New Delhi: Sachin Tendulkar feels in order to keep the primacy and attractiveness of Test cricket intact, one shouldn’t look at in how many days the match ends, but instead the focus should be on garnering more eyeballs. The legendary cricketer said he is also finding current ODI cricket, a bit of a drag and wouldn’t mind a change in format.
Three of the Border-Gavaskar Tests between India and Australia recently ended inside two-and-a-half days. It led to massive criticism of the pitches. However, Sachin Tendulkar said it is part and parcel of cricketer’s job to play on different surfaces.
“We need to understand one thing that Test cricket should be engaging. It should not be about how many days it lasts, five days or whatever. We (cricketers) are meant to play on different surfaces; be it a bouncy, fast, slow and turning tracks, swinging conditions, seaming conditions with different balls,” Tendulkar said during a TV show Friday.
Tendulkar also said that at a time when the ICC, MCC and other cricketing bodies are talking about making Test cricket entertaining and the No.1 format, there was no harm in matches ending in three days. Besides, touring teams should not think that they will get featherbeds and they should make thorough preparations.
“When you tour, there are not easy conditions. You need to understand what’s happening, assess everything and then start planning things. For me, the most important factor is the kind of surface that we play on because that is the heart of Test cricket,” Tendulkar pointed out.
“All the guys, including the ICC, MCC, etc, we are talking about Test cricket. How Test cricket can continue to be the No.1 format. So, if we want that, then we need to have something for the bowlers because bowlers ask a question (off) every ball and the batter has to answer that. So, if that question itself is not interesting enough, how are you going to have more eyeballs?” asked Tendulkar.
The former batting great indicated sports should be result-oriented and everyone should go home knowing ‘who won, who lost’.
“We should not be bothered too much about number of days. I feel it should be whether the match was exciting enough or not. Nobody wants to go back home not knowing who has won and who has lost,” Tendulkar asserted.
He also said there was no harm in giving the new ball to a spinner if the surface so demanded. “Instead of a fast bowler bowling an opening spell, why cannot a spinner be bowling a wonderful spell. It’s just a different kind of surface we are playing on and that should also be challenging enough for batters to go out there and express themselves … If somebody has batted well, he gets runs, simple,” Tendulkar opined.
With former India coach Ravi Shastri wanting ODI cricket to change with the times and be made a 40-over-a-side affair, Tendulkar agreed. He said that the format was getting monotonous and suggested a way to make it entertaining.
“It’s (ODIs) getting monotonous, without a doubt. There are two parts to it. One is the current format and the next which I feel that should be played,” Tendulkar stated.
“The current format, which has been there for a while now is two new balls (per innings). When you have two new balls, you have kind of eliminated reverse swing. Even though, we are in the 40th over of the game, it’s just the 20th over of that ball. And the ball only starts reversing around the 30th over. That element is missing today because of two new balls. The current format, I feel, is heavy on bowlers,” pointed out the former Indian captain.
“Right now, the game is becoming too predictable. From the 15th to the 40th over it is losing momentum. It’s getting boring,” added Tendulkar.
He opined, that while there was no harm in retaining the 50-over format, teams should alternate between batting and bowling after every 25 overs, as that will give the opponents level-playing ground and take toss, dew factor and other conditions out of the equation.
“So, both teams bowl in the first and the second half. Commercially too it more viable as there will be three innings breaks instead of two,” Tendulkar said.
SHOULD SALIVA BE ALLOWED AGAIN?
Tendulkar advocated that with the Covid-19 pandemic history now, the ICC should reverse its rule on disallowing the use of saliva to shine the ball. “I am no medical expert but I think it should (saliva) be back because it’s happened over 100 years. Guys have used saliva and nothing drastic has happened. A couple of years in between were challenging and rightly so that decision (to ban use of saliva to polish the ball) was taken, but now Covid-19 behind us,” opined Tendulkar.
Asked if he sees himself becoming a BCCI administrator in the future, Tendulkar said, “Maine itni zyada fast bowling nahin ki hai (I have never bowled so fast ever)… Because (ex-BCCI president) Sourav (Ganguly) still considered himself a fast bowler,” said Tendulkar in jest.