Time for Test cricket fans to do the annual ‘give BBL a try’ merry dance - it's not for everyone ... and that's OK

By Paul Suttor / Expert

With the Big Bash League kicking off on Thursday night, many cricket fans are doing their annual dance of trying to give the hit and giggle comp more than a passing glance. 

Many people who are old enough to remember the domestic scene prior to the BBL don’t give the “new” set-up much credence.

It doesn’t have the tradition of the Gillette/McDonalds/FAI/Mercantile Mutual/ING/Ford Ranger/Ryobi/Matador BBQs/JLT/Marsh Cup. Now there’s prestige for you. 

The Big Bash has been operating in one form or another since 2005 with the city-based franchises replacing the states a dozen years ago. 

But for Test aficionados, the pastel explosion of colour each summer dishes up the annual conundrum of whether it’s worth investing plenty of precious loungeroom viewing time or even a trip to the stadium to see the Bash in the flesh.

Ashton Turner cuts away from Jimmy Peirson in the BBL final. (Photo by Paul Kane/Getty Images)

After all it is cricket but not the flavour many fans grew up devouring. 

It should be like pizza, even when it’s not your preferred topping, it’s never not good. 

Defenders of the BBL will tell you that if you’re a cricket fan and you don’t like it, then that simply means you aren’t the target audience. 

The BBL and WBBL are designed for kids to get them interested in the sport, an entree designed to get them feasting on cricket when they’re old enough to savour the longer feast of the 50-over meal deal or the unique five-day smorgasbord that is the Test variety. 

Australia’s indifference to the Indian Premier League is a huge saving grace for BBL executives. 

Fortunately for Cricket Australia, the IPL being played in the middle of the night Down Under has hampered its popularity on these shores. 

(Photo by Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images for Cricket Australia)

If India was in our time zone, the IPL would have much greater reach in Australia, relegating the BBL to second-class citizen status, which is what it is, but ignorance is bliss. 

It’s a dilemma that many Australian sports face – the proliferation of the English Premier League and NBA among fans in this country make it hard to market the A-League and NBL to hipster fans who turn their nose up at the local offerings. 

The BBL will only ever be competing for second spot on the global T20 pecking order, and may struggle to cement that spot particularly with leagues in the UAE and the US bankrolled by Indian conglomerates able to attract elite talent. 

Money talks the international language of players and huge contracts will make up for a lack of established franchises or fan bases. 

CA is making inroads into its perceived lack of star power by having Test stalwarts Steve Smith, Mitchell Starc, David Warner, Travis Head, Marnus Labuschagne and Usman Khawaja turning out for cameo stints in the BBL this summer, aided by a supplementary roster system being brought in. 

Solving the eternal problem of fitting in the BBL and the international fixtures in the summer schedule is all but impossible given CA is hamstrung by the constraints of the ICC Future Tours Programme. 

Whereas in days gone past, Australia’s first-choice players would be available for state and national duty in early October once the footy codes had held their respective grand finals, now the calendar space where the top talent is available has shrunk to December and January. 

The name-brand players won’t even be in the country during the school holidays for Australia’s next Test tour to India for a five-match Border-Gavaskar Trophy assignment which is slated to start in January of 2027. 

The BBL will always face the problem of Test players being rarely available because there is no way CA will want to stage their marquee matches at any time other than the December-January window when kids and many adults are on holidays. 

For the Test snobs who look down their noses at the BBL, some of us will brush it altogether and others will tune in on opening night when the electric blue Brisbane Heat clash (both on the pitch and with their uniforms) with the green machine of the Melbourne Stars at the Gabba. 

It used to be that many fans would decry the BBL because there were grade players in the sides who were not even in state squads. 

Being a Sheffield Shield player has never been so anonymous as it is now so it’s kind of a good thing that most viewers who don’t recognise a BBL player wouldn’t be able to tell you if they were a regular on the domestic scene or not. 

For the BBL’s best home-grown talent there is also the carrot of a spot in the World Cup squad next year. 

BBL form will go a long way to helping the likes of Jason Behrendorff, Ashton Turner, Aaron Hardie, Ben McDermott, Matt Short, Tanveer Sangha, Spencer Johnson and Lance Morris get a gig in the national squad as only six more T20s are on Australia’s schedule before the showpiece event in June. 

Cracking the first XI will be extremely difficult but there are worst things in the world than being a traveling reserve in the US and Caribbean, mixing the drinks and filling in for fielding duties here and there. 

The BBL has grown up a fair bit in recent years after shedding gimmicky novelty rules like the X-factor which sound more at home at the X Games than a supposedly legit sporting league which wants to be taken seriously. 

Whether the rusted-on Test fans finally start reverse engineering their interest from the long-form game to the shortest contest is not going to make or break the BBL. 

But hopefully some of the crickeratti are sufficiently entertained to tune in for more than a game or two here and there. 

As long as it keeps getting kids engaged, the BBL is serving the purpose. 

Someone is thinking about the children. 

The Crowd Says:

2023-12-08T17:48:51+00:00

13th Man

Roar Rookie


I’m not asking for it to go into Feb – I’m saying make it even shorter – 1st of Jan til the 31st. That’s all inside the school hol period.

2023-12-08T03:01:58+00:00

Sydneysider

Roar Rookie


it will always stay in mid December to end of January because they tried expanding into February but once school started, the interest in the BBL went. AFL and to a lesser extent the NRL are the 2 biggest leagues in Australia for sports followers. Cricket is a distant third, BBL is a round robin comp, not a genuine league - only goes for 6 weeks.

2023-12-07T20:33:56+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


They invented it.

2023-12-07T20:19:53+00:00

Andrew

Roar Rookie


They had form long before us.

2023-12-07T18:27:55+00:00

13th Man

Roar Rookie


I’d hate to see them get rid of one day cricket either. Just keep the BBL limited to a small window.

2023-12-07T17:16:07+00:00

Morz

Roar Rookie


What? You think they might steal the 80 grit roll outa Warner's cricket bag?

2023-12-07T13:08:50+00:00

Reddy

Roar Rookie


Hopefully one day the bbl merges with nz's super smash. Everybody plays each other once. The bbl adds Canberra, a second Perth team, the gold coast. Then you've really got a good competition. NZ teams might need an extra overseas international per team though just until they get used to the bbl. If you combined Auckland and Northern Districts this is the team you would get. 1)F.Allen 2)T.Seifert(w) 3)G.Worker 4)K.Williamson 5)G.Phillips 6)M.Chapman 7)M.Santner 8)T.Southee 9)L.Ferguson 10)I.Sodhi 11)T.Boult 12)K.Jameson

2023-12-07T12:04:41+00:00

Anth

Roar Rookie


Yeah! Sadly my initial comments haven’t aged well. Despite my foray into BBL SuperCoach, in order to develop some sort of interest in T20, I lasted 2 hours into Game 1. I suppose it’s 2 hours more than I have watched in the last 4 years, guaranteed it will be 2 hours more than I will watch in the next 4. It’s sort of like cricket, but sadly, in reality nothing like it. Hey I gave it a go.

2023-12-07T10:04:15+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


"And if my thought-dreams could be seen They’d probably put my head in a guillotine But it’s alright, Ma, it’s life, and life only" "It's Alright Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)" Dylan

2023-12-07T09:41:58+00:00

Brett Allen

Roar Rookie


Aside from Dave Warner, who else has ?

2023-12-07T09:40:19+00:00

Brett Allen

Roar Rookie


Shield cricket is where we produce not just test cricketers, but all our international cricketers.

2023-12-07T09:34:40+00:00

Brett Allen

Roar Rookie


It’s funny, I’ve never seen any shortage of kids or women at Test cricket.

2023-12-07T09:05:29+00:00

Lance Boil

Roar Rookie


As a cricket tragic I am ambivalent about BBL. It's not my scene and that's alright, I say well that's all right, I'm loving my baby and that's alright,I say that's alright

2023-12-07T07:50:46+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


It was cut by popular demand, players, viewers, broadcasrers. It's back, now, to the fixturing format that has been most successful.

2023-12-07T06:59:17+00:00

Ed Flanders

Roar Rookie


Yeah, but those early shield games are also fire. Can't get a ball to bounce higher than the waist. Wickets are really slow. It's not really representative of actual cricket conditions. But I do appreciate your point

2023-12-07T06:51:19+00:00

Laurie

Roar Rookie


2023-12-07T06:43:30+00:00

Rob9

Roar Guru


Shield Cricket started on the 3rd of October this year. Granted it’s not playing in AFL (BBL appropriate) stadiums with drop-ins until the middle of the month. There also seems to be a trend to start seasons in Brisbane and Perth before bringing in Sydney and Adelaide while Melbourne and Hobart are usually the last to see games. All scheduling challenges of sorts but not exactly impassable barriers.

2023-12-07T06:17:11+00:00

Vamsi K

Roar Rookie


I wish I could give more than 1 like to your comment. Before BBL, IPL or T20 format getting invented, ask any Test cricket fan how many overs of cricket they played for fun, purely ojt of love for the game. I can bet that more tban 90% wouldn't have played more than 20 overs a side. The short form of cricket is what captures the imagination of the young and few move on to the next level, slowly building technique. So it is natural for people to like a format that they can easily associate with. Demeaning and looking down on a format that large number of cricket lovers watch and more importantly bring in the much needed revenue to sustain domestic cricket is not the correct way. Some call T20 inferior or not even cricket, which is absurd. It requires different technique, temperament. If it was so easy all Test players should have been excellent T20 players. It is a fact that Test cricket was/is losing fans even before the advent of T20. WI cricket was down in doldrums long before T20. So was Zimbabwe, Kenya and many such small nations. SA has it's own politics for their state of cricket. So if a team like SA or NZ which are very good at Test cricket are unable to find takers for test cricket in tbeir own nations, it cannot be the problem of the so called evil big 3 or T20. It is the shift in peoples preferences. NZ is a rich country and can subsidise tests without depending on others, but they won't do it. The way to market tests isn't looking down on other formats or saying shorter forms lack technique. The difference which needs to highlighted is that in test cricket the players are free to decide how to play and what tactics to adopt. In shorter forms players are forced to play a certain style by design as time is limited. Test cricket is more like war with multiple battles going on while shorter forms are battles. So, while the basic things are same, batsman and bowlers of two teams trying to outdo each other, in Test cricket a side can concede a battle and lay low and still win the war. In short formats olayers don't have that luxury. So, test cricket is cricket with lots of freedom for players to decide their tactics, while in shorter forms the way players play and the tactics adopted are dictated by the limited time.

2023-12-07T05:04:36+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


The Manus v Nauru Cup?

2023-12-07T04:31:45+00:00

Andrew

Roar Rookie


Good to see pakistan are getting reverse after 26 overs with that lush outfield. Make sure those cameras are on alert in perth.

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