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Thursday April 18, 2024

Longest format set to make evening debut

MELBOURNE: Whether the catalyst for a full-scale revolution or a more gentle evolution, the inaugural day-night Test between Australia and New Zealand should lead to irrevocable change for cricket’s oldest and most hallowed format.Traditionalists have decried the concept and players on both teams have concerns about the fitness of the

By our correspondents
November 26, 2015
MELBOURNE: Whether the catalyst for a full-scale revolution or a more gentle evolution, the inaugural day-night Test between Australia and New Zealand should lead to irrevocable change for cricket’s oldest and most hallowed format.
Traditionalists have decried the concept and players on both teams have concerns about the fitness of the pink ball to be used in the match at Adelaide Oval.
Some fingers will inevitably be crossed when the lights flood down at the venue, where some of cricket’s most powerful officials will be among the crowd during the day’s first play.
However, like anxious parents fussing over their child on a school morning before the class photo, Australia’s cricket board has gone to great lengths to ensure the match puts on its best face for the cameras.
Over seven painstaking years have been devoted to the development and testing of Kookaburra’s pink ball but the match has still seemingly arrived in a hurry.
The Adelaide Oval, recently redeveloped into an ultra-modern stadium, has been hand-picked to host the match and appears an inspired choice as both a reliable tourist magnet and being resistant to the dew that plagues other venues at night and can play havoc with the behaviour of a ball.
‘Ashes-style’ crowds are expected to attend the 53,500-capacity ground through the opening days and the weekend, with many curious interstate visitors intrigued by the novelty factor of seeing players in traditional whites grapple with a pink ball.