Sachin Tendulkar Recommends Indian Team to Practice With Pink Ball for Day-Night Tests Only As and When Required
Some experts questioned the Indian team's lack of preparation with the pink ball after the batsmen were bundled out for India's all-time low total of 36 in the second innings of the first day-night Test against Australia and lost by eight wickets.
New Delhi, December 24: Indian cricketers should practice with pink ball for day-night Tests only as and when required, and there's no need to especially earmark some matches in Ranji Trophy or Duleep Trophy to get used to it as about 90 per cent Test cricket is played with red ball, says Sachin Tendulkar. He, however, has emphasised for the need to find a balance between the red and pink balls.
Some experts questioned the Indian team's lack of preparation with the pink ball after the batsmen were bundled out for India's all-time low total of 36 in the second innings of the first day-night Test against Australia and lost by eight wickets. Tendulkar, however, is not unduly perturbed, as he pointed out that only about 10 per cent of Test cricket worldwide is played with the pink ball. India vs Australia 2nd Test 2020 Preview: Likely Playing XIs, Key Battles, Head to Head and Other Things You Need to Know About IND vs AUS Boxing Day Match in Melbourne.
"I feel 90 per cent Test cricket is played with red ball, so the solution is to practice more and play more matches with the pink ball as and when possible," Tendulkar told IANS in an exclusive interview.
So, would it help if, say, Duleep Trophy, or a few Ranji Trophy matches, are played with the pink ball?
"Basically, we have played just one Test match in this series with the pink ball. So, it is 25 per cent that was played with the pink while 75 per cent will be played with the red ball. So, we have to find a balance between the two coloured balls," he stressed. IND vs AUS Dream11 Team Prediction: Tips to Pick Best Fantasy Playing XI for India vs Australia 2nd Test 2020.
"As of now, around the world, possibly 90 per cent, or even more, of Test cricket is played with red ball. So, one would stick to the red ball right and when the changes are made then one can think differently."
Before the first match against Australia in Adelaide, India had played a solitary day-night Test, against Bangladesh, at the Eden Gardens in Kolkata in November last year. India won that five-day match inside three days.
(The above story first appeared on LatestLY on Dec 24, 2020 07:09 PM IST. For more news and updates on politics, world, sports, entertainment and lifestyle, log on to our website latestly.com).