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Test cricketTest cricket is the longest form of the sport of cricket. It is regarded by players and serious fans as the ultimate test of playing ability (as compared to One-day International cricket). Test matches are played between national representative teams which have Test status, as determined by the International Cricket Council (ICC) and, from 2005, between a Rest of World XI and the top team in the LG ICC cricket ratings. Test matches are a subset of first-class cricket, the form of cricket played over several days and officially sanctioned by the ICC. Only ten nations of the world have been given Test status. ''Note: Most of the information here pertains to men's cricket. Test matches are also played in women's cricket. Unless explicitly mentioned, most Test matches or Test cricket referred to is in regards to men's cricket.'' ==History== ''See main articles: History of cricket; History of Test cricket (to 1883); History of Test cricket (1884 to 1889); History of Test cricket (1890 to 1900)'' ==Test cricket playing nations== There are currently ten Test-playing nations, listed below with the date of each nation's Test debut shown in brackets: # Australian cricket team (15th March, 1877) # English cricket team (15th March, 1877) # South African cricket team (12th March, 1889) (''Note: Banned from international cricket from 1970 to 1991 due to their policy of apartheid'') # West Indian cricket team (23rd June, 1928) # New Zealand cricket team (10th January, 1930) # Indian cricket team (25th June, 1932) (''Note: pre-1947 India included Pakistan and Bangladesh. See History of India.'') # Pakistani cricket team (16th October,1952) (''Note: pre-1971 Pakistan included Bangladesh. See History of Pakistan'') # Sri Lankan cricket team (17th February, 1982) # Zimbabwean cricket team (18th October, 1992) # Bangladeshi cricket team (10th November, 2000) From June 10, 2004, to 6 January, 2005 Zimbabwe's Test matches were temporarily suspended, although they retained their status as a Test-playing nation. See the Zimbabwean cricket team article for more details. ==Conduct of the game== Test cricket is played between two teams over five days, with three two-hour sessions per day. (Sessions are usually interspersed with a 40-minute break for lunch and 20-minute break for afternoon tea.) Each team has eleven players. Before play starts on the first day, a coin is tossed. The team winning the toss chooses whether to bat first or to bowl first. In the following, the team batting first is termed "team A" and its opponents "team B". * Team A bats until either ten batsman are dismissed (team A is "all out"), or its captain chooses to stop batting (called a "declaration"). This batting period is called an "innings". There is no limit to the length of an innings provided there remain at least two batsmen who have not been dismissed (when ten are dismissed, the eleventh cannot continue by himself) and the five days have not elapsed. * After team A's first innings the teams swap roles, with team B batting its first innings, and team A bowling and fielding. * If team B is dismissed with a score 200 runs or more behind team A, team A chooses whether to "invite" team B to bat again for its second innings (called "enforcing the follow-on"), or to bat itself to gain a bigger lead. (If the whole first day of play is abandoned without a single ball being bowled, whether because of rain or otherwise, the follow-on requirement is reduced to 150 runs.) If the follow-on is enforced: * Team B bats its second innings. * If team B's total score from both innings is less than team A's first innings score, team A wins the match. * If this is not the case, team A must bat its second innings to attempt to score more than team B's total. If it succeeds in the remaining time, team A wins. If it is dismissed before this occurs, team B wins (though this is very unusual - teams that enforce the follow-on very rarely lose). * If time runs out before any of the above occurs, the match is called a tie (draw). If after each team's first innings the follow-on is not enforced or cannot be enforced: * Team A bats its second innings. If time runs out before the innings is completed, the match is a draw. * If team A's total score for its two innings is less than team B's score from its first innings, team B is the winner. Otherwise, team B must bat a second innings. * If team B's total score over two innings is more than team A's, team B wins the match. * If team B is dismissed before reaching team A's total, team A wins the match. * If neither occurs before the scheduled end of the match, it is a draw. Finally, if both teams are dismissed twice with the same combined totals, the game is a tie (draw) (as distinct from a draw, as described above). With the comparatively high scores in cricket, only two ties have occurred over the entire history of over 1,700 Test matches. Both matches are regarded as amongst the most exciting ever played. The decision for the winner of the toss to bat or bowl first is based on the an assessment of the relative strengths and weaknesses of each team and the conditions of the wicket. Most of the time Cricket pitch tend to become hard to bat on as the game nears its conclusion, and players bat more poorly after the fatigue of four solid days of cricket, so teams usually prefer to bat first. However, sometimes the conditions at the very beginning of the match particularly suit fast bowling, so if either team has particularly strong set of pace bowler (cricket), the winning team may choose to bowl first (either to take advantage of their own attack or to disallow the opposition the use of the "green" wicket). The rationale for declaring an innings closed prematurely may be confusing for cricketing neophytes, but it is often a sound tactic. Remember that to win a game, the losing side must be given the opportunity to complete two innings - if they do not do so, no matter how many runs they may be behind, the game is a draw. Therefore, a team with a large lead will declare to give themselves time to bowl at the opposition and take all their wickets. ==Competitions== Test cricket's competition structure has evolved somewhat idiosyncratically due to the long match duration, cricket's status as one of the earliest professional spectator sports, and the wide geographical distribution of the teams. Until recently, test series between international teams were organised between the two national cricket organisations. Umpire (cricket) were provided by the home team, and, at most, perpetual trophies (of which the Ashes is most famous) were traded between teams when series were won or lost. However, with the entry of more countries into Test cricket competition and the desire to maintain public interest in Tests (which was flagging in many countries with the introduction of one-day cricket), a new system was added to Test match competition. A rotation system that sees all ten Test teams playing each other over a five-year cycle, and an official ranking system (with a trophy held by the highest-ranked team) were introduced. It is hoped that the new ranking system will help maintain interest in Test cricket in nations where one-day cricket is more popular. However, the rankings' idiosyncratic and complicated rules lead to few fans being able to understand the system. This, in turn, has led to general disregard for the ratings among most fans. In the new system, umpires are provided by the International Cricket Council. An "elite panel" of eleven umpires has been established, and the panel is supplemented by an additional "International Panel" that includes three umpires named by each test-playing country. The elite umpires officiate almost all test matches; the International Panel is only employed when the cricketing calendar is filled with activity, or for one-day internationals(ODIs). ==See also== * List of Test cricket grounds * List of cricketers * Test cricket records * ICC Test Championship * List of test matches Test cricket Forms of cricket Cricket terminology Test cricket"regard Australia as stronger team (in their most recent two series, Australia beat South Africa 3-0 in Australia and 2-1 in South Africa) and the changeover the result of the inadequacies of the ranking system." I thought SA was ranked higher than Aus because Aus refused to play series against certain countries. [http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/cricket/2622021.stm] == Test cricket playing nations == Is it worth keeping the note about Zimbabwe's suspension from Tests? It was useful when they weren't playing, but now that the suspension has ended I'm not sure it serves any useful purpose. I will remove it if there are no objections. --User:Ngb 01:25, 11 Jan 2005 (UTC) I just changed the wording of that Zimbabwe suspension note. It does indeed say "suspend" on the ICC/ZCU announcement, but it seems to refer to the Tests themselves, and not Zimbabwe or the Zimbabwean team. Not as in "Tim was suspended from school," but as in "the trial was suspended for a week." http://usa.cricinfo.com/link_to_database/ARCHIVE/CRICKET_NEWS/2004/JUN/166521_ZIM_10JUN2004.html 4th paragraph. Um, that said, I just saw your message about removing the note, Ngb, and actually I haven o objection to that. --User:BadLeprechaun 11:08 pm, 10 Jan 2005 (EST) :We should keep the info about the suspension somewhere (History of test cricket?) as it's interesting info, User:Jguk 14:15, 11 Jan 2005 (UTC) ::There's already a section about it in History of cricket which I've just clarified with the exact dates of the suspension, and tried to make more encyclopaedic. Does that suffice? --User:Ngb 15:04, 11 Jan 2005 (UTC) :::I think so - good stuff:) User:Jguk 19:29, 11 Jan 2005 (UTC) == Capitalisation == Why is "Test" capitalised, as far as I can see, in every instance here? I have never seen that done for any other sport, is it a proper noun somehow?--User:Dmcdevit 23:48, 22 Mar 2005 (UTC) :It is treated as a proper noun in cricket usage, at least. It is standard among cricket writers, magazines, and newspapers that "Test" is capitalised. I can't recall ever seeing it in lower case, except on some dubious web pages. I'm not sure why it should be capitalised, but established usage is that it is. - User:Dmmaus 00:35, 23 Mar 2005 (UTC) ::I'll take your word for it, I only noticed it and became concerned when I saw some of the subpages had (what I thought might be) the wrong naming convention. --User:Dmcdevit 01:13, 23 Mar 2005 (UTC) We had a discussion on this on Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Cricket. I was the only one supporting "test" over "Test". The outcome is that WikiProject Cricket's standard is to capitalise the first ''T'' in ''Test'', User:Jguk 06:48, 23 Mar 2005 (UTC) Test cricketcricket Cricket subcategories See other meanings of words starting from letter: TTA | TB | TC | TD | TE | TF | TG | TH | TI | TJ | TK | TL | TŁ | TM | TN | TO | TP | TR | TS | TU | TW | TX | TY | TZ |Words begining with Test_cricket: Test_cricket Test_cricket Test_cricket Test_cricketers Test_cricket_families Test_cricket_families Test_Cricket_Hat-Tricks Test_cricket_hat-tricks Test_cricket_in_the_19th_century Test_cricket_records Test_cricket_records Test_cricket_records |
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