« Blog Home
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars
Loading ... Loading ...

Deserts are an ever-changing landscape. From one day to the next the dunes shift from place to place, rolling over the landscape made asunder with the assistance of the wind. The only constant is the sun and as an Arabic proverb states “all sunshine makes a desert”.

Cricket’s great desert over the last decade and a half has had an eerily Australian golden tinge to it with many wanderers, journeyman and enemies perishing in its vast and ruthless landscape. Oases of opportunity have been few and far between: the 2005 Ashes stands out as an example, when a side, with many great players, was beaten in a contest by a more willing and more dangerous opponent.

Now, with England’s most recent Ashes triumph, the natural landscape of the cricketing world appears to have moved from a dominant and unforgiving Australian desert to a climate resembling South Africa’s. Though England managed to dethrone the Australians again (to most people’s surprise) the more significant conclusion is that the Australians are clearly going through a “rebuilding phase” (a euphemism for not being the best). How England managed to win the series while averaging approximately six runs less a wicket is beyond me and the only other time they pulled off such a feat was when Javed Akhtar screwed South Africa in 1998.

South Africa, for a country of its size, has a vast microcosm of climates within its borders. In the north you have the Highveld with summer rains and biting winters. On the east coast, the air is thick and sticky with humidity that can make anyone sweat. In the west, you have the Kalahari, a landscape not rich with fauna but still spellbinding in its beauty. The Eastern Cape is more rustic and hilly with bushes and shrubs but even then it is a pleasure to look at on a warm summer day when the sun sets, especially in the hinterland around Alice. Lastly, there is the Western Cape, which is closer to Greece than to Bloemfontein. Cape Town’s natural beauty is well-recognised around the world.

However, will a Sri Lankan monsoon or an Indian summer blow away the fabled Protea, or will an English shower somehow wash away what was there before?

The talk that often surrounds Test cricket of late is comparable to an epitaph or obituary. Many scribes have proclaimed that Test cricket’s time is limited, soon to be engulfed by a tsunami of flat pitches, lights, sixes and 120 balls an innings. Even Shane Warne has stated that one day international cricket will reach its expiry date (I would agree with him there).

To those so willingly ready to cast aside the truest measure of a cricketer’s ability, I say this: it has never been a more interesting time to watch cricket than now. No longer is cricket’s state of international relations ruled by a seemingly omnipotent and dominant hegemon. Instead, the politics of cricket has descended into a pluralistic society, not quite anarchistic but the difference between the top sides is minor.

South Africa may be number one for now but with the way things are changing so quickly in the game of cricket, there hasn’t been a better time to grab a seat in the crowd with a beer or cool drink in your hand and feast on Test cricket. There are many quality cricketers out there, and even in Sri Lanka, Daniel Vettori has once again shown to be one of the most underrated if not the most underrated all-rounder in world cricket. Sir Richard Hadlee would have been proud.

Though purists (me being one of them) decry the lack of emphasis Test cricket receives at the moment, the five-day game has survived this long. In comparison to the head rush that is 20-over cricket, where the public see fit to gorge themselves in three-hour stints, Test cricket somehow manages to rise from the Ashes (pun intended) and be reborn. All it takes is one exciting series. Before this Ashes series we had the truly fantastic South Africa versus Australia contests and even before that India versus Sri Lanka proved to be quite a tussle.

Would WG Grace approve of where Test cricket is? I think so, because it is a measure of the respect people show the game that while 20-over cricket reigns supreme on a throne of TV dollars, everyone knows where Test cricket is in relation to the games quickest form.

It is foolhardy to compare apples and oranges as they say and it is equally silly to compare red balls and white balls. How the ICC (listed in the dictionary as “toothless tiger”) manages to let the two formats (if ODIs were to fall away) live side-by-side is a difficult task but not an impossible one. If they, plus India, manage to get the balance right, cricket’s future is very bright indeed.




Related Posts

2 Responses to “The ever-shifting sands of cricket”

Talking about Sri Lanka, why is it that SA plays them so seldom? It’s been years since the last series in Sri Lanka (occasion of that surreal 622 3rd-wicket partnership by the home team) and I can’t remember when last SR played in this country.

(Report abuse)

david saks on September 3rd, 2009 at 12:54 pm

Fair question David. I’ve had a look at the Future Tours Programme (not a fan of that either)and it seems we are only going to be tackling the Lankans again at the start of 2012. That is a bit ridicolous but perhaps CSA might organise a tour outside of the programme since Zimbabwe aren’t involved any more.

We should definitely play them again…they appear to be on the up. Thanks for the comment.

(Report abuse)

Adam Wakefield on September 3rd, 2009 at 3:58 pm

Leave a Reply

All comments must be approved by our editors, click here to read the editorial guidelines for comments. Please allow some time for our editors to approve your comment after posting.

Send me the Thought Leader daily newsletter

profile
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.

twitter: adamwake86
Technorati RSS
Adam's links
Cricinfo
Your modern cricket companion
cricket with balls
A great website, which shows cricket's more humourous side
Just Blog Off!
A blog about the ridiculousness of blogging. A rant about the twits on twitter. A journal of other things that happen in the 'real world'. An oft-used musical soapbox.
My portfolio
If you would like to see other work by this contributor, or are interested in employing his services.
rugby365
For all your rugby news.
The Analyst
Former Middlesex seamer Simon Hughes getting into cricket's finer points.
The Question
An excellent look into the technical, tactical and realities of modern football
more posts
Howard Webb isn't very popular in the blue part of London right now. The burly referee, a policeman, had a hand in awarding Manchester United two pena...
Detective Jimmy McNulty once said in The Wire, when referring to lives on the street versus the way politics interacts with those lives, "It just ne...
South Africa won their first Test series at home since beating Bangladesh in 2008 after two dominant displays at Centurion and Newlands, plus being ta...
Journalism allows you the opportunity to see, hear and read a lot of different opinions on how sports teams overcome tough patches to eventually trium...
With 2011 done and dusted, it's time for some cheer to be spread among those sportsman and suits who, in a nutshell, didn't say "The boys are disappoi...
latest activity
Blog Statistics
Total reads 68921
Total comments 763
Adam's tags
advertisement
All material copyright of the author, or the Mail & Guardian, unless otherwise specified
Author Login
Afrigator