As the graph above shows, the Big Three nations (India, England, Australia) have played more Tests than the others through this period. Sri Lanka have been a close fourth, but this is arguably largely due to SLC’s serious commitment to maintaining their Test programme. Sri Lanka is the only country that has hosted all three of Zimbabwe, Afghanistan and Ireland during this period. These are all loss-making series for SLC.If we split the WTC league into the Big Three and the Next Six (South Africa, New Zealand, Sri Lanka, Pakistan, Bangladesh, West Indies), for the Next-Six boards generally, the only home series that provide serious earning opportunities are those against the Big Three. This is why three-Test series have become increasingly rare over the past two decades – boards would rather spend that time hosting limited-overs games.The next graph makes that plain. England play the longest series, on average, but for both India and Australia, almost two thirds of their series have been three-Test (or longer) affairs. That number is less than half for every Next Six team.

The ICC’s best idea so far to deal with this imbalance has been to put in place a “Test match fund”, where the Big Three essentially redistribute a small percentage of their revenue to the remaining men’s Test teams to subsidise those teams’ Test programmes. The latest version of this whisper of a plan, which hasn’t even really been discussed, features a central pot of roughly US$15 million, split between nine countries, with players being guaranteed a $10,000 match fee for Tests.But even this has already been described as “window dressing” by some boards, with CWI’s former CEO Johnny Grave, whose term ended last month, among the most vocal. “I don’t know if US $15 million a year will make any difference to anything,” Grave told the talkSport Following On podcast in August. “We pay our players $10,000, so I sort of smiled when that came out in the press.”In fact, split nine ways, the $15 million annual payout – which has yet to be approved – is little better than the $1.25 million a year promised to smaller boards nine years ago; it barely accounts for inflation since then. That Test match fund payout was halted very soon after it began, though at least two years worth of payments were made.ICC proposed financial model – 2024 to 2027•ESPNcricinfo LtdStill, for context, the ICC’s present four-year broadcast deal with Star is understood to be worth $3.5 billion globally. From that sum, the BCCI, ECB and CA have carved out annual payouts worth almost $310 million put together (this works out to about 58% of the monies paid out to Full Members each year). It is true that the Next Six nations are also getting more money in nominal terms than they used to, but this being a sport, and competition being key, the vital figure is how much they are getting in comparison to other nations. The proposed Test match fund is worth less than 5% of the Big Three’s income from the ICC alone (they have other sources of revenue).If it is widely accepted that any sports league has to have some semblance of equality of opportunity about it. Equalising rules such as drafts or salary caps are imposed on many T20 leagues, but cricket has largely chosen to make peace with gargantuan imbalances in its oldest format. And if Test cricket is being allowed to wane naturally in the smaller nations, it is worth noting that many of those nations are propping up the red-ball game at considerable expense. South Africa, in particular, have felt the need to de-prioritise Test cricket in favour of their T20 league. It’s worth noting here, too, that no other league enjoys the de-facto hiatus that international cricket takes for the benefit of the IPL.We may have a delicious few months of Test cricket ahead of us, for now, thanks in no small part to an epochal New Zealand win. But it is worth asking, how long before the vast commercial disparities begin to swallow the format?

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