Tony Cozier

TV contracts dictate daytime scheduling of Caribbean matches

Whether day-night Tests will be a success or not is yet to be seen, but it's unlikely that fans in West Indies will ever get to enjoy five-day cricket in the evening

Tony Cozier
Tony Cozier
13-Jul-2014
Last season the CPL attendances were solid since fans could come to games after work. No such luck this season  •  Getty Images

Last season the CPL attendances were solid since fans could come to games after work. No such luck this season  •  Getty Images

It is a strange irony that the timing of international television coverage out of the Caribbean effectively eliminates West Indies from the potential move towards Test cricket under lights at the same time as it obliges the Caribbean Premier League T20 tournament to revert to daytime for all but four of its 31 matches in its second season that got underway on Friday.
It appears that only the t's are to be crossed and the i's dotted for the first night Test, in November 2015 between Australia and New Zealand, either in Adelaide or Hobart. The proposal hasn't met with widespread approval from the players. The Australian Cricketers' Association reported that a survey of its members following the 2014 Sheffield Shield season showed sizeable opposition. Over 90% weren't happy with the pink ball to be used and 51% didn't believe night Tests should be played in the future.
The relevant boards make the decisions and, for both, it is a virtual fait accompli. It is likely to be the game's latest innovation to follow those of Kerry Packer's World Series Cricket, which introduced its own night "Supertests" as far back as 1979, and Lalit Modi's IPL.
The purpose is to reverse the decline in attendances that is causing concern over the survival of the traditional, unadulterated form of the game against its newest, trendiest offshoot, T20.
The theory is that play from 2pm to 9pm will allow the public to take in most of the last two sessions after office hours.
The pink ball has been tested under lights in recent years in first-class matches in the West Indies, Australia, and between English county teams in the Emirates. Australian players are not the only ones wary of it.
Whether the experiment - for that is what it will be - is permanent or not, it won't involve Tests in the Caribbean. The regional cricket centres are far enough to the west of the other cricket-playing countries that live television would be delivered at inhospitable hours. A local 9pm close of play would be 1 or 2 in the morning in England, an hour later in South Africa. Indians would have to watch from 10.30pm to 5.30am the next morning. A 10am-5pm day in the West Indies equates to 2 or 3pm-9 or 10 pm in the UK - ideal scheduling.
It's the reason why West Indies have staged no more than a couple of ODIs under lights and none for a decade. Even matches in the 2007 World Cup and the 2012 World T20 were daylight encounters.
For the recent three Tests against New Zealand, the WICB attempted to boost attendances by appreciably lowering ticket prices. By the time the series got to Barbados for the decider, US$5 was the most expensive.
Here was a contest between evenly matched national teams jostling for positions in the ICC rankings. It featured fascinating fluctuations from one match to the next, one day to the next, one session to the next, before New Zealand secured their 2-1 triumph nearing the end of the final day of the series. Only matches over five days without artificial restrictions can offer such ebb and flow.
A local 9pm close of play would be 1 or 2 in the morning in England, an hour later in South Africa. Indians would have to watch from 10.30pm to 5.30am the next morning
One might think it might have been enough to give a bit of a boost to the public's waning interest. Instead, there were rarely more than a couple of thousand in the stands for the five days at Queen's Park (capacity 22,000), about as many as would once turn out for a club match.
While certain extenuating circumstances existed in this case - the simultaneous attraction of the omnipresent football World Cup, West Indies' dismal recent record, the lack of star players on either side - Tests everywhere, England excepted, have long since failed the "bums-on-seats" test.
The floodlit proposal is the obvious corollary. In a recent column in the Times, the former England captain Mike Atherton reckoned night Tests were "worth a try, surely". Shane Warne, the legendary Australian legspinner, is another who believes it should be given a go.
"No one is suggesting day/night Test cricket should be played in England but imagine a Test match in Bridgetown, Barbados, for example," he wrote. "The last session of play could be played on a warm evening, with light falling quickly, and cheap tickets for the final session could encourage the working man in Bridgetown to pop in for a couple of hours to enjoy something he might not otherwise have a chance to see."
It is an agreeable image, except it won't happen, for the same reason the CPL has had to alter its times.
The staging of its matches - with games starting around the time the temperature went down in the evenings, when fans were free of their nine-to-five jobs - guaranteed sellout crowds at all six venues last year. The lights meshed perfectly with the carnival atmosphere and its slogan, "the biggest party in sport". Calypso rhythms, fireworks and dancing girls were added to the mix, making it a rousing success.
It'll have a different feel over the coming six weeks of the second season. With a new contract with BT Sport television channels in England to be considered, the tournament has made the adjustment. After all, television contracts are the main revenue earners as much for the CPL as for the WICB.
In the circumstances, the CPL launched a regional Twitter petition, "calling on businesses and governments across the region to let employees leave work early to watch the mid-week CPL game in their respective countries". The petition, it stated, "is a rallying cry to cricket fans and party people alike to fight for their right to enjoy the 'biggest party in sport'".
"The biggest party in sport" takes in two new islands in 2014. Buoyed by University of the West Indies (UWI) research that put the CPL's combined impact at US$105.6 million in the countries where it was played in 2013, the Grenada government reportedly paid US$500,000 for the first three matches to be staged at its National Stadium; the St Kitts-Nevis government is said to have spent US$1 million to be able to hold nine matches, including semi-finals and final, at Windsor Park in Basseterre.
They clearly regard it as a worthy investment regardless of the timing of the TV coverage.

Tony Cozier has written about and commentated on cricket in the Caribbean for 50 years