Floodlit tests move one step closer

LONDON, (Reuters) – Only one final obstacle now  prevents the International Cricket Council (ICC) introducing  floodlit day-night test matches as it confronts dwindling  support for the five-day game.  

Experiments over the past two years have shown that either  pink or orange balls in place of the traditional red can be seen  clearly under lights.  
Now the problem is not visibility but whether the ball can  retain its colour for the minimum 80 overs required before the  fielding side can ask for a new ball.  

Consequently over the next year a pink ball with a black  seam, which was used in the Marylebone Cricket Club’s (MCC)  annual season-opening fixture against county champions  Nottinghamshire in Abu Dhabi this year, will be trialled  throughout the world.  

“This time next year I hope we will be in a position,  hopefully, to recommend it be used in a day-night test match,”  ICC general manager Dave Richardson told reporters at Lord’s  last week.  

“The principal aim now is just to confirm that the ball in  most conditions can sustain itself for long enough.”  
Although Richardson is sanguine about the future of five-day  tests, the reality is that attendances in the 10 test nations,  apart from England, Australia and Bangladesh, have plummeted.  

Elsewhere, one-day cricket in either its 50- or 20-over  versions is proving consistently more popular with fans whose  time and money need to be husbanded carefully in times of  continuing economic uncertainty.   
    
  PRIME TIME
  
Mindful of the need to preserve the pre-eminence of test  matches, still the form of the game regarded by players and  cricket enthusiasts alike as the most satisfying and meaningful,  the ICC has concluded that day-night cricket is one way ahead.  

“I’m not as pessimistic as some people as far as the  necessity to save test cricket is concerned,” Richardson said.  

“I think test cricket is pretty healthy in a number of  countries. But I do think it affords the boards the opportunity  to play test cricket at times where more people are available to  go and watch in the evening sessions.  

“I also know commercially it can be valuable to play at  those times of the day. The hours of six to nine in the evening  are prime viewing time and they can charge more for the  advertisements during that time. 
 
“Commercially I know it makes sense to be able to play test  cricket at that time.   
“The main reason for me would be to go to work on Thursday  and Friday and also maybe go to watch the test match in the  evening.”  
Day-night cricket was introduced in Kerry Packer’s 1977-78  rebel World Series where coloured clothing, a white ball and a  black sightscreen, still staples of one-day cricket, were  employed for the first time.  
Test cricket, though, is played in traditional whites with a  red ball and to this end experiments have been conducted with  different coloured balls which can be seen clearly under lights.   
    
SUITABLE CLIMATES
  
The MCC experiment was regarded as a success but the ICC’s  cricket committee, headed by Clive Lloyd who captained West  Indies in World Series Cricket, concluded further tests were  needed in potentially more difficult conditions.  

“Conditions were fairly benign, the outfield was a good one,  there was no dew so we thought what we need is a period of  further trialling,” Richardson explained.  

He said the pink ball would be employed in the ICC’s  Intercontinental Cup, a four-day competition between associate  member countries such as Ireland and the Netherlands, while the  10 full member nations would be encouraged to use it in at least  one round of their domestic competitions.  

Richardson, a former South Africa wicketkeeper, said the  committee was concerned about the endurance of the ball “in  conditions where there is maybe early morning dew, where you  have a rain spell, occasions when the outfields are damp”. 
 
“We haven’t gone into which countries would have climates  that are suitable but I would imagine that most of the 10  (test-playing nations) have a venue where some time in the year  they could easily hold a day-night test match.” 
 
If the cricket committee concludes in a year’s time that the  pink ball can retain its colour in adverse conditions, the path  appears clear for a trial day-night test in the ensuing 12  months.