Richard
Cricket Web Staff Member
I hope you're not contending that because hardly anyone outplayed Australia between '89 and '06/07 (I'd say there was West Indies in '91, India in '97/98, Sri Lanka in '99/00, India in '00/01 and England in '05) that means Test cricket has declined.There is a reasonable argument that test cricket has declined since the 80's and I would agree considering no team has challenged the dominant team 'Australia' other than England and India in even winning one test let alone considering these teams respective series winning feats.
I might remind you that there were just two series' between 1976 and 1986 where anyone seriously challenged West Indies - New Zealand in '79/80 (with Richards absent and Roberts missing the Test they lost) and Australia in '81/82 (with Greenidge missing the Test they lost), and those both in a three-Test rubber.
I don't doubt, myself, that Test cricket has declined in recent times, but it's since 2001/02 rather than since 1990, and the indication is the flat pitches and regular heavy scoring rather than the dominance of any one team.
Last edited: