Adelaide day-night Test still uncertain

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Cullinan: Teams need time to adjust to the pink ball

Cricket Australia will continue its efforts to persuade South Africa to agree to a day-night Test at Adelaide Oval next summer, despite concerns from the South African players that they will be disadvantaged due to their lack of experience against the pink ball.

The Australian summer schedule has been released, with the Brisbane Test against Pakistan locked in as a day-night encounter. Four teams will tour Australia, with the summer set to begin with Tests against South Africa, followed by a three-match Chappell-Hadlee Trophy contest with New Zealand, Tests and ODIs against Pakistan, and finally T20s against Sri Lanka.

The WACA will host the first Test of the summer in early November while the Gabba, typically given the first Test of the season, will instead host the first Test of the Pakistan series. Whether Australia play back-to-back day-night Tests at the end of the South Africa series and the start of the Pakistan series remains to be seen.

“We are working with Cricket South Africa with a view to ensuring that the Adelaide Test is a day-night Test,” Cricket Australia chief executive James Sutherland said. “With more than 123,000 people attending and an average of two million watching on television last season, there is enormous expectation that we deliver another pink ball Test match this summer in Adelaide.

“Understandably, there is some concern from the South African players, but day-night Test cricket is all about the fans and a day-night match in Adelaide will be a bigger Test match crowd than the South African players will have ever experienced.

“The success of Adelaide last year demonstrates the huge potential the day-night format has in revitalising Test cricket all over the world, and it’s for that reason that it is our desire to stage another Test under lights at that venue.

“We believe that having the ability to move matches into the evenings provides cricket fans with greater access to the game, both at the ground and at home on TV, and there is no doubt that this will help grow interest in Test cricket.

“Even for cricket fans at home in South Africa there are benefits. The day-night Test hours will allow the match to be televised in a far more attractive time of day in South Africa.”

More to follow

Test series v South Africa
1st Test, Perth, November 3-7
2nd Test, Hobart, November 12-16
3rd Test, Adelaide, November 24-28

Chappell-Hadlee Trophy
1st ODI, Sydney, December 4
2nd ODI, Canberra, December 6
3rd ODI, Melbourne, December 9

Test series v Pakistan
1st Test, Brisbane, December 15-19
2nd Test, Melbourne, December 26-30
3rd Test, Sydney, January 3-7

ODI series v Pakistan
1st ODI, Brisbane, January 13
2nd ODI, Melbourne, January 15
3rd ODI, Perth, January 19
4th ODI, Sydney, January 22
5th ODI, Adelaide, January 26

T20 series v Sri Lanka
1st T20, TBC, February 17
2nd T20, TBC, February 19
3rd T20, TBC, February 22

© ESPN Sports Media Ltd.


Source: ESPN Crickinfo

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