Well said. But you have to admit SJS, as Keith Miller said in his autobiography. Cricket needed One-day cricket, cause lets be honest in 2009 test cricket as the only form of the game couldn't compete globally like Football, basketball etc.
The problem is basically ICC not being a governing body, it always goes back to that. A proper governing body who UNDERSTANDS (a key quality) the dynamics of this sport. Could have controlled the rise of T20s & keep fans & players in check.
The fire is already burning the house down, so ICC has to become a governing body & revamp things under these extreme circumstances.
The most important thing that needs to be done to revitalise the game is to restore some balance between bat and ball. At the moment the game is completely skewed in favour of the former.
For some strange reason everyone who matters seems to have concluded that people come to watch only batsmen, boundaries, sixes, centuries, doubles and triples. This has had a very detrimental impact on all aspects of the game.
As it is the bats are completely unrecognisable from what even we were playing with. At sixty today I can drive with my new bat and get almost as much out of the stroke as I did when I was twenty. For those who play the game at the highest level the difference is amazingly vast.
On top of that the boundaries are shrinking.
Referrals to the third umpire are bringing more 'doubtful benefits' for the batsmen.
Wickets have become dead even in places where they used to be lively. Perth, for example is nothing compared to the fiery top it used to be.
The new ball swings for much shorter time if at all since the lack of emphasis on the side on aspect of the action has dramatically reduced the number of bowlers around the world who can swing late and big.
In the limited overs game, the restriction on how many overs the best bowler/s of a side can bowl has made the batsman face the weaker bowling for more than half the game.
The wide rule (still in ODI's) has ensured that the bowlers bowl just where the batsmen would love them to.
Need to have six players who will be available to bowl has meant that fewer specialist bowlers will be played in the limited overs game.
The importance of the limited overs game and its proliferation has meant that all these habits that the bowlers are 'forced' to pick up from the shorter version become part and parcel of the game for the generation that has been brought up on that diet from their very first 'baby steps' in the game.
The bowling standards are nowhere near what they used to be. This is a fact. This has nothing to do with the "bleatings' of an old foggy. Ask any top cricketer of the seventies or eighties whose opinion you respect and you will get the same answer.
This has actually made the batsmen of today, inspite of the 'great' averages, much lesser players than you may want to think of them. When we criticise some of the older players for not having performed against this or that great bowling attack, we need to look around and see what kind of bowling attacks we have today.
This is not a fault of the players. The bowlers, and the batsmen, of this generation have it in them to be as good as the best of other eras but the system needs to keep monitoring the anomalies that are bound to creep in over time.
A lot can be done to make things better for bowlers. Uncovered pitches is often suggested but that is not the only thing. So much else can be done if the authorities just decided that if bowling standards improved, the batting would have to, and will, rise to learn to counter it and the spectators will get not just a real contest but one of a much higher quality.