H
sport
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

Crammed Test cricket schedule risks leaving Australian summers unrecognisable | Geoff Lemon

1 day ago
A picture


This has long been on the way, and here it is.Test season, the centrepiece of Australia’s summer, will next time around consist of four matches played over four weekends, not starting until the second week of December and done a week into January.Cricket Australia will instead claim to have expanded the schedule to seven Tests, but their tropical excursion against Bangladesh is in August, and the pink-ball sideshow masquerading as the 150th anniversary Test will have half its overs in March darkness.Both are distant islands to the summer mainland.Unlike most cricket countries, Tests are still Australia’s most substantial earner and site of interest.

Yet in a world of sports trying to claim more of the calendar, Australian administrators are in voluntary retreat.Even as recent decades have squeezed the format into shorter series, while tour matches are euthanised and preparation is eroded as an outdated luxury, there still has to be time within a series itself.Two matches could run back to back, maybe three, but any longer and there has to be space built into the tour, gaps of a week or 10 days to offset the physical demand.Those pauses also gave the audience time for breath; they let players rest and storylines compound.Much of the rhythm of cricket is in waiting.

That said, Test cricket every week of a holiday month will have its appeal to the average spectator,More is more,Various parties have spent some years arguing for universal four-day Test cricket on this basis: that shortening the span could see Tests run routinely from Thursday to Sunday in consecutive weeks, using a predictable schedule to draw viewers,But this proposal also envisaged using the technique in shorter bursts: adding a third match to two-Test affairs, or adding a second two-Test series rather than one series of three,Any longer than that, and the problem with a crammed schedule isn’t that punters won’t like it, but that players can’t do it.

If each match goes the distance when Australia host New Zealand at the end of this year, there will be players on the field for 20 days out of 31, plus four travel days and Christmas on the road.Inevitably, especially for bowlers, they will have to rotate out of the team.Not all 11 players can or will, though.Injury risk will increase, as will mental burnout.Even for batters, how much time can one spend in the field before it undermines performance?Given the work players do to be fit and ready, and the importance to them of every Test appearance, this is indefensible.

Take Mitchell Starc, passing up umpteen IPL seasons and the riches therein to keep his body right,The message to him and every other player is that their ambition is secondary at best, by administrators setting a schedule that is physically impossible for the players to complete,So far, this schedule is an anomaly, and Cricket Australia will claim force majeure via specific circumstances, in that New Zealand host India right before the Australia series, while Australia tour India right afterwards,Clearing the India tour before the 150th Test will be cited too,Really, though, it’s about the still-expanding Indian Premier League starting in March, and Test series against India becoming so lucrative that they have grown to five fixtures.

Accommodating both means starting Tests in January – and be assured that this Border-Gavaskar series will have its longer breaks built in, with plans at this stage for two of them, not compromising the fitness of players or the quality of play.No board here is a victim of circumstance.This is a squeeze that CA have been complicit in creating, and more of the same is on the way.This week the state associations and the federal body will hold a bumper two-day meeting to discuss selling tranches of the Big Bash League to foreign investors, with IPL conglomerates the most likely bidders.For months the messaging and positioning from the governing body has made a pretence of neutrality while positioning itself to encourage the sale.

The promise of vast sums will likely suck in any stragglers,Bear in mind that Cricket Australia remains a tax-exempt body set up to serve the public good, not a business tasked with seeking profit,Do any of those people believe that capitalist conglomerates will care about the development of future Australian players, or will accept Test duties keeping stars out of the league, or Test matches taking the prime Christmas holiday airtime while the Big Bash comes second? Cramming four Tests into four weeks unavoidably compromises the quality of the sport,But if cricket heads are turned by the promise of bags of cash, it will be the first in a very long list of compromises, ones that will leave Australian summers unrecognisable, and likely make Australian Test season a contradiction in terms,
businessSee all
A picture

Crispin Odey tried to ‘manipulate’ sexual assault victim, FCA tells court

The financial watchdog has accused the former hedge fund manager Crispin Odey of attempting to “manipulate” a victim of sexual assault into silence.Odey texted his former employee, whose breasts he had groped, a warning in 2022 that the Financial Conduct Authority could question her about him.He said the regulator was “using” her to further its “vendetta” against him and his hedge fund, Odey Asset Management (OAM).The 67-year-old has previously accepted that he groped the woman without her consent in 2005, which he said happened while he was under the influence of sedatives after a root canal treatment.Odey, who faces a number of sexual harassment allegations, sent the woman a text in January 2022 saying the regulator would use her “to show that there were no controls and you were in fear of my position in the company which stopped you from speaking out”, according to evidence provided by the FCA at a court hearing on Wednesday

about 13 hours ago
A picture

Iran war threatens to delay large offshore wind projects in EU and UK

A string of large offshore wind projects in Europe are facing potential delays as the Iran war threatens to disrupt shipping of crucial parts manufactured in the Gulf.Industry sources are concerned that components ordered from suppliers in the United Arab Emirates could become trapped if shipping remains effectively blocked through the strait of Hormuz.Iran’s chokehold on the crucial trade route has upended oil and gas deliveries from the Middle East. Sources fear contingency plans may have to be put into action to avoid delays to clean energy projects too.These include two giant offshore windfarms planned for UK waters, as well as a series of projects that will supply offshore wind power to Germany and the Netherlands

about 15 hours ago
A picture

ECB could raise eurozone rates ‘as soon as next month’; oil price dips on peace talk hopes – as it happened

Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the world economy.Inflation in the UK was unchanged last month, as expected – before the Iran war drove up global energy costs, threatening a renewed price jump.Official figures showed the consumer prices index (CPI) stayed at an annual rate of 3% in February, the same as in January. Economists had expected it to stay at 3%.Clothing made the largest upward contribution to the monthly change while motor fuels made the largest, offsetting downward contribution, the Office for National Statistics said

about 15 hours ago
A picture

Europe could face fuel shortage by April as Iran throttles supplies, says Shell boss

Europe could face a shortage of energy and fuel as soon as next month without a reopening of the strait of Hormuz, Shell’s chief executive has said.The boss of Europe’s biggest oil company said it was working with governments to help them address the oil and gas supply crisis, which has already led to energy rationing in Asian countries.Oil prices dipped back to about $100 a barrel on Wednesday from highs of about $114 at the start of the week, on the back of reports that the White House had sent a 15-point peace plan to Iran’s leaders.However, without a return of crude deliveries from the Gulf to global buyers via the crucial Hormuz channel, Europe could face shortages of fossil fuels within weeks, according to Wael Sawan.The Shell chief executive told an oil industry conference in Texas: “South Asia was first to get that brunt

about 18 hours ago
A picture

Estate of Mike Lynch ordered to pay £920m to Hewlett Packard Enterprise

The estate of the late British tech tycoon Mike Lynch has been ordered to pay £920m to the technology company Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) two years after he died in a superyacht disaster.The ruling by London’s high court said the estate was liable to pay the sum as compensation, costs and interest for the acquisition of Lynch’s firm Autonomy by Hewlett-Packard (HP), after a UK legal ruling in 2022 that he duped the US company into paying £8.2bn for the software firm.HP split into two separate companies in 2015 – one still called HP, which focuses on printers and PCs, and the software and hardware company HPE.The deceased entrepreneur’s estate has been estimated to be worth about £500m, so the damages could leave it bankrupt

about 19 hours ago
A picture

UK pet owners: we would like to hear about your experience of vet bills

The UK’s competition watchdog has ordered vets to cap prescription fees at £21 and proposed a cost-comparison website.The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) said public satisfaction with the cost of services was “low” after a two-and-a-half-year investigation that found “there is not strong competition between veterinary businesses”.It said vets must now tell pet owners that medicines may be cheaper online, and let them know they can get a prescription and that this could save them money.We would like to hear from UK pet owners about their experience of vet bills. Did your vet bill come as a surprise, or was it as expected? How did you manage the cost? Tell us

about 20 hours ago
trendingSee all
A picture

No escape from the energy shock for UK business. A long-term strategy is still essential | Nils Pratley

about 12 hours ago
A picture

Stocks rise and oil dips on hopes of 15-point Iran peace plan

about 13 hours ago
A picture

UK iPhone users face over-18 age check to use services after update

about 14 hours ago
A picture

What are the rules on cryptocurrency donations to UK political parties?

about 15 hours ago
A picture

US runners led off course in chaotic half-marathon given entry to world championships

about 16 hours ago
A picture

Lily James, Andy Murray and a million Britons: padel’s rise nears milestone

about 17 hours ago