Richard
Cricket Web Staff Member
It hasn't taken over the international scene, and not everything that has come of it is to the detriment of the longer game. Plenty of things, indeed, are completely unrelated - the two games are more different now than they ever were.Well, if wanting to preserve Test cricket, and thinking that it is the highest (or the only) form of the game is elitist, then I am proud to be one TBH. I hate the limited overs format. I hate the idea of it, I hate the execution of it, I hate the fact that it has taken over the international scene at the detriment of real cricket, and I hate the fact that when a overblown, over hyped piece of ****e tournament like the World Cup rolls around, the real game takes a back seat.
Yes, I suppose that makes me an elitist and part of a very small population of people, but so be it.
I don't dislike there being breaks in the Test schedule, either, myself - it makes me think "ah, won't it be great to get back into the Test routine", which I have been for the last 2 weeks. I don't like **** tournaments like the WC, no, but I don't like **** "Test" series like Sri Lanka vs Bangladesh or India vs Zimbabwe either, they're even worse and even more of an abomination to the game than a single ODI between any team deserving of the status.
If he'd performed as **** as he did in the same number of games, very probably, yes. It just so happens that, of late, he hasn't in the Test game.3. Sure it has, but would he be dropped from the Test side right now?
And personally, I wouldn't have a problem even if that was the case - which it's not. All games are different. Some require ****loads of defensive play, some all-out attack. And that is the way I like it. It's no different in Tests, there are countless shifts in the requirements. It's very, very closeted and intolerant to just expect every game to be a picture of attack-attack-attack. It gets very boring that way - and that's why I hate Twenty20, the attack mindset is rarely out of the picture. Bowlers have got no chance to defend to any decent degree, and batsmen can't afford to.There is nothing 'wrong' with it in the sense that it is what is needed to win the game. But that's precisely my point - that fact that such strategies are almost essential to win a game. It's not like it's just a couple overs here and there. It's at least 40% of the overs in every game!