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The Australian cricketers’ players union yesterday urged the sport’s national governing body to ensure conditions for this year’s two pink ball Tests are upgraded to produce high quality matches.
South Africa this week overcame their reservations and agreed to play a day-night pink ball Test against Australia in Adelaide in November, while Pakistan are scheduled to experience the new concept in Brisbane in December.
Australian Cricketers’ Association (ACA) chief Alistair Nicholson said he had stressed to Cricket Australia (CA) the need for significant work to get the revolutionary format right after last year’s inaugural day-night Test between Australia and New Zealand finished inside three days. Players from both teams complained about the pink ball’s movement and durability, as well as the difficulty batsmen faced seeing it under floodlights.
“The concerns of the players run deep, and with (England captain) Alastair Cook’s comments we see they also run internationally,” Nicholson said in a statement.
Cook said on Wednesday there was no need for day-night Tests to be introduced for the next Ashes series in Australia in 2017-18.
“A lot of the games have really good attendances, so I don’t think that’s a series where you need to do it at this precise moment in time,” Cook said in London. Nicholson said when the best players in the world were all expressing concerns they must be listened to and have them addressed.
“The message from players all over the world is clear: ‘We want the best quality Test cricket. To achieve this there is a lot of work to be done on the pink ball format,’” he said.
Nicholson added that CA must invest time and money over the next five months to develop the best possible pink ball and the best wicket to enable high quality Test cricket.
“That’s what the players want and the fans deserve,” he said.
Nicholson also wants next year’s home Ashes series against England to stay with the traditional red ball, given the reservations expressed by rival captains Steve Smith and Cook.
“As the issue stands the collective position on Ashes cricket is that it should be preserved as a red ball contest, and the two Test captains are clearly expressing this view,” he said.
“With 140 years of high quality Test cricket between Australia and England we want to ensure that contest remains at the highest standard... the players and the fans expect this.
“Again the Test is to get this format right first, before any consideration can be given to expansion.”
Sarah Taylor says ‘anxiety’ behind career-break
England women’s wicket-keeper Sarah Taylor said Wednesday that anxiety was the reason behind her already announced decision to take an indefinite break from all cricket.
The 27-year-old, widely regarded as one of the best keepers in the women’s game and, on her day, a dynamic batsman, struggled during the World Twenty20 in India in March, where she made 49 runs at 9.80 in five matches.
Taylor, who had previously ruled herself out of this year’s home series against Pakistan, said she was “99 percent certain” she would return to cricket but could no say when that would happen.
“For the past four years, I have been suffering from anxiety,” Taylor told the BBC in an interview on Wednesday.
“My health is my first priority, and it was starting to affect my performance in cricket.
“Taking time out is trying to fix me as a person and to prolong my career.”
Taylor added: “It happened mainly when I was waiting to bat - the nerves and expectation of scoring runs would hit me.
“It would be nerves, plus something else - and now I know it is genuine panic.
“The heart races, you feel faint... there have been times when I would run off into the changing rooms and be sick... sometimes through sheer panic.”
Taylor, who revealed she was receiving cognitive behavioural therapy for her condition, also said: “I would like to say I am 99 percent sure I will play again. “I absolutely want to play cricket, put an England shirt on, train with the girls. I miss them terribly.”
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