Running down Test cricket seems to have become an industry, and lack of competitiveness is the stick usually used to beat it with. Test cricket might have 99 problems in a world with many more entertainment options than before, but competitiveness or quality or depth are not among them. Not in big 2024.
In a way, Test cricket has responded to the times by dropping some of the flab. It is getting to the point quicker. No more the first two or three days of run-making in Asia and then relying on the pitch to break up for a result. The WTC has only hastened a trend that began in the mid-2010s.
Let’s not forget that athletes, as a rule, will keep getting better with time. Diets, training, sports science all improve to produce better, fitter, stronger players, especially bowlers. Almost every team has a larger pool of bowlers than they did in whatever glorious era exists in our nostalgia. No more seeing off the new ball and then feasting on a drop in bowling intensity and quality. Dynasties like the ones that Australia built with two record-winning streaks in the 2000s are difficult to sustain now, not because Australia have got worse but because the competition has almost always become tougher.
Most governing bodies continue to keep Test cricket inaccessible. During the Perth Test, Indian fans couldn’t believe their luck when Cricket Australia put out easily accessible highlights and clips packages of the performances of Jasprit Bumrah, Virat Kohli and Yashasvi Jaiswal. They are not used to this during Tests in India. Unlike in baseball and basketball, where open access to advanced data and footage gives fans a sense of ownership of the sport, cricket continues to shoot itself in the foot by remaining exclusivist to its teams and unfriendly to its consumers.
And yet the sport and its practitioners continue to be resilient, forever evolving to make sure the longest format gets the best of them at most times. This year is no accident; it is a consequence of the quality and depth in the playing field. And 2024 is not even over yet; the greatest rivalry of our times is yet to play itself out along with South Africa’s push for a WTC final slot.
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