Jono
Virat Kohli (c)
When people say "tough to bat under lights", they don't actually mean the lights in the ground makes the ball swing more. They mean at night time, the conditions aid swing bowling, and its thus harder to bat in.Two points. Should all grounds be standardised (probably not - on the big Aussie grounds they would need to bring the ropes in) - and is there a minimum size for boundaries like in football where there is a minimum width the pitch can be for international matches? And if there isn't a minimum should they be? Also, is it my imagination, or do floodlights make more of a difference in SA than other countries? Last year Australia and India got bowled out for double figures under lights replying to good SA scores while in the current CB series NZ nearly chased over 300 under lights. Are SA's lights poorer than Australia's just like their team? (When they are on that is) - last night's blackout was not the first -it happened on an England tour too - but it didn't stop us winning that match as Pakistan did last night.
Its like in India, where sometimes people say "Its going to be hard to bowl under lights today", they are generally referring to the dew. The lights itself have little to do with it.