
Sydney: Australia captain Steve Smith and
star opener David Warner say they have no desire to play
four-day Tests in a setback to international cricket chiefs
who have floated the idea.
At a board meeting in Auckland this month, the
International Cricket Council unveiled plans for a long-
awaited, nine-nation Test championship in a bid to preserve
the five-day format's status following the rapid growth of
Twenty20.
Among a raft of other reforms, it also agreed to
experiment with four-day Tests, with South Africa and Zimbabwe
set to trial the first in December.
But Smith and Warner are not keen, even if the hours and
over requirements of each day are extended to reduce disparity
with the traditional format.
"Personally, I like five so I would like to keep it at
five," Smith said in an interview with cricket.com.au.
"Just the traditional way that Test cricket has been
played, I think it's great when you get into that fifth day
and enter that last hour, I think it's a really cool part of
the game."
Warner was even more strident in his opposition, saying:
"I have no interest in four-day cricket".
"You have so many variables in Test match cricket --
you've got weather, some games might be only getting three
days but it just takes one day to have that weather come in
and it can ruin it," he told the same website. "Then on the flip-side, it's a Test.
"It's the longevity, being out there on your legs, it's
grit, determination, those things come to my mind to actually
want to keep playing five-day cricket.
"Like a timeless Test (a feature of Test cricket in the
1920s and '30s), it's basically survival of the fittest."
Cricket Australia chief James Sutherland has expressed
support for the trial, but indicated earlier this month it was
unlikely Australia would take part any time soon.
"We were supportive of the trial... I think it's about
learning, it's about innovation, it's about understanding
whether these sorts of things can work," he told reporters.
"Our Test schedule over the next couple of years before
the Test Championship starts has us playing against England
this summer, South Africa, Pakistan, India and Sri Lanka.
"I don't foresee us playing any four-day Test cricket in
that window. But that's not to say we don't support the trial.
We'll certainly be interested observers.