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How To Revive Test Cricket!
June 25, 2016
|Sportstar
The two-tier plan to bring interest back to Test cricket will certainly galvanise the Intercontinental Cup (the first class tournament for non-Test countries), but it needs more work to ensure that the structure of Test cricket is not altered to fit a marketing plan that might not make the slightest difference.
Two years ago the buzzword in cricket was“oligarchy”. Today it is “context”. Test cricket needs context, international series need context, every match must not only stand for itself but be part of the bigger picture.

Hence the proposal for the two-tier system for Tests with seven teams in the top group. The teams play home and away matches in their group over a two-year or four-year cycle (yet to be decided) for the world Test championship. The top team in the lower group gets promoted while the bottom team in the other group is relegated. All very cut-and-dried. This should, according to the International Cricket Council bring the crowds rushing back to watch the longest format of the game which is in some danger of disappearing and hence the need to “do something”.

But Test cricket was never so cut-and-dried. Much of its charm derives from its illogicality, quirkiness, lack of context, apparent absence of a controlling mechanism, and of course the duration itself. It is a version of the game that has usually been seen as anachronistic, long before the birth of the T20.
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