How would 4 days solve the extra workload though? Organisations could just see one less day per match as a chance to squeeze some extra games into the tour, or to fit more tours into one season. In a five-test tour for instance, that's 5 extra days which could just see more OD or T20 games crammed in.Proposal # 5 : Play an extra hour and cut out a day of test cricket.
With an eight ball over if we could squeeze in another hour's play, we could actually go to four days and still have at least as much cricket as we are getting from five days with 90 6 ball overs.
With the problems of scheduling being what they are, and the playewrs being away from families for long periods, cutting down 20 percent by way of days in Test cricket is a big thing,. It is doable given the will.
2 balls an over, you'd get 270 overs in a day.For mine it (8 balls per over) seems like an arbitrary number, why not go for 7 ball overs for instance?
Rescheduling is not the only advantage.Thats probably my least favorite suggestion thus far SJS. I think scheduling in itself would find its own way to be exactly as poor with four day cricket as it is with five, if there is more time to spare it will be filled in with something else. Also this gives more time for rain to wash away a match completely as a whole day being rained out isn't out of the question, which if it happened in this context would almost certainly mean a match wouldn't get a result.
As for having an extra day in case of rain? They could do this with five day cricket but it is a television production problem more than a cricketing one. TV companies can't afford buy a spot that they might not use, its a massive waste of money whenever it doesn't rain.
I spose the availability isn't yet an issue for me being a student. I can really go to the cricket whenever I please.Rescheduling is not the only advantage.
If I had to take time off from work to watch a Test match, I would love it if it was just two days I needed to take off rather than three (assuming I do not work on Saturday Sunday anyway).
As for the authorities squeezing more cricket into the extra days, well the whole thing is a hypothetical excercise to reform, which would be impossible in any case if the same guys ran the game the same way anyway.
Scheduling will come as yet another proposal. Have patience. I am rushing them through for this reason.
You could do better. Bowl two overs from each end at a time2 balls an over, you'd get 270 overs in a day.
Would be disappointing to see the line of great wicket-keeper batsman ended though.Just to deviate a bit
Proposal # 6: Play specialist wicket keepers only to keep wickets
Let the teams play 12 players one of which would be a specialist wicket keeper who would do nothing but keep wickets. This will allow them to play an extra specialist bowler (or batsman) as the case may be and the specialist keeper will not become a dying species as has been the case for a long time now.
We want the keeper to be more than a slip wearing gloves. Lets have the best keepers compete for the job, be paid equally and be able to rest after the most tiring job in the game is over (except in the unavoidable case of a follow on).
This is not to end but to revive great wicket keeping.Would be disappointing to see the line of great wicket-keeper batsman ended though.
Its a long one, the reply to that.I haven't the faintest what one of these wicket keepers would have been like. Just the fact that a guy like McCullum can pull off amazing catches and only one the rarest occasion drop something is basically the pinnacle of a guy with the gloves for mine. I can't see how they could benefit the team much more.
I'd be happy to read it.Its a long one, the reply to that.
I have replied in an oblique way because I did not read your last post "I'd be happy to read it.I'd be happy to read it.
You will be amazed at how many chances are there to get a batsman as he just loses balance momentarily when he drives, which cant be picked up if you are standing back. The catches which the keeper dives and takes up may still be taken by a slip fielder but those stumpings cant be taken by anyone else.Yet a wicketkeepers job is not the same as a bowlers, he himself cannot force wickets only take the chances that are given to him.
You are right. They dont and thats sad. But you cant blame them.I suppose it is coming to a fold where in many places the batting is far more important than the keeping (Prior) as opposed to equally important (Gilchrist, McCullum, Boucher). How many young players out there genuinely focus on their keeping more than their batting? Or even the same amount of focus.