Greed could kill Test cricket
A rebellion is growing against the incessant demands of international cricket
Andrew Miller
13-Apr-2006
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Shahid Afridi's casual announcement last night that he is "retiring"
from Test cricket to concentrate on his World Cup preparations, is the
loudest hint yet that a rebellion is growing against the incessant
demands of international cricket. The hazard lights have been flashing
for years, but Afridi's decision is a klaxon that the game can no longer
afford to ignore.
The identity of the player matters less than the thinking behind the
decision. Afridi's Test form in recent months has been magnificent, and
his absence will be a sad loss to a resurgent team - particularly in
England in three months' time. That he should pack it all in, however,
in the prime of his career - albeit on an apparently temporary basis -
implies a worrying schism is brewing in the world game.
The international calendar is overloaded to the point of absurdity -
that much is abundantly clear. It is common-place these days for touring
sides to arrive in a country while their hosts are still wrapping up a
series elsewhere, or failing that, for squads to shift from timezone to
timezone with barely a pause to synchronize watches. For all the
magnificence of Bangladesh's current challenge against Australia, one
wonders what might have happened had the Aussies been given time to
acclimatize after their endeavours a week earlier in South Africa.
And the demands just keep getting worse. Last week, for instance, the
BCCI announced it would be adding 25 offshore one-day internationals to
India's already rammed itinerary - the majority, undoubtedly, will be
against Pakistan. It was a move greeted with understandable dismay by
the men whose duty it is to stick to that treadmill day-in, day-out.
Cricinfo has learned that not even India's 4-0 clean-sweep was enough to
appease their taskmasters, who were concerned that to rest key players in
the dead-rubber matches that followed would offend the relevant hosting
associations.
Something, clearly, has got to give. And as far as the Asian market is
concerned, there can be only one loser. One-day cricket is king on the
subcontinent, especially in Pakistan where attendances at Test matches
have been little short of woeful for years. The glitz, the glamour and
the professional satisfaction that Afridi and his contemporaries rightly
crave can only be realised in front of those seething floodlit
audiences. Now that Afridi has set his precedent, the lure of the
floodlights could well open the floodgates.
Such a prospect has horrific ramifications, not least because the ten
Test-playing nations have such vastly polarised priorities. For English
audiences in particular, nothing can rival a good old-fashioned Test
match, and though it sounds churlish to say it, the gulf between their
Test and one-day exploits cannot be explained by inexperience alone. The
joy of last summer's Ashes stemmed from the knowledge that they were
competing with their most like-minded opponents. One-day cricket has never
captured the nation's affections, and probably never will.
So what's a game to do? Should we expect all elite players to plough on
and on and on through the good days and the bad, risking the sorts of
family-based traumas that may or may not have befallen Marcus
Trescothick this winter, or burning out like comets in flash-bang
five-year careers, or worse, playing on long after the passion has
dimmed, and caring so little for each contest that disgust and
disillusionment takes hold amid a new wave of match-fixing scandals?
Make no mistake, this a worrying time for the game. It was the insidious
spread of meaningless one-day tournaments that brought the game to its
knees at the start of the millennium, and all the while that the ICC
turns a blind eye to the latest gathering of storm-clouds, they are
inviting another disaster.
Afridi may actually have hit upon the only way to end this insanity once
and for all. The game is nothing without its drawcard players. But why do I
feel that Test cricket will be the bigger loser?
Is too much cricket killing the game? Let us know what you think.
Andrew Miller is UK editor of Cricinfo