Cape Argus

Big boost in new era

World Championsh­ip gives ‘proper context’ to purest format of the game, says Faf

- STUART HESS @shockerhes­s

IDENTIFYIN­G Test cricket’s best team will no longer be a matter for debate over the dinner table or at the bar, with the Internatio­nal Cricket Council’s World Test Championsh­ip set to start in Birmingham tomorrow.

By June 2021, everyone, theoretica­lly, will know exactly which team is Test cricket’s best following a final at Lord’s.

Before then, the top nine Testplayin­g nations will play six series ranging from two Tests to five in the case of The Ashes, with points being accumulate­d from each match to determine the top two teams, who will then face off in that Lord’s showpiece.

The aim is to liven up the sport’s oldest and longest format, and as South Africa’s captain Faf du Plessis said yesterday, provide it with “proper context,” something a number of players have been calling for in the last decade.

The high profile Ashes series – Test cricket’s longest running battle between England and Australia – appropriat­ely kicks off the twoyear long league competitio­n to decide the world champions of the five-day format.

South Africa start their campaign in a region where the Proteas have failed to win any of their last eight Test matches – the sub-continent – with a three-match series against India in September.

“We beat them at home last season but playing against India in India is probably one of the toughest challenges for an internatio­nal player,” Du Plessis remarked.

In fact, South Africa do not have an easy start to their World Test Championsh­ip challenge as, following the series in India, the Proteas face England at the end of the year.

The English have won the last two series between the teams, including a 2-1 triumph the last time they toured here in 2015/16.

“We probably have the toughest start, but everyone will play everyone, so it doesn’t really matter,” Du Plessis added.

South Africa’s other two away series will be against the West Indies in 2020 and then Pakistan in 2021, with home series against Sri Lanka and Australia, also in 2021.

South Africa won’t be facing New Zealand or Bangladesh in the two-year cycle as those teams were not schedule on the Future Tours Programme on which the inaugural Test Championsh­ip is based. But they will feature on the next cycle, starting in the second half of 2021.

Each series will be worth a total of 120 points, with wins in twomatch series counting for 60 points, in three-match series 40, and in four-match series – like South Africa’s against England later this year – 30.

Five-match series, like the Ashes or England’s against India in 2021 will see victories worth 24 points.

 ??  ?? Faf du Plessis
Faf du Plessis

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