



Tours by India boost opponents’ bank balances, allowing home boards to sell TV rights to the lucrative subcontinental market.
Former India wicketkeeper Farokh Engineer said the Board of Control for Cricket in India had been “blinded” by Twenty20 to the detriment of an overall vision.
“India have been sort of blinded by the T20, the IPL,” said Engineer, speaking alongside Gower. “Your first priority is to play for your country and then the riches will come automatically.”
That Engineer played 46 Tests in just over 13 years while recently retired England batsman Alastair Cook made 161 Test appearances in 12-and-a-half years is an indication of just how congested the international calendar has become.
Engineer’s fellow panel member Mushtaq Mohammad said it was crucial to make Test cricket affordable and that spectators risked being priced out of the game.
“If you want Test cricket to survive you’ve got to reduce the entrance fee.
Open the gates, let the people come in, make it affordable.”
As for the recent innovation of day-night Tests, the former Pakistan batsman added: “In Southeast Asia we’ve got the right weather for day-night cricket but don’t reduce it (Test cricket).”
Test cricket has suffered a marked decline in the West Indies, who dominated Test cricket from the late 1970s until the early 1990s, playing with a crowd-pleasing swagger.
Gower said reviving five-day interest in the Caribbean was no easy task despite a significant cash injection from the International Cricket Council.
“If you are talking about the Caribbean, you are not talking about one nation but several nations,” he said. “You are talking about socio-economic problems and it’s disjointed.”
Of some consolation to traditionalists is that the debate is nothing new, with Test cricket still alive and kicking.
“In this ultra-modern age, counter-attractions have multiplied many times….They (young people) just haven’t the time to devote to cricket or is it they just can’t be bothered to dash home to tea, then to the local cricket ground?”
It might sound like a contemporary lament, but those words were written by England great Herbert Sutcliffe after his country’s 1950-51 Ashes Test series loss in Australia.