CMJ: ICC to breathe new life into Test calendar (15 Jun 1998)
A WORLD Championship of Test cricket every four years is likely to be agreed by the International Cricket Council today
15-Jun-1998
15 June 1998
ICC to breathe new life into Test calendar
Christopher Martin-Jenkins
A WORLD Championship of Test cricket every four years is likely to
be agreed by the International Cricket Council today. Decisions made
during a week of deliberations at various levels of the ICC by
officials from full and associate member countries will be tied up at
Lord's this morning and announced tomorrow, writes Christopher
Martin-Jenkins.
Some way of establishing genuine Test world champions has been under
consideration since the ICC set up an investigative committee a year
ago, stimulated by a Wisden campaign to start an official grading
system. Crowds for Test cricket have been excellent in England,
generally healthy in Australia, variable in India but increasingly
poor elsewhere, the entirely predictable consequence of an excessive
glorification of, and indulgence in one-day internationals at the
expense of the five-day game, still the truest test of strength.
A committee under the chairmanship of the managing director of the
United Board of South Africa, Ali Bacher, have been weighing the
merits of staging an actual championship or of having a rolling system
which uses existing Test series to grade the nations. Their preference
was for a tournament held over a two-month period every four years,
with preliminary matches staged simultaneously in two main centres and
a final in one of them.
It would be surprising if their recommendations have not been accepted
by the ICC, though the logistical problems of such a scheme might be
as big as its potential advantages to the game. The first tournament
is likely to be staged in 2001, two years after next season's World
Cup in England. Where and at what time of the year the Tests will be
held remains to be seen, but India is one likely venue.
Dr Bacher and others believe that Test cricket needs a boost in most
parts of the world and that such a championship would repeat the
success of the one-day World Cup and of rival sporting events which
create international interest and generate big profits. No stranger to
hyperbole but sometimes a genuine visionary, Dr Bacher said some
months ago: "A World Championship would not simply enhance Test
cricket, it would save it."
The questions to be asked, however, are what effect a quadrennial
championship would have on existing Test series, whether they would
further relegate public, media and commercial interest in domestic
programmes which have already been downgraded by the proliferation of
international fixtures, and how it will be fitted into an
international circuit which is already congested. One assumes pains
will be taken not to devalue series like those between England and
Australia which have lost none of their lustre and also that the
England and Wales Cricket Board will want to guard against any further
belittling of county cricket.
The possible elevation to Test status of Bangladesh, and
rubber-stamping of the English proposal to prevent negative bowling
outside leg stump from over the wicket, are the other major items on
this year's ICC agenda.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)