One day too many? Early finishes point to new possibilities for Test cricket

Even as the ICC mulls four-day Tests to make the longest version of the game more popular among its fans, the format itself seems to be shrinking organically

Shiva Jayaraman28-Aug-2019Each of the three Tests played over the last week produced outright results, and that happened despite poor weather affecting the games to varying degrees.Two of those matches – the thriller between England and Australia at Headingley and the one in Antigua between West Indies and India – didn’t need the scheduled fifth day. Funnily enough, the game that actually went into the fifth day was the shortest of the three in terms of playing time: only 275.4 overs were bowled in the Colombo Test between Sri Lanka and New Zealand, but time almost ran out for New Zealand on the last day as it looked like the light would fail. The Antigua Test was the longest of the three, but even that lasted only 310.2 overs, less than four full days of cricket.So, even as the bosses of the game mull four-day Tests to make the longest version of the game more compact, the format itself seems to be shrinking organically.There have been 67 five-day Tests since the beginning of 2018 and 40 of them have finished within four days, or sooner. That’s a record-breaking 60% – no two successive years in Test history have had such a high proportion of matches getting over with a day or more to spare.In 2019 alone, 13 out of 19 five-day Tests have finished within four days – that’s 68.42%, the highest ever for a calendar year in which a minimum of ten Tests have been played. This is not a blip either. The last three calendar years are among the top five in Test history in terms of matches finishing a day before schedule. In 2018, 56.25% (27 of the 48 five-day Tests) of matches finished within four days. In 2017, it was 47.83%.