking - but ensure that India v Pakistan is a valid WTC fixture. If either side don't play. dock points.
5: Make Classic test matches packaged and readily available viewing on streaming platforms to engage younger viewers. I think tiktoks of epic test battles would engage younger viewers.
We were fortunate that somehow all the stars aligned and the events of yesterday took place. Now is the time to build on top of it.
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