12 November 1996
Lloyd advocates world league for Test nations
Christopher Martin-Jenkins on impetus for five-day game
THERE was influential support yesterday for future regulation of
the international cricket calendar to produce a world championship of Test cricket.
It came from the former West Indies captain Clive Lloyd, speaking
in Alice Springs in his latest role as manager of the team in
Australia. He was reacting to the Australian Cricket Board`s
marketing of the Test series, beginning in Brisbane on Friday
week as `The Decider` with the accompanying assertion that the
winners will be unofficial world champions.
"Why unofficial?" Lloyd asked. "We`re not playing unofficial
Tests. Tests are official, so something should be set up
where you play for the championship of the world. You have it
in the one-dayers; why not in the Test matches?
"Test cricket is the thing. It`s what you are known for.
Nobody`s known for doing anything in the one-day scene. Test
cricket is the ultimate and we must make it interesting, so
that people know exactly what`s going on."
Lloyd added that he favoured official sanctioning of a programme of Tests by the ICC, ensuring that every one of the nine
Test countries would play the others in a given number of
years. "We have to have a better system of working out who`s
playing who and how often," he said.
For two reasons his view deserves to be taken very seriously:
firstly because there are an increasing number of very short
Test series or `one-off` Tests; secondly because of the proliferation of international cricket generally.
There is the danger that the five-day Test, with all the
rigours, shifts and fascinations of two-innings cricket played
by cricketers of high skill at full mental and physical
stretch, will become subordinate to the meretricious allure of
the limited-overs international.
The idea of giving points for each Test to determine world
champions was expounded in the 1995 Wisden almanack by the
editor, Matthew Engel, who recently expanded his views in the
November issue of Wisden Cricket Monthly magazine, arguing that
Test cricket is in disarray while one-day internationals are
played before packed houses.
This winter 33 Tests will have been played in eight countries and
12 different series, all linked to one of the bewildering array
of one-day games. Well before the current batch of games in
Sharjah that unlikely centre of cricket (a place where the
indigenous population barely play the game) became the first
venue to stage more than 100 internationals. The ICC officially
are cautious about attempts to bring some semblance of order.
"Market forces will decide; that`s the reality of the commercial world," said David Richards, chief executive of the International Cricket Council, in reaction to Lloyd`s comments.
"I`m not an advocate of ICC controlling the international programme.
"If one country ignores another, we`ll take a hand, as we did
when we encouraged the West Indies to tour Sri lanka for the
first time recently, but the game has to remain contemporary.
It is certainly an idea which we should devote attention to and
we`ll be monitoring the international programme through our new
committee of chief executives."
Richards, just back from the meeting of international referees, who discussed mutual problems and a more uniform application of the code of conduct last week in Bombay, conceded that
he would be concerned if the top players become so over-taxed
that they end up merely going through the motions.
He cited as an example the programme for India, who are following their recent Test and one-day triangular series at home
with visits to South Africa, Zimbabwe, Bermuda and the West Indies.
At home there will be a further step today on the road to the
completed England and Wales Cricket Board. The new TCCB chairman, Sir Ian MacLaurin, will oversee a special meeting of the
Board at Lord`s to determine the constitution of the First
Class Forum, a matter which was deferred when the Board agreed
in principle to start the new ECB next Jan 1.
World Cricketers: A Biographical Dictionary by Christopher
Martin-Jenkins (OUP) is available for 25 (post-free UK) from
Telegraph Books Direct, Deanshanger, Milton Keynes, MK19 6HD.
Or phone 01908 566366.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)