Strauss fears for the future of Tests

Sport360 staff 06:08 04/10/2014
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  • Worries: Andrew Strauss

    Former England captain Andrew Strauss has issued a dire warning for the future of Test cricket, saying he fears it could “fizzle out”.

    Strauss made his gloomy fore­cast in the paperback edition of his autobiography, Driving Ambition, published Thursday.

    In it the former opening batsman, who led England to Ashes victory in both 2009 and again in 2010/11 in Australia, highlighted the revamp of the International Cricket Coun­cil – on whose cricket committee he now sits – and the rise of lucrative Twenty20 tournaments such as the Indian Premier League as the big­gest threats to Test matches.

    Cricket’s three wealthiest na­tions – India, England and Aus­tralia – now effectively run the ICC, cricket’s global governing body, between them.

    Should a new tel­evision rights deal be concluded, the trio and in particular India – al­ready the richest of the three crick­et boards on account of the massive commercial marketplace generated by the huge following for the sport in the world’s second-most popu­lous country – will become even wealthier.

    Strauss believes this will cre­ate an increasing number of lop­sided matches, in turn speeding the demise of Test cricket.

    “India can argue that they bring the most money into the game, and thus de­serve more out of the precious ICC broadcasting rights, but skewing the distribution of the three boards that are already the most financial­ly secure can only create a situation in which the rich get richer and the poor poorer,” Strauss wrote.

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