I suspect its bcoz New Zealand for example didn't hav as many established cricketing nations to deal with in comparison to Bangl;adesh and those 50 tests were probably played over a longer timescale than Bangladesh. In any case its not like SA, India or Pakistan were the powerhouses they are todayWhilst NZ and Sri Lanka were undoubtably poor when they entered Test cricket they were not 'consistently thrashed' anywhere close to the same level Bangladesh have been.
So far Bangladesh have played 49 Tests.
Played 49, lost 43. Thats a losing %age of 88%![]()
In NZ first 49 games they lost 26. Thats a losing %age of 53%
In Sri Lanka first 49 games they lost 22. Thats a losing %age of 45%
Also Sri Lanka and NZ didnt have the benefit of playing nearly 20% of their Tests against another weak team like Zimbabwe as Bangladesh have done.
Really ?? If England and Ausrtalia thought along those lines, there would be only two countries playing test cricket.there is no need of more test playing nations,8 would be enough I think.
Oh there was. In the 70s and early 80s (When Sri Lankan cricket was still not playing much) there were 6 teams and there was certainly a feeling of just seeing the same old faces over and over and there was a level of same old same old series after series.There were times when cricket had far fewer than 8 nations - deja vu wasn't a problem then.
And if they had, no-one would have known any better.Really ?? If England and Ausrtalia thought along those lines, there would be only two countries playing test cricket.
Not helped, I daresay, by the fact that one West Indian thrashing was almost always the same as another.Oh there was. In the 70s and early 80s (When Sri Lankan cricket was still not playing much) there were 6 teams and there was certainly a feeling of just seeing the same old faces over and over and there was a level of same old same old series after series.
That's incorrect way of looking at stats, It took Srilanka 13 years to play 49 tests, took 29 years for NZ to play 49 tests. Bangladesh has played 49 tests in 7 years. It took NZ 26 years to win a test match, 4 years for SL to win one. Test matches used to be a lot defensive in the past hence a lot of them used to end up as draw.Whilst NZ and Sri Lanka were undoubtably poor when they entered Test cricket they were not 'consistently thrashed' anywhere close to the same level Bangladesh have been.
So far Bangladesh have played 49 Tests.
Played 49, lost 43. Thats a losing %age of 88%![]()
In NZ first 49 games they lost 26. Thats a losing %age of 53%
In Sri Lanka first 49 games they lost 22. Thats a losing %age of 45%
Also Sri Lanka and NZ didnt have the benefit of playing nearly 20% of their Tests against another weak team like Zimbabwe as Bangladesh have done.
Kev's way is absolutely the right way of looking at things. Times have changed and so therefore so must the way teams are elevated to Test statusThat's incorrect way of looking at stats, It took Srilanka 13 years to play 49 tests, took 29 years for NZ to play 49 tests. Bangladesh has played 49 tests in 7 years. It took NZ 26 years to win a test match, 4 years for SL to win one. Test matches used to be a lot defensive in the past hence a lot of them used to end up as draw.
Agreed.Kev's way is absolutely the right way of looking at things. Times have changed and so therefore so must the way teams are elevated to Test status
20 teams would see the end of tours as we know them IMO. We'd probably get quadrangular tournaments in one country regularly, for example. "Australia, India and Uganda in England" or the likes, all playing simultaneous tests there. I don't really like the idea of that tbh, but it's probably what we'd see.If 20 places can make Test-standard, great, let's have 20 Test teams. It would mean series came around pretty irregularly, but I think we'd get used to that.
However, having 20 Test teams just for the sake of it, rather than because 20 places demanded it, would be stupid beyond belief.
But you are completely missing the point. The timeframes you mention are irrelevant.That's incorrect way of looking at stats, It took Srilanka 13 years to play 49 tests, took 29 years for NZ to play 49 tests. Bangladesh has played 49 tests in 7 years. It took NZ 26 years to win a test match, 4 years for SL to win one. Test matches used to be a lot defensive in the past hence a lot of them used to end up as draw.
That said SriLanka were obviously more ready to play test cricket in 1981 than NZ, BD, Zim were when they started playing tests. More on this later.
20 teams would see the end of tours as we know them IMO. We'd probably get quadrangular tournaments in one country regularly, for example. "Australia, India and Uganda in England" or the likes, all playing simultaneous tests there. I don't really like the idea of that tbh, but it's probably what we'd see.
Ten is a pretty perfect number IMO, but as has been said, picking number X and then admitting the X best best teams isn't the best way to go about it. Countries which posess signficant interest in the game and have basic national domestic competitions should be persisted with financially in order to help professionalise the game and get the required infrastructure and competitions in place. During this phase, they should play regularly as a national side against A teams and against other teams at similar levels. If they show consistent signs of significant improvement to compete regularly with the other test nations, they should be given test status. That's the level Bangladesh should be at IMO, along with Holland, Namibia and Kenya. Zimbabwe are a totally different case - whether they should be persisted with financially and helped to get competitions in place is highly debatable. Scotland and Ireland are different again as they have strong ties with the English domestic structure.
Thing is, though, even if tours as we know them were to be ended because of this (and yes, it's certainly a possibility) could we possibly justify refusing teams who patently had the resources and the players entry just because "we only want 10 teams"? That'd be utterly unfair.20 teams would see the end of tours as we know them IMO. We'd probably get quadrangular tournaments in one country regularly, for example. "Australia, India and Uganda in England" or the likes, all playing simultaneous tests there. I don't really like the idea of that tbh, but it's probably what we'd see.
Ten is a pretty perfect number IMO, but as has been said, picking number X and then admitting the X best best teams isn't the best way to go about it. Countries which posess signficant interest in the game and have basic national domestic competitions should be persisted with financially in order to help professionalise the game and get the required infrastructure and competitions in place. During this phase, they should play regularly as a national side against A teams and against other teams at similar levels. If they show consistent signs of significant improvement to compete regularly with the other test nations, they should be given test status. That's the level Bangladesh should be at IMO, along with Holland, Namibia and Kenya. Zimbabwe are a totally different case - whether they should be persisted with financially and helped to get competitions in place is highly debatable. Scotland and Ireland are different again as they have strong ties with the English domestic structure.