Is there a bigger dampener than a two-Test series?

By Rustom Deboo / Roar Guru

“As the ICC has increased the number of T20 Internationals that countries can play against each other, the number of two-Test series are becoming more common, which I would rather not happen at all because they are a nothingness of a nothing.”

This is what the great former Indian batsman Rahul Dravid said during his enlightening speech at the ESPN-Cricinfo For Cricket Summit in London in August 2013.

However, most of the cricket boards are increasingly moving in the opposite direction, much to the chagrin of Test match lovers around the world.

The fact that Dravid’s sentiment has fallen on deaf ears is shown by the number of two-Test series in the last cricket season.

The 2013-14 season (April 2013 to March 2014) saw fourteen Test series played, of which two were the Ashes. Of the remaining twelve, as many as nine series consisted of just two Tests. The abrupt ends to these series left many a cricket follower frustrated.

Thankfully, one of the three series in 2013-14 which consisted of three Tests was the Australian tour of South Africa. The Baggy Greens triumphed on a classic last day of the third Test in Cape Town to inflict a first series defeat on South Africa in five years. It also ensured their undefeated record (since South Africa’s re-admission) in the Rainbow Nation remained intact.

Imagine for a moment if this series, like the one in 2011-12, had consisted of just two Test matches. Mitchell Johnson’s fiery spells at Centurion and Dale Steyn’s magic at Port Elizabeth would have amounted to little. The third Test added context to the series, and the result was there for all to see.

Regarding the 2011-12 series between South Africa and Australia, Steyn had then remarked, “I go on holiday for longer than that series is going to last”.

The champion fast bowler hit the nail on the head. After South Africa romped to victory in the bizarre 47 all-out match in Cape Town, Australia drew level with a thrilling chase in Johannesburg. Perfect setting for a mouth-watering decider. Unfortunately, the third Test existed only in the realm of fantasy for cricket connoisseurs and players alike.

Watching the two captains hold a shared trophy after a two-Test series is pretty depressing. The two teams trade a punch each, then what?

Also during 2011-12, we saw how New Zealand edged out Australia in Hobart after going down tamely in Brisbane. This left the enthralled fans asking for more, but instead what they got was an empty feeling of discontent. Australia and Pakistan last played a Test against each other back in 2010, yet the forthcoming series in the UAE in October will have only two Tests.

Two-Test series can never provide the necessary build-up. The series is over even before the teams are getting into the groove. If a team wins the first Test, the other team has already missed the opportunity of winning the series. Two-Test series rob the game of the charm of watching a team fight back to victory after being one down.

Players like Dravid and Steyn are class acts, and over their careers have yearned to win Test matches for their countries with their performances. But a two-Test series often breeds a defensive mindset – for instance, when South Africa shut shop during what would have been a world record chase against India in Johannesburg last December. I believe they would have at least made a bold effort to go for glory had it been a three-Test series.

No one likes a two-Test series, except for the unsatiated administrators in pursuit of quick cash. It is akin to a farce and demeans the tradition of Test match cricket. Scrapping a third Test to accommodate a meaningless limited-overs series has become quite a norm today.

Nowadays we see two back-to-back Tests scheduled as if a favour is being done on us Test cricket lovers. Earlier, all cricket tours used to be centered around the Test series. Today, the token two-Test series is a damning indictment which clearly shows where the priorities of the administrators lie.

Over the last few years, we have seen a two-Test Wisden Trophy (in 2009) and a two-Test Border-Gavaskar Trophy (in 2010-11) for the first time. As of now, the only head-to-head fixture that has never had a series of less than three Tests is Australia versus West Indies.

But even that is likely to change, as Australia are scheduled to pay a two-Test visit to the Caribbean next year. With this, the Frank Worrell Trophy nearly loses its meaning and it is an insult to the great man himself, who had undoubtedly envisaged a rich Test match future between the two sides after the historic 1960-61 series.

It is a fact that Test cricket is a very expensive sport to sustain. But that is no excuse for not having that much-needed extra Test in a series. Ticket sales are dropping, and the public is moving towards T20.

Rather than sit and do something about this worrying trend, cricket boards show ignorance and instead callously cancel previously-scheduled Tests, and at times, entire series. And then in a most hypocritical manner, they talk about the ‘primacy’ of Test cricket.

A minimum of three Tests is absolutely essential, no matter which teams are playing. Anything less than that is sacrilegious.

The Crowd Says:

2014-07-30T14:09:54+00:00

Arto

Guest


@ Johnno: Aus v Ind is only a FOUR Test series (Brisbane, Adelaide, Melbourne & Sydney). Perth is out until it gets upgraded & Hobart missed out this year (most likely due to the ODI WC)... Agree though that 3-Test series should be the minimum. I don't have a problem with playing either of Sth Afr or Ind in a 5-Test series, but if finances mean that's not possible then I understand having only 3 or 4...

2014-07-30T09:10:18+00:00

Timmuh

Roar Guru


The two Test series are a disappointment. It makes some sort of sense when its something like Australia v Zimbabwe. Maybe some of those types of series could be a "best of", scheduled for three but if its two-nil it fnishes there. If the teams are more than, for example, five places apart o the rankings that sor of system might work. As was alluded to above, acclimatisation is another factor. I'd like to see at least two first class tour games before the first Test of any series, but that isn't going to happen. An ideal would be to ban alll limited overs only tours (50, 20, or whatever number of overs) except World Cups, and enforce a three Test minimum with any such tour. That certainly won't happen, and I guess it could cause problems for the smaller nations - but they don;tmake big money from 50 over games either.

2014-07-29T14:11:26+00:00


Exactly, tours are being condensed and doesn't allow for much preparation.

AUTHOR

2014-07-29T14:07:58+00:00

Rustom Deboo

Roar Guru


Biltongbek, that's a good point. Acclimatisation to alien conditions is a vital factor, especially in today's era where at times, not even a single first-class game is scheduled before a Test series.

2014-07-29T09:37:38+00:00

Cadfael

Roar Guru


Couldn't agree more. So infuriating to have what could be a good series stalled because it is only two tests. Not a fan of T20 so the increase in these games does nothing for me.

2014-07-29T09:10:36+00:00


in my humble opinion every test series should be 4 tests. Often a team lands in foreign conditions and do not have much time to get used to conditions, which automatically puts them on the back foot and the lose the first match, to come back from 0-1 in a short series is not easy. At least a four test series has enough to negate poor starts, conditions, weather etc.

2014-07-29T09:00:21+00:00

Tom from Perth

Guest


Great piece. 2 test series suck. I've been watching the RSA vs SL 2 test series that finished yesterday. A final test would have been great.

2014-07-29T08:59:42+00:00

Beauty of a geek brains of a bimbo(atgm)

Guest


Two tests series = cricketin equivalent of foreplay

AUTHOR

2014-07-29T07:47:09+00:00

Rustom Deboo

Roar Guru


Australia v South Africa deserves a four-Test series. It is the most exciting rivalry today; iit even trumps the Ashes.

AUTHOR

2014-07-29T07:45:22+00:00

Rustom Deboo

Roar Guru


Johnno, Australia v West Indies playing a two-Test series is pretty ridiculous in my opinion. And furthermore, the Windies have not exactly been pushovers in the last two series - in Australia in 2009-10, they came within 35 runs of winning at the WACA and in the Caribbean in 2012, they were in winning positions in all three Tests only to squander it all in a session or two.

AUTHOR

2014-07-29T07:42:32+00:00

Rustom Deboo

Roar Guru


Thank you. Couldn't agree more. Save for the World Cup and World Cricket League, ODI's have become absolutely irrelevant. There should be a maximum of three ODI's in any bilateral series.

2014-07-29T06:44:35+00:00

TriangleFlatDog

Guest


Nice article mate. For me it will always be test cricket first and daylight second. I don't even enjoy the one dayers that much anymore and I don't watch 20/20 cricket.....David Lloyd was right when he said "T20 cricket is just entertainment using cricket equipment" or something to that effect

2014-07-29T01:49:19+00:00

JGK

Roar Guru


Have to agree - a 2 Test series isn't really a series.

2014-07-29T01:03:36+00:00

Pope Paul vii

Guest


No tests

2014-07-28T23:14:30+00:00

Sideline Comm.

Guest


Mate, I said that SA and India should have four, so I guess we agree on that. But India are only playing four tests here over the summer, as they usually do. And yes, they do love cricket.

2014-07-28T23:06:56+00:00

Johnno

Guest


I like South Africa at say 3, 4 at most. I don't think South Africa need 5. India the same. India are getting 5 in Australia this year. There getting 5 right now in England, but so many Indians in UK so it's fine. Indians can't get enough cricket, they sell-out best of 7-ODI series, again and again they love it so much. Indians love cricket, can't get enough of it.

2014-07-28T22:53:19+00:00

Sideline Comm.

Guest


No, two test series are rubbish. Three at least should be the lowest, with four against India and SA and obviously five for the Ashes. I cannot think of one good aspect of a two test series, it doesn't keep test cricket fresh, it dilutes it by allowing for the seven T/20s and 14 One Dayers they decide to follow them with.

2014-07-28T21:06:09+00:00

Johnno

Guest


Funny I don't mind a 2 test series sometimes, it keeps test cricket fresh etc. VS NZ, or West indies, no problem or Sri Lanka. Maybe vs NZ a 3 test series would be good to try again.

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