'Envious' Bates not willing to give up on Test dream just yet
The New Zealand allrounder is closing in on 20 years of international cricket, but is yet to represent her country in the longest format
Vishal Dikshit
04-Sep-2025 • 17 hrs ago
Closing in on 20 years in international cricket, New Zealand allrounder Suzie Bates is still keeping her dreams alive of playing a Test match before she retires. Bates has represented New Zealand in 171 ODIs and 177 T20Is, captained them full-time from 2012 to 2018, has featured in nine T20 World Cups and is ready to play her fifth ODI World Cup starting later this month.
But she remains without a Test cap as New Zealand last played one 21 years ago, against England at Scarborough. Bates made her international debut 19 months later and has gone on to become the top run-scorer in T20Is and sits third on the list in ODIs, behind Mithali Raj and Charlotte Edwards.
New Zealand are not scheduled to play a women's Test as per the current FTP that runs until April 2029, but Bates keeps her hopes alive while watching the other women's teams play Test cricket, as was the case even 10 years ago, when she had said she "felt cheated".
"The feeling [of not having played a Test] is just like I'm envious," Bates told ESPNcricinfo. "Like I think I've said this in another interview when I watch the [women's] Ashes and even when I watch men's Test cricket and they talk about it being the toughest game, it tests your skills, it tests you mentally, it tests you physically as an athlete and a sportsperson I want to be tested. So you sort of watch when there are women's Test matches on and you're like, 'oh I wonder what I'd do in this situation or how I'd go about it', and to not have that opportunity when others are playing it, you do want to experience it.
"But I understand the decisions and the politics of it at times but just as a player I'm like, 'I'd love to have a taste of how I would handle that mentally and physically'. If it happens and I'm still playing I will be over the moon. I do just think for the future of the game - I think Virat Kohli's talked about it saying that is still where you learn the most about the game and where you are tested and if young players, if a young New Zealand player gets to go over and play a four or five-day Test match in India in those conditions with the ball turning, the amount of learning that you do and that compared to a 20-over game is you just can't compare. So yeah, I think there's space for it, but those decisions aren't up to me."
171 ODIs, 177 T20Is, and nearly 20 years of international cricket, but Suzie Bates is yet to play a Test•ICC/Getty Images
Even if Test matches aren't scheduled for New Zealand Women in the current FTP, extra bilateral matches can be added to the schedule if there is an agreement between two boards. Bates will be 38 later this month before the World Cup starts, but was willing to work further on her fitness, tempted by the possibility of playing a Test match, if the chance came in the next year or so.
"Yes, it would motivate me but there is a long time between now and then and I am just focused on contributing at this 50-over World Cup and then we will see what happens after that."
New Zealand begin their World Cup campaign against defending champions Australia on October 2 in Indore before taking on South Africa (October 6, Indore) and Bangladesh (October 10, Guwahati). They will then fly to Colombo to face Sri Lanka (October 14) and Pakistan (October 18), before returning to India for their final two league games in Navi Mumbai, against India on October 23 and England on October 26.
The full interview with Suzie Bates will go up later this month
Vishal Dikshit is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo