
Port Elizabeth: The one-off day-night Test
between South Africa and Zimbabwe, starting on Tuesday, will
be staged under experimental playing conditions.
The International Cricket Council gave permission to
Cricket South Africa to stage a four-day Test.
There are several variations from standard Test playing
conditions.
Play will be scheduled for six-and-a-half hours each day,
half an hour more than in five-day games, with 98 overs due to
be bowled in a day, instead of 90. As in five-day games, an
extra half hour can be added in order to complete the overs.
The first two sessions of play will be two hours 15
minutes each, instead of two hours, with a 20-minute tea break
instead of a lunch break after the first session. There will
be a 40-minute dinner break after the second session.
There is no provision for time lost to be carried over to
subsequent days.
The follow-on can be enforced with a lead of 150 runs,
compared to 200 runs in five-day games.
Play will start at 1.30pm (1130 GMT) each day. The sunset
in Port Elizabeth will be between 7.30pm and 7.31pm on the
four days of the match, half an hour into the last session.
It is the first Test match since 1972/73 to be scheduled
over four days. Until then, Test matches were played over
varying numbers of days, from three to six - and on a number
of occasions were "timeless", played over an unlimited number
of days until a result was achieved.
The last timeless Test, between South Africa and England
in Durban in 1938/39, ended in a draw after ten days (one of
which was rained off) when the England team had to catch a
ship home.
Since 1972/73 Test matches have been standardised as
five-day games, although a match between Australia and a World
XI in 2005/06 was scheduled over six days. It lasted four
days.
The South Africa-Zimbabwe match will be the eighth day-
night Test and the first to be played in South Africa. Four of
the previous seven day-night games have been played in
Australia.