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Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Death of a Gentleman: Can Test cricket be saved?

In recent years it would be fair to say that amongst cricket's premier commentators any debate as to the future of Test cricket has been treated as something of a hot potato.

In an attempt to uncover the truth behind the future of the game, journalists and life-long cricket fans Sam Collins and Jarrod Kimber have travelled the cricketing world to ask the "heroes, villains, ogres and accountants" of the game whether (gulp) Test cricket really has a future in the new fast-paced and money-driven Twenty20 age.

And they've gone a made a film about it.

On their travels, Collins, former editor of thewisdencricketer.com, and Kimber, former editor of Spin Cricket Monthly Magazine and author of Australian Autopsy and When Freddie Met Jesus, track down a plethora of cricketing royalty in a quest to discover why the game has found itself at such an ugly crossroads.

Their hit list features some of the sport's most influential kingpins, including Lalit Modi, Ian Chappell, Giles Clarke, N Srinivasan and Michael Atherton, as well as a wealth of current and former players, such as former England captain Andrew Strauss, Kevin Pietersen and Rahul Dravid.

Collins and Kimber's film is largley punctuated by their encounters with friend and Aussie batsman Ed Cowan as he embarks on his debut Test series against India. The duo follow his journey through all four games and speak to him about what it means to play Test cricket in 2012.

Running in parallel to what becomes an increasingly sinister excavation of the game's inner elite, Cowan's story questions whether an unashamed love for Test cricket can really outweigh the cynicism of an increasingly corporate sporting world, and provide a compelling case for the game’s survival.

However, as India's series goes from bad to worse and their fans chose to switch off, Collins and Kimber realise that the future of Test cricket, and the in fact whole fabric of the game, is already severely under threat.

The film is due in early 2013...




1 comment:

  1. In recent years it would be fair to say that amongst cricket's premier commentators any debate as to the future of Test cricket has been treated as something of a hot potato.Cricket

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