Unattainableguy
State 12th Man
Twenty20 is great. I have a question for all those people who are bashing twenty20 here: how many of you actually watch a test match without missing many overs? I bet none or very few of you yet you all have probably watched all the Twenty20's or at least the matches involving your teams. I personally don't hate test cricket, I like all the three formats equally (because I'm having a hard time deciding which one I like more ), but I've had situations where I stopped watching a test match for a session or the whole day because the batsmen were scoring too slowly or because there was no possibility of a result ( flat pitch, rain, etc so pointless to watch). So imagine someone completely new to the game.
But I agree with those who are saying fans, cricket players etc if they're exposed to Twenty20 more, they will start to pay more attention towards it than test cricket, but that's because test matches are usually boring the first 3 days, you're unsure of a result, pitches are flat, and you hear commentators saying how the pitch will take turn on day 4 or 5 or there will be more uneven bounce and it gets more flatter . So I think if any one of these things can be improved, people will follow test cricket with more interest, maybe instead of 5 days, make it 4 days ( 90 overs a day) but with pitches that offer a lot of assistance to the bowlers so you're guaranteed a result, this would mean batsmen more likely to get out because they would want to score quickly while they're there and not just block every ball they face. Good bowling will also get its rewards which isn't happening currently.
So do you think test matches should be reduced to 4 days with more helpful pitches to attract more fans?
But I agree with those who are saying fans, cricket players etc if they're exposed to Twenty20 more, they will start to pay more attention towards it than test cricket, but that's because test matches are usually boring the first 3 days, you're unsure of a result, pitches are flat, and you hear commentators saying how the pitch will take turn on day 4 or 5 or there will be more uneven bounce and it gets more flatter . So I think if any one of these things can be improved, people will follow test cricket with more interest, maybe instead of 5 days, make it 4 days ( 90 overs a day) but with pitches that offer a lot of assistance to the bowlers so you're guaranteed a result, this would mean batsmen more likely to get out because they would want to score quickly while they're there and not just block every ball they face. Good bowling will also get its rewards which isn't happening currently.
So do you think test matches should be reduced to 4 days with more helpful pitches to attract more fans?
Last edited: