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Chris
24-11-2011, 09:37 AM
A very well-written article. Well worth the long-ish read.

Daily Telegraph (http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/peteroborne/100119471/cricket-is-being-destroyed-by-this-indecent-obsession-with-money/)


By neglecting the Test match, greedy officials are undermining the essence of the game

Rather more than 2,000 Test matches have been played since Australia defeated a touring England XI by the handsome margin of 45 runs at Melbourne in March 1877. After this first contest, Test cricket very quickly developed into a major art form, in part because the game included so many disparate and sometimes contradictory elements.

On the one hand, there is the raw, elemental and often heroic struggle between the outstanding cricketers of rival nations. But each of these sportsmen is playing not just for his team but for himself – one of the deep fascinations of Test cricket is the tension between the selfish desire to put in a strong personal performance, and the duty to serve the team.

A batsman may, for example, be required to risk throwing away his wicket in order to chase quick runs or, in harsher circumstances, to restrain his natural attacking game in order to save his side from defeat.

In the best Test matches, the initiative changes hands many times before the result is decided. By the end of such games, the crowd feels exhausted, a feeling comparable to the state of catharsis – the purging of pity and fear – which, says Aristotle, is the outcome of great drama.

As for the players, they are inwardly drained. Basil D’Oliveira, the famous cricketer who died last week, once told me that he would feel so physically and mentally tired after a Test that he was useless for several days. This is an experience shared by all players, which is why every great cricketer regards Test cricket as the ultimate examination not just of skill, but also of character, stamina, fitness and (of course) raw courage.

Last week, cricket lovers were privileged to follow one of the finest Test matches ever played, fought out between two of the oldest Test-playing nations, South Africa and Australia, at Johannesburg. South Africa started as favourites, having defeated Australia in the first Test match. (At one point, the Australian second innings score stood at a ragged 21-9, threatening to collapse to the lowest score in history. They recovered slightly to 47.)

But it was Australia who started best, bowling out their rivals for the mediocre score of 266 on day one. Thereafter, the momentum fluctuated from hour to hour, but at the start of the final day it was South Africa who held the advantage, setting the Australians what looked like an unreachable target of 310 to win the game. Inch by inch, the Australians crawled towards the finishing line, with an 18-year-old debutant called Pat Cummins showing immense nerve and skill in the closing moments of the game to guide his country home.

This wonderful match should have been a moment of hope and celebration. But instead it is a cause for deep alarm. For all the evidence shows that the world cricketing authorities are determined to destroy Test cricket.

Let’s analyse last week’s Johannesburg game in rather more depth. South Africa and Australia have been playing Test cricket against each other for more than a century, and throughout most of that time the rivalry has been played out over five separate Test matches. Last week’s game, in contrast, was the final rubber of a two-match series, with the teams flying off to take part in their next bout of one-day games.

It cannot be doubted that this arrangement suits the television programmers, who now determine the shape of world cricket. But for the true fan, last week was an utter tragedy. With evenly matched sides tied at one-all, we were surely entitled to look forward to three more contests in which South Africa and Australia each attempted to assert their dominance.

Thanks to the cricket authorities, there’s no hope of that – and matters are set to get worse. Next summer, this South African team will tour England. It ought to be a brilliant tour, spread over five Tests, starting, as Test matches traditionally do, at Trent Bridge and ending up at the Oval. England and South Africa are currently the two best sides in the world and, at the end of a sublime summer contest, the winners would have the right to declare themselves world champions.

But it is not clear that the visit of the South Africans will even be the main event of the summer, which starts off with a three-Test contest against the West Indies, followed by an inexplicable series of one-day games against Australia.
South Africa only arrive in July, at which point they will play three hasty Test matches – and a string of one-day contests – before scuttling off in the middle of September. Something very valuable has been lost here, and it is easy to see why. The administrators who run world cricket may believe they are acting in the best interests of the game, but they are transfixed by only one thing – money.

This means that, in the short term, they stand to make a fortune – but, in the long term, they are on course to destroy the game of cricket itself. There is a very interesting parallel here with the wider economic and political crisis that the world is facing.

A major cause of the chaos confronting us today is that we have, as a society, chosen image rather than substance, and the short term over the long term. We have destroyed our long-term capital in search of easy money. We face financial catastrophe and social degradation because we have turned our back on solid values.

The great players who have succeeded in five-day Test matches have required qualities that have become unfashionable over the past few years: patience, application, concentration, a sense of purpose, the ability to build an innings and to put the team first.

These are the qualities that Western societies have ceased to cherish, and so have the men who arrange the international cricket programme. English cricket fans need to send out the urgent message that our sport is a traditional game and that we want our values reinstated. When teams of the calibre of South Africa come to England, we don’t want to be treated to next year’s truncated apology of a contest. We want a serious five-match Test series.

Here’s another thing. We value and respect our cricketing relationship with Australia. Since time immemorial, Australian sides have come to these shores every four years. This has meant that each Ashes series has been a major event, to be looked forward to with reverence and unrivalled anticipation. We degrade the significance of the famous Ashes rivalry by bringing the Australian team over for a handful of money-spinning but pointless one-day games in the middle of the summer.

Test matches sell out in England because the cricketing public love the game and bring to it knowledge and respect. Unfortunately, cricket administrators have started to treat it with discourtesy bordering on contempt. It is way past time for those of us who cherish cricket to speak out.

OrbitalDawn
25-11-2011, 07:01 AM
What isn't?

MickeyD
25-11-2011, 07:05 AM
I fully agree with his article.

moose007
25-11-2011, 09:43 AM
How pathetic is the pitch West indies and India are playing on, I never take any games in India seriously, only place they can win as well.

SinghDude
25-11-2011, 09:52 AM
Show me the money.....

Deezil
25-11-2011, 09:53 AM
What isn't?
Spot on

Devill
25-11-2011, 10:08 AM
Well written article and I could not agree more.

It is all about the Money :(

phiber
25-11-2011, 11:17 AM
Great article, can't believe they postponed the test world cup thing as well...

Devill
25-11-2011, 11:22 AM
Great article, can't believe they postponed the test world cup thing as well...

+1, I will even be willing to watch a 3 day game World Cup (1 innings per team, no limit to overs).

But in reality we need pitches that assist the bowlers a tad more than was seen in recent years. Both pitches in the tests vs Aus was fine, and thus we achieved results.

SinghDude
25-11-2011, 11:23 AM
+1, I will even be willing to watch a 3 day game World Cup (1 innings per team, no limit to overs).

But in reality we need pitches that assist the bowlers a tad more than was seen in recent years. Both pitches in the tests vs Aus was fine, and thus we achieved results.

Dont forget the batting from both teams were k@k

Devill
25-11-2011, 11:38 AM
Dont forget the batting from both teams were k@k

Yes but the pitch was gave enough assistance that you could take wickets if you bowled in the right areas. There were runs to be had if you were not lazy :p:D

Ecco
25-11-2011, 11:39 AM
How pathetic is the pitch West indies and India are playing on, I never take any games in India seriously, only place they can win as well.

And yet India managed to draw a series against SA in SA (their last tour here), and make it to 2003 world cup final in SA and win the T20 world cup in SA!

Not taking games in India seriously is probably what the SA cricket team does too, shortfall in my opinion.

Mastering sub-continent conditions is what only the best teams in the world can do. Sadly South Africa is not there - too often moaning about the conditions and how it does not suit them.

On topic though, i agree on test matches not taking preference, but the South African public are part of the problem.

This final test match (and how great it was) which i attended on both Saturday and Sunday had dismal attendance. Saturday the busier of the two days only had 15 000 people - 50% capacity. Compare this to a T20 match which is normally sold out.

In England and Australia test matches are sold out, even at 50 GBP for ticket in the cheaper stands. In SA its R50!

permanentmarker
25-11-2011, 11:53 AM
On topic though, i agree on test matches not taking preference, but the South African public are part of the problem.

This final test match (and how great it was) which i attended on both Saturday and Sunday had dismal attendance. Saturday the busier of the two days only had 15 000 people - 50% capacity. Compare this to a T20 match which is normally sold out.

In England and Australia test matches are sold out, even at 50 GBP for ticket in the cheaper stands. In SA its R50!

I think its more a combination of cricket administration, media hype and the public's fault.

Cricket admin here is so adamant the test cricket is dead that the general public believes it. In truth, teams around the world are scoring at nearly ODI RPOs consistently, and the clashes have historically proven to be closer affairs than t20s generally are. However, when the media and CSA are punting t20 cricket as the next big thing, folks at home choose to spend more money on a t20 clash than a day at the cricket. Its unfortunate, and it needs to be corrected IMO.

MyWorld
25-11-2011, 12:07 PM
You have also to keep in mind that the game evolved quite a bit, this started in the late 90's.
There are now nations playing cricket that never before were considered a match (Sri Lanka for one) and there is just too many opportunities and too little time. Test, ODI and T20 and this India series, etc.

We need to split the game in two, test vs. ODI, and have two teams in the field, SA test and SA ODI.

The problem is that the test side will suffer most, where they can play at most 4-5 tests a month without overdoing it, the ODI side can play well over 10 matches a month with the potential to make buckets load more cash.

Five day tests will for ever be the mark of the true cricketer, but spectators and sponsors want instant satisfaction, that is why we now even have T20, totally pointless IMHO but entertaining to the masses and profitable. You can clearly see that the people attending the ODI's and T20's are not test supporters and I myself enjoy the ODI 50 overs, but T20 is plain pointless to me.

So in the end, demand is dying for test series, we made heroes out of ODI players and seldom give thought to their test performance, as long as he can hit a six in under 20 overs we are all happy!

Arthur
25-11-2011, 12:09 PM
Great find, thanks Chris.

The love of money has contaminated almost all sports, sadly. And not just sport.

Guantanamo
28-11-2011, 06:35 PM
Went to the game on Friday and it was practically full, I think the weather over the weekend lowered the crowds that would have attended. Also the fact that it was a 2 test series made it crap, if it was a 3 or 5 match series where the drama had more time to build and SA went into that, the final test needing a draw to win then I have a feeling the crowds would be bigger.

MickeyD
28-11-2011, 06:38 PM
Went to the game on Friday and it was practically full, I think the weather over the weekend lowered the crowds that would have attended. Also the fact that it was a 2 test series made it crap, if it was a 3 or 5 match series where the drama had more time to build and SA went into that, the final test needing a draw to win then I have a feeling the crowds would be bigger.
Agree - imagine if it was the final test of a 3-5 Test Series at the Wanderers (or any Test venue) on the last day and it came done to the wire... full house guaranteed!

I would be there!

Vercogen
29-11-2011, 07:44 AM
I am a bit more left of this border(or right?), although I am a cricket fanatic, I don't even follow the 50 over games, I truly believe that test cricket is the only form of cricket. I will follow the world cup, but that is about it. Test cricket, I will not miss a ball, not even when I am at work. :D

Michaelbro
29-11-2011, 07:52 AM
Very well said , Why not cut the ashes sown too three test matches.

Ou grote
29-11-2011, 08:15 AM
How pathetic is the pitch West indies and India are playing on, I never take any games in India seriously, only place they can win as well.

That test ended rather well.

SinghDude
29-11-2011, 08:30 AM
That test ended rather well.

A draw will be misunderstood.

Ou grote
29-11-2011, 10:00 AM
A draw will be misunderstood.

The people at the ground and those who commented on the game appeared to understand ok.

SinghDude
29-11-2011, 10:08 AM
The people at the ground and those who commented on the game appeared to understand ok.

I doubt the vast majority know that prior to the game only two ties have occurred in the 2,000 Tests played since 1877.

Ou grote
29-11-2011, 10:14 AM
I doubt the vast majority know that prior to the game only two ties have occurred in the 2,000 Tests played since 1877.

I'm quite sure that the majority of people following test cricket will be familiar with famous players and matches.

SinghDude
29-11-2011, 10:17 AM
I'm quite sure that the majority of people following test cricket will be familiar with famous players and matches.


Im sure too.........

axelblue
11-12-2011, 04:45 PM
You have also to keep in mind that the game evolved quite a bit, this started in the late 90's.
There are now nations playing cricket that never before were considered a match (Sri Lanka for one) and there is just too many opportunities and too little time. Test, ODI and T20 and this India series, etc.

We need to split the game in two, test vs. ODI, and have two teams in the field, SA test and SA ODI.

The problem is that the test side will suffer most, where they can play at most 4-5 tests a month without overdoing it, the ODI side can play well over 10 matches a month with the potential to make buckets load more cash.

Five day tests will for ever be the mark of the true cricketer, but spectators and sponsors want instant satisfaction, that is why we now even have T20, totally pointless IMHO but entertaining to the masses and profitable. You can clearly see that the people attending the ODI's and T20's are not test supporters and I myself enjoy the ODI 50 overs, but T20 is plain pointless to me.

So in the end, demand is dying for test series, we made heroes out of ODI players and seldom give thought to their test performance, as long as he can hit a six in under 20 overs we are all happy!

Amen to this post. It is in test cricket that a players true ability to play the game is seen. T20 cricket is so flash in the pan. Very unsatisfying.

axelblue
11-12-2011, 04:50 PM
Is this reporter English? Read an article the other day of Swann saying 50 overs cricket should be dismissed. Big deal. England is at best currently an average ODI team but the top ranked test team. Naturally they would want test cricket to be the main attraction, as they are dominating there the last 2 years. Did not hear them complain about test cricket not being hailed enough when they were doing not so well.