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By Adam Wakefield

The old adage states “if it ain’t broken, don’t fix it”. David Morgan, the ICC president, recently said that Test cricket could or would undergo serious changes by the time the clock strikes 12 and 2010 becomes 2011. This statement emerged from the background of what has now become a cliché in cricket circles: “preserving the primacy of Test cricket”. When these words were first uttered, it was in the context of keeping Test cricket as is, especially since memories of South Africa’s wonderful contest with Australia over six Tests at the end of last summer were fresh and vibrant.

It seems, however, that the games administrators have short memories, or perhaps an alternative agenda. Doesn’t it sound contradictory to first say that Test cricket should be preserved, then to change one’s tune and suggest that 4-day, day-night Tests are the way to go? The ICC appears to be spinning a web of deceit, because no one really knows what their intentions are. The ICC is starting to mimic the FIA and all their contorted statements meant to generate press (OK, it isn’t as bad, but as they say, “the road to hell is paved with good intentions”).

Since many supporters question the ICC’s motives, perhaps we should investigate whether these suggested changes are actually what the game needs. Perhaps it is the fans who can’t see the real picture? Test cricket has been played over five days for over 100 years. Some of the game’s greatest moments have happened in the dusk of the fifth day, the tail end of a gruelling contest when the body is weak even though the mind is willing.

First-class cricket is played over four days, but it is the step up to five-day competition that truly separates the lamb from the bone. Test cricket is the ultimate test (hence its name) of a player’s skill and mental fortitude. If you can hack it in Test cricket, you have proven your worth as a cricketer. The game itself is entrenched in world cricket culture. Most fans (ones that are over the age of 20) were raised on the game, with ODIs as a sweetener after the Test series had concluded. Since then, the game has changed dramatically with Twenty20 being the new sensation, though that feeling isn’t going to last for long at the current rate.

So why the sudden change of heart? Is Test cricket unhealthy around the world? The Ashes is beginning soon, and South Africa’s contest with England last year was a riveting affair. They will be touring SA this year, always a fun tour with the Barmy Army being a great bunch of cricket lovers. Sri Lanka, Pakistan (when playing away) and India always generates buzz considering the complex relationship between these different cricket powers. Australia, very much the team to beat even two years ago, always generates excitement considering they are still one of the best sides going around. The West Indies, though a problem child, is a great place for teams to tour. Bangladesh is still finding its feet (another cliché) and New Zealand has always produced a fighting team (and Bond is back).

What reducing Tests to four days and making them day-night affairs will do is free up more space on the calendar. Who gets those extra days is easy to guess: Twenty20. The ICC appears content to gorge itself on Twenty20 till they overdose, irrespective of other cricket formats. It’s a slippery slope if there ever was one.

Cricket’s supporters (and this isn’t a slight against other sports, just an observation) have the intellect to appreciate where the game is in relation to macro-economics. The ICC seems to take cricket fans as a bunch of chumps. Cricket’s need to modernise is stripping the game of its soul. Would you want to go watch a Test match if it were a day-night affair? I wouldn’t because that isn’t what Test cricket is. If the game changed, they might as well call it “Super” cricket or some other name because calling it Test cricket would be an injustice.

The real problem lies in the currency of cost, because since TV became involved, events have only been going one way. They are the ones who pressure boards to produce a five-day pitch that guarantees a result. Ask any groundsman: that isn’t easy. It is TV money that is turning red-blooded administrators green. Players shouldn’t be blamed since all they can do is take advantage of what is put in front of him. The ICC is using the lexicon of “primacy” as a tool to quietly run a coup over the foundations of cricket’s most prized history. They are using the need to keep it “cool” to create more space for Twenty20 and to enrich the bottom line, not the game itself.

They seem to forget, however, that this whole argument and “mission” only came about when the ICC themselves were the ones who shifted attention away from Tests in favour of Twenty20. ODI, as we know it, is a dead-man walking. It is only a matter of time …

Perhaps all this is inevitable? Since the game went professional, and with its development accelerated by the IPL (an epoch shift if there ever was one) it has always been about the bottom line. Don’t let the ICC fool you into thinking they are doing this for the benefit of fans and players: they don’t give a damn about the little people because that would get in the way of making a quick buck.

The ICC in this piece might be judged unfairly, since this author admits his view is biased. But damn it, it just ain’t cricket, and the ICC is determined to make sure it becomes just that. They created the problem which suits their motives conveniently, though no one seems to acknowledge that. To take away Test cricket, the tea breaks, the sessions, the subtle changes in momentum, is to pull the carpet from under the game so that the fallen body becomes a smooth vessel for currency to run over it.

The ICC be damned. Maybe my views will change if the future becomes the present, but right now many supporters, including this one, know where they stand: if it ain’t broken, don’t fix it.

Adam Wakefield has been a cricket enthusiast since Allan Donald attempted to kill Michael Atherton in Johannesburg in 1995/96. He studies journalism at Rhodes University and now works in Cape Town as a rugby journalist and organiser (cricket, however, is his first love). He played forth team cricket at varsity, with his controlled round-arm off spin and dexterous lower-order batting




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12 Responses to “‘Primacy’ my ass: The ICC’s semantic coup”

Actually, if you check the cricinfo archives, most test matches up until the end of the 1940s were 3 day matches. No less an expert than CLR James lamented the ponderous nature of 5 day matches.

(Report abuse)

Neil Bostock on July 7th, 2009 at 4:29 am

I must admit that I didn’t know that, but perhaps more over were bowled in a day etc? I am just a sucker for the 5-day game…

(Report abuse)

Adam on July 7th, 2009 at 11:08 am

Great article! I agree with you wholeheartedly. Every professional cricketer aspires to play test cricket as that is the greatest stage to play the game. One day cricket, whether it be fifty over or T20, is a crowd pleaser, but that is not the format that players of the game take as seriously as test cricket.
As a true cricket fanatic I take heart from the packed stadiums in India, Australia, England, and even here recently in South Africa, watching the true TEST of a cricketer’s ability. I sincerely hope that the ICC do not change the format of test cricket.

(Report abuse)

David Cloran on July 7th, 2009 at 11:53 am

Huh - test cricket- the bottom line as ou say is the dollar. the fat salaries and cocktails must come from somewhere.I truly like test cricket- i love T20/20 better.
a) always exciting
b)always a draw-whoever says sittin in one ground9and its not cheap) for 5 days to end up with a dull draw with the batsman blocking every shot just to force a draw is not my kind of fun in the sun that is Waca Perth

Test cricket will die a slow death if they dont change the format things like
a)run rate must be at least 4 an over or lose a wicket for slow run rate.
b)maybe introduce a duckworth lewis kind of calculation in case of weather. NEVER DRAWS.
I truly hate wasting 5 days of watching warne do his beautiful thing all for nothing just because a taiender does not want to score ANY runs. he just wants to stay in.
Cricket has to be dynamic- change with the times adopt new innovations .TV will be with us for ever and it has the money.
Night test sounds ok to me. after work a few beers and second half of the days play.

WHAT BENEFITS DO YOU GET FROM REMAINING STAID. Someone has to pay the bills and 5 days of a boring match is not the way to do it.Its simply not meant for the paying masses.5 days for a match simply means you are unemployed or unemployable or just rich

(Report abuse)

Haiwa tigere on July 8th, 2009 at 3:34 am

oops on t20/20 i meant NEVER draws

(Report abuse)

Haiwa tigere on July 8th, 2009 at 3:36 am

AND ANOTHER POINT- andrew symmonds autralias Samuel etoo of cricket salary under contract with australian cricket (before he drank himself to oblivion) 1 million dollars add his contract with ipl $2 mill .total 3 million dollars. samule etoo of barcelona gets a cool 250000 pounds a week 12 million pounds a year into his pocket and his taxmans pocket.
these are people of the same skill and dedication. By cricket refuusing to change it keep its players in relative poverty. Its already happening in the west indies. those who can play cricket can also play basketball /baseball and this pays big money in USA so all you get is the failed Baseball trialists who go into cricket.change your ways.

Warne Murali Mendis should at least get paid more than the cricket authorities. Warne at 40 plus should really not be playing he should be retired rich. Not adapting to suite the new enviroment is causing the relative suffering of ex cricketers.

I pay good money- i want to be entertained not spend 5 days watching the grass grow.
i HAVE WATCHED 1 live test for a full 5 days. NEVER AGAIN.i have watched countless 1 dayers and a few T20s. i will take my partner and her little brat to a 1 dayer and T20 any day.please dont let me listen to that kid for 5 days straight!

(Report abuse)

Haiwa tigere on July 8th, 2009 at 6:22 am

Well spoken, sir!

The Philistines are upon us, no doubt.

(Report abuse)

Yawn on July 8th, 2009 at 11:12 am

Test cricket is the games untimate, according to the top players plus everything needs to change to stay relevant.

So why not the following:

- 4 days at 7 hours per day = 28 hour tests vs 30 now
- start at 0900 or 1000, why waste good morning sunlight and then lose time for bad light in the late afternoon, think of the paying public.
- 15 overs per hour a law, any less and the bowling side is penalised by conceeding runs each hour to the batting side - say 5 per over not bowled.

Thus get a full 105 overs per day and spin comes back into its own as spinners will be required to achieve the 15/hour over target.

Jazzes up the game without losing the ethos of test cricket.

Brent

start

(Report abuse)

brnet on July 8th, 2009 at 11:31 am

There have been more constructive suggestions here then the ICC has seemed to come up with recently. I think Haiwa makes some very relevant points: at the end of the day, he (and others paying to watch the game) wants to get value for money.

It would take me a while to wrap my head around 4 days, but with the other ideas like extension of play, more overs involved…you never know, it could possibly work…

I’m just a stickler for the 5 days…

Keep the comments coming!

(Report abuse)

Adam on July 8th, 2009 at 3:56 pm

Test cricket forever in my book.

Draws have been less common in recent years so I don’t really think that stands up as an argument against it.

The Aussies started it a while back when they decided that losing wasn’t there thing for about a decade.

(Report abuse)

Ariel on July 8th, 2009 at 6:52 pm

It is all down to the dollar bill indeed-so I whole heartedly agree. Perhaps THE ASHES will make the financial men of the ICC (David Morgan, Haroon Lorgat, et al.) think a little harder about potential changes and if there even need to be any. Day 1 in Cardiff has certainly been a good (Though the Sri Lanka vs Pakistan match in Galle this past week did only last 4 days - so maybe not)

(Report abuse)

Geoff on July 8th, 2009 at 9:04 pm

@ Ariel,hiring and using these test venues is not cheap. 5 day at the paltry crowds will not pay everybody who deserves to be paid. thats why cricketers are so relatively poorly paid. One dayers and the T 20 are the money spinners witness IPL.
Ashes every 4 years one test series between countries every 3 or 4v years. pile in the one dayers and T20/20 pay these guys a decent salary.
WHATS THE NAME OF THE ex english test cricketer(Chris lewis) caught peddling drugs???Not all of them can be commentatorsaftre their playing days are over.
Its all about money skilled exponents of the game must be paid well if quality players are to come through.
As of today the west indies dont have a team at all. The last big payday was from Mr stanford who happens to be in jail as we speak.
The desire to keep test cricket as primary will kill cricket in the long run for sure. west indies cricket IS DEAD

(Report abuse)

Haiwa tigere on July 9th, 2009 at 1:23 pm

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A journalist by trade, Adam takes an interest in sports, politics, communication and media trends.

Having lived in Cape Town and Melbourne, Adam is back in Johannesburg, his home town.

The views expressed are his own.

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