Test cricket 'near crisis point'
By Sam Hewat
The truth is finally being acknowledged; test cricket is in danger of dying.
Cue the purists, who hate shorter formats of the game which have come to dominate player movements and television screens.
They'll say the five-day format is the way cricket is meant to be played.
But you only have to look at any test series around the world to see empty seats, meaningless results and a whole lot of unsustainable costs.
Heath Mills, the chief executive of the New Zealand Cricket Player's Association, spoke to Newstalk ZB's Tony Veitch and said the biggest problem is that test cricket lacks meaning.
"We lurch from month to month with different bilateral series between countries and they are all different in nature," Mills said.
"There'll be a test series between countries one year, then they'll play short-form the next, then there'll be three ODIs or seven ODIs or one test or three tests.
It just has no context or meaning in the greater sense."
And it's the rise of T20 cricket and the shorter forms of the game, bringing in all the cash, which are paying for the format we love, but that's sucking all the money.
"Test cricket is the biggest cost to the sport at the moment," Mills said. "I wouldn't say the game is at a crisis point, but it's nearing it."
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