Tendulkar: Four-day Tests would be disadvantageous to spinners

Tendulkar has joined the chorus of calls against the move, which is set to be discussed by the ICC cricket committee this year for 2023 and beyond.

Published : Jan 07, 2020 13:23 IST , New Delhi

Sachin Tendulkar has said a shortened form of Test cricket would be disadvantageous to spin bowlers.
Sachin Tendulkar has said a shortened form of Test cricket would be disadvantageous to spin bowlers.
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Sachin Tendulkar has said a shortened form of Test cricket would be disadvantageous to spin bowlers.

Cricket great Sachin Tendulkar has vehemently opposed the International Cricket Council’s proposed “four-day Test”, urging the governing body to refrain from “tinkering” with a format in which the spinners come into play on the final day.

Tendulkar has joined the chorus of calls against the move, which is set to be discussed by the ICC cricket committee this year for 2023 and beyond.

“From a purist’s point of view and as an admirer of Test cricket, I don’t think it should be tinkered with. The format has to be played in the way it has been played for so many years,” said Tendulkar.

A day less, according to the world’s highest run-getter across two formats, will lead to batsmen thinking of Tests as an extended version of limited-overs cricket.

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“The moment you bat till the second-day lunch, you know that there are only two and a half days to go. That changes the thinking and dynamics of the game,” he added.

The other worrying aspect could be spinners being rendered ineffective. “Taking away the fifth-day track from a spinner is like taking away the first-day track from a fast bowler. There is no fast bowler in the world who wouldn’t want to bowl on a fifth-day track.

“On the final session of a fifth day, any spinner would like to bowl. The ball doesn’t turn from the first day or the first session. The wicket takes time for wear and tear. The fifth day brings with it, turn, bounce and the unevenness of the surface. It doesn’t happen on the first two days,” he explained.

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Tendulkar fully understands that there are commercial aspect and audience interest attached to the game but he wants one format to remain the true test of batsmanship.

“We first need to understand why do they want it and what are the reasons for that. That’s one side of it and obviously, it’s got to do with the commercial side as well,” he said.

“Audience-friendly, yes, it is important. But for that, from Tests, we have moved to ODIs and T20s and now we even have T10s. So there should be something for the purists and that’s Test cricket,” he added.

“The batsmen, are they being tested in Test cricket? At least, there should be one format that should challenge the batsmen and that’s why it’s called Test cricket because it’s not over in two sessions. You need to bat for long hours on difficult surfaces at times.”

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Tendulkar has time and again stressed on the need to have good Test match wickets.

“For good Test matches, you need good wickets. If the Test match pitches have quality, the game will not get boring. There are tracks where even the bowler feels he can’t get the batsman out on this surface.

“They then think let’s bowl maiden overs and wait for the batsmen to make mistakes. Batsmen also know that if I don’t play a foolish shot, no one can get me out.”

Mark Taylor, Michael Vaughan and Shane Warne are among former players who have supported the shake up. The ICC approved a trial of the concept in 2017, with South Africa, Zimbabwe, England and Ireland taking part in four-day games since then.

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