What's new

Why Test cricket still needs its fifth day

jnaveen1980

ODI Captain
Joined
Mar 19, 2016
Runs
45,713
https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2017/oct/04/why-test-cricket-still-needs-its-fifth-day

Why Test cricket still needs its fifth day
There are good arguments for rationalising the calendar and decluttering the fixture list, but the case for cutting off the fifth day’s play is less convincing


jUqfhQG.jpg


The long and the short of it
After some weeks in the jungle, Philip Halden decided the best thing to do was teach his kidnappers to play cricket. Halden, a 48-year-old engineering consultant from Stoke-on-Trent, was snatched while he was working in Bogota in 1996. He persuaded one of the guards to lend him a machete, and took what he described as “great pains” to carve a “really heavy Gooch-type bat” and a whole batch of balls, then set about instructing them in the Laws. The guerrillas were Marxist-Leninists and neither they nor his fellow captives, a Dane and a Colombian, particularly enjoyed the game, except in that it took so long to play it killed a lot of time. It was eight months before the three were finally freed.

This, then, was a rare case of strangers to the game finding its length to be the most appealing thing about it. Nothing about Test cricket seems to boggle newcomers to it quite like the fact it lasts so long, which is the very thing those of us who love it like the most. “I hardly think,” Tom Stoppard put it when he first saw live baseball, “that I can be expected to take seriously a game which takes less than three days to reach its conclusion.” Test matches have, of course, been known to go on more than twice as long without finishing. The Beckettian timeless Test between England and South Africa in 1939 lasted 11 days before they finally called it all off.

Time was when Tests were scheduled to last three, four, or many more days. Five days, the length of a working week, has been the standard since 1979. The only exception since the ill-starred Super Test between Australia and the Rest of the World in 2005. That was scheduled to last six, but finished in three-and-a-half. It was supposed to be the first in a series, repeated once every four years, but the idea was abandoned exactly one hour after the inaugural match was over, its only legacy a lingering argument between the ICC and assorted cricket statisticians over whether or not the match should have official status, since the regulations state that “Test matches shall be of five days scheduled duration”.

That’s about to change. Cricket South Africa wants to stage a four-day day-night Test against Zimbabwe this winter. They’re going to petition the ICC for permission at the Chief Executives Conference in New Zealand next week. And given that the game’s many mandarins have been talking up four-day Tests for some time now, it seems CSA is likely to get its way. Officials from England, South Africa, Sri Lanka and New Zealand have all spoken out in support of the idea in the last year or so. Their thinking is that since so few games last more than 400 overs, you can squeeze them down by stretching play later into the evening and making the players get through more overs in the day. This game is likely to be the first of many.

Between them, the executives have put forward a bunch of reasons, all variations on the seven-letter theme mo’ money. New Zealand’s David White wants to do it because it will mean they can fit a three-match series into 18 days, whereas right now, when you add in the rest days between back-to-back matches, they take closer to 26. Sri Lanka’s Thilanga Sumathipala wants to do it because he thinks that if play stretches on for another 45 overs each evening, then the games will pull in bigger crowds after work each night. England’s Colin Graves, who made his name running Costcutter, believes it will reduce expenditure for the grounds and the broadcasters. All three agree that if matches are cut to four days, then they should always run from Thursday through to Sunday.

The players, fans, and, it seems, pretty much everyone else who has publicly discussed the issue seem to be on the other side of the argument. A couple of South Africa’s players came out against it just this week. “I don’t think you should tinker with something that’s not broken,” said Dean Elgar. “There are other formats that are being experimented with. I don’t see why Test cricket should suffer.” And here’s Faf du Plessis: “I am a fan of five-day Test cricket. I believe the great Test matches have gone to the last hour of the last day on day five. That’s what is so special about Test cricket.”


Add to that the MCC, whose new chief executive, Guy Lavender, came out in support of five-day Tests in the Telegraph, and the ICC’s own cricket committee, who decided just a couple of years ago that “Test matches should not be shorter than five days”, with the caveat that “the game will need to be open to considering proposals in the future that look to enhance the public appeal of cricket’s oldest format.” Aside from the brute economics of it, this seems to be the key argument for shortening Test cricket. Something has to be done! And this it seems, is what the administrators have decided something should look like.

They say that fewer Tests go to a fifth day, which is true, but around six out of every 10 played still do. And the best of them, like the Tests between England and West Indies at Headingley, and Pakistan and Sri Lanka in Abu Dhabi, are as good as this game gets, a better advert for it than anything the ICC’s marketing consultants have concocted. There are good arguments for rationalising the calendar and decluttering the fixture list, but the case for cutting off the fifth day’s play is less convincing. Cricket administrators with grand plans are like Greeks bearing gifts. It’s best to be wary.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
4 day test is a foolish idea, what if one day is washed out then the chance of result will be nearly 0 , while there is still chance to get a result in 4 days with 1/2 hours extra play . ( India vs Aus 3rd test 2013)
 
I used to be in favor of 4 day fast paced tests in sporting pitches but I have now come to realize that we aren't ready for 4 day tests.

5th day in tests still remain crucial.

On the flip side, because 5th day makes a boring test like Abu Dhabi an interesting one, we will continue to see more of such awful pitches.

If 5-10 tests end in a draw in 4 day tests, authorities would have to take action (assuming ICC brings in strong regulations).

It's a chicken and egg story.

Good cricket pitches need to have something for all...and most importantly aid stroke making against pace or spin. Figuring out a way making that happen is critical for the future of test cricket (which itself is very bleak).
 
I used to be in favor of 4 day fast paced tests in sporting pitches but I have now come to realize that we aren't ready for 4 day tests.

5th day in tests still remain crucial.

On the flip side, because 5th day makes a boring test like Abu Dhabi an interesting one, we will continue to see more of such awful pitches.

If 5-10 tests end in a draw in 4 day tests, authorities would have to take action (assuming ICC brings in strong regulations).

It's a chicken and egg story.

Good cricket pitches need to have something for all...and most importantly aid stroke making against pace or spin. Figuring out a way making that happen is critical for the future of test cricket (which itself is very bleak).
Its not about AD pitch , 4 days test will be geared toward more draws unless pitch is extremely result oriented. If team knew beforehand that test is 4 days then team behind by 150 runs on third day will play negative cricket and go for a draw, similar to South Africa did to India on Delhi test but because of fifth day India forced the result.
Another one I remember is 1st Ashes test where England bocked out the fifth day because of rain washing out around or more than 2 session on 4th day.
 
Four days "tests" are not tests. They should be considered first class matches at the most.
 
If Test matches are reduced to 4 days, batsmen who score at under 60 S/R will be considered as a burden on the team. The most impacted team will be the current Pak team.
 
Its not about AD pitch , 4 days test will be geared toward more draws unless pitch is extremely result oriented. If team knew beforehand that test is 4 days then team behind by 150 runs on third day will play negative cricket and go for a draw, similar to South Africa did to India on Delhi test but because of fifth day India forced the result.
Another one I remember is 1st Ashes test where England bocked out the fifth day because of rain washing out around or more than 2 session on 4th day.

I understand your logic but the issue is many are viewing 4 day cricket from the lens of today's test cricket.

In that context, what you say makes perfect sense. But it need not be how things actually play out.

Anyways, do majority of county matches end in draw? Not really.

When 4 day tests come into play, everything will get adjusted if ICC heavily penalizes teams for dull slow scoring pitches.

Day Night 4 day tests can be a whole ball game altogether with great mixture of attacking and defensive cricket. Who knows rules can be changed to eliminate draws too.

Test cricket may undergo a major transformation in the upcoming decade. I won't be surprised if there are LOI components attached to it.

I for one look forward to it.

Test cricket in its current form is gonna be dead. That's for sure.
 
If 4 day Tests become the norm, no team will suffer more than Pakistan.
 
I understand your logic but the issue is many are viewing 4 day cricket from the lens of today's test cricket.

In that context, what you say makes perfect sense. But it need not be how things actually play out.

Anyways, do majority of county matches end in draw? Not really.

When 4 day tests come into play, everything will get adjusted if ICC heavily penalizes teams for dull slow scoring pitches.

Day Night 4 day tests can be a whole ball game altogether with great mixture of attacking and defensive cricket. Who knows rules can be changed to eliminate draws too.

Test cricket may undergo a major transformation in the upcoming decade. I won't be surprised if there are LOI components attached to it.

I for one look forward to it.

Test cricket in its current form is gonna be dead. That's for sure.
Oh tell us more :snack:
 
Make it a maximum of 100 overs per innings and you will get a winner more often than not...
 
Make it a maximum of 100 overs per innings and you will get a winner more often than not...

This indicates, you haven't thought much. I give a scenario -

Team A are put in on a gloomy morning & they are all-out for 170 in 65 overs. Team B bats under Sun & bats well to reach 353 by 100 overs.

Now, the wicket is fantastic to bat & ideally, Team A can bat for 2 days to st 270 in last day, which'll be a cracker of a Test match. Instead, for team B, now the equation is bowl with T20 field & restrict scoring - either Team A has to go after the bowling blindly or concede match for 260/4 sort of score after 100 overs, which gives Team B a target of 80 or so - Team A is losing the match for one bad session, after being put in under clouds.

I can give a similar example for 1st innings high scores, which will be more common - somehow set target over 300 & then bowl with T20 fielding, chasing side has 100 overs to win or it ends in draw.

The game is perfectly OK as it is played now - only ICC needs to ban grounds & boards that arranges Tests like Abu Dhabi & Dubai; 4 days isn't worth wasting on such wickets.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top