Leave Flagship of Cricket Alone: Ian Botham on Four-Day Test  

England all-rounder Ben Stokes also called for five-day Test cricket to “always be around”.
IANS
Cricket
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Ian Botham has come out as the latest among illustrious former cricketers who believe the ICC must not tinker with the traditional five-day Test format.
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(Photo Courtesy: Twitter/@IanBotham)
 Ian Botham has come out as the latest among illustrious former cricketers who believe the ICC must not tinker with the traditional five-day Test format.
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Former England cricketer Ian Botham has come out as the latest among illustrious former cricketers who believe the International Cricket Council (ICC) must not tinker with the traditional five-day Test format and leave "the flagship of cricket” alone.

On Tuesday, England registered a thrilling 189-run win over South Africa on the final day of the second Test at Newlands. It was because of some quality and all-round bowling effort by the visitors which helped England to gun down the hosts, who were chasing a 438-run target, at 248 runs.

"Well played England...Such a good idea to end 5day test cricket....full house watching cricket at its best!!! Leave the flagship of cricket alone it's a real test of character, skill, guts, stamina & ability...it's real cricket for real players!!! Leave it alone," Botham tweeted after England's series-leveling victory.

England all-rounder Ben Stokes, who was adjudged the Player of the Match at Newlands, called for five-day Test cricket to "always be around".

“We will all remember this for a long time and I’m sure South Africa will remember it for a long time. It will go down as one of the greats.”
Ben Stokes, England Cricket Player

"(This is) why five-day cricket should always be around. It's the best format of the game and it makes cricket and games like these just unforgettable," he added.

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There is a raging debate underway over the idea of four-day Tests - which has been floated by the International Cricket Council (ICC) for the 2023-2031 cycle. Many former and current cricketers have opposed ICC's proposal, with some even terming the idea of four-day Tests as "ridiculous".

ICC's increasing demand for event windows, the proliferation of domestic T20 leagues, BCCI's demands for its own sizeable share of bilateral calendar space, and the costs of staging Test series are all said to be the factors contributing to the move.

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