Pink ball Tests: practise before taking the plunge, says Hadlee

June 15, 2016 10:26 pm | Updated October 18, 2016 02:20 pm IST - MUMBAI:

Richard Hadlee, the first bowler to pick 400 Test wickets, gave a thumbs-up for floodlit Test matches, but the former New Zealand pace bowler hinted that India should not rush into organising a day/night Test.

“It is important for the players to have practice games; you cannot ask them to go out there and ask them to play a day/night game against the pink ball. It is unrealistic in professional environment era. That needs to be tried and tested, so players can get some confidence,”

Hadlee said on Thursday during an interaction that followed a preliminary discussion on community development through sport, in a strategic alliance with Tata Trusts.

Different conditions

“That makes a lot of sense. Because conditions are different all around the world, so we don’t really know how the pink ball is going to work here in India and that’s why players need to have those practice games (and) that’s what is happening for South Africa when they go to Australia. They were against it initially, because they were to go under-prepared. You’ve got to be fair, if it works, it works. I am for it.”

The Board of Control for Cricket in India has been planning to host at least a day/night Test in each of its three Test series at home in the coming season, with little time to get players’ feedback.

The Duleep Trophy, to be played in September, will serve as the pink ball trial ahead of the first anticipated floodlit Tests, against New Zealand in October.

Hadlee, a member of the famous quartet of all-rounders in world cricket in the 1980s, cautioned that there shouldn’t be an overdose of pink ball Tests.

“You try, it is the game of the future. Probably one Test in a series is fair enough. I think most people like to see the traditional format during the day, one-off Test (a series) during night every now and again is reasonable,” he said.

The maiden pink ball Test, between Australia and New Zealand in Adelaide in 2015, seemed to have impressed Hadlee, who retired in 1990 with a tally of 431 Test scalps, the most at the time. “Even (if) that was over in three days, it was a contest between bat and ball. And that’s what you wanted. It was a wonderful spectacle,” he said.

“The only problem is — clearly in some areas around the world — the dew factor. And that the ball could get affected and that is going to be a disadvantage, particularly, to the fielding team. And in a Test match, you want to have those variances, variations in the game and something needs to be worked through.”

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