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Test cricket: An Australian perspective

by Kiall Rowberry

If you want to know how the average Australian cricket fan feels about Test cricket, you need to first look at how the Australian people look at life.

Generally speaking, Australians are fighters. Not in an alcohol-fueled bar room sort of way - though that is a regular part of life, but in a 'don't expect life to hand you any favours, you've got to earn everything you get' way.

We are of convict heritage, so our forefathers had to work hard for their freedom, their reputation and their future. We live on an island that is half desert, with a climate that can be punishing and cruel. So those that built this country did so in some of the most demanding conditions imaginable, over distances that have to be seen to be believed.

Our working class are dubbed 'Aussie battlers' and are spoken of as typical of the nation, not some disrespected sub-section of Australia. We will always back the underdog and cut down the tall poppy.

Test cricket is where the mentally and physically tough play, Twenty20 and One Day cricket is the domain of the flashy show pony. It takes guts to take on a four man pace assault for hours on end to grind out a century, the type of guts that made names like Boon and Waugh revered as almost god like in households and playgrounds all over the country.

Where Twenty20 and One Day cricket is fun and instantly gratifying, like a McDonald's happy meal, Test cricket is delivered over time and is far more satisfying for the consumer, like a 3 course meal. Sure, it helps when the local restaurant is a five star establishment, which the Australian Test side has been in the past 15 years or so, but our take away food outlets have not been too shabby either - a fact backed up by the past three World Cups.

Settling down to watch a limited overs contest gives you a chance to watch some of the best batsmen in the world throw the bat for anything up to three hours, maybe knock up a few boundaries in the process. It also allows you to witness up to ten overs from the best bowlers in the game, but often while the fielders are restricted in where they can stand and while batsmen have not time to give them the respect they deserve.

This may be all good fun, but Test cricket is where the likes of Lara, Tendulkar and Ponting can stay at the crease for seven or eight hours and face the likes of Warne, Steyn and Muralitharan for as long as they are able to bowl. The battles that come from such match ups are the stuff any true cricket fan lives for.

When Australia won in the West Indies in 1995, the first time they had done so in two decades, it was on the back of a double century from Steve Waugh that saw him hit numerous times by some of the fastest bowlers in the world. It took mental and physical strength to face up to each ball, but he did so and was instrumental in the success of the side.

You just can't get that in the other forms of the game, it is simply not possible.

Flashy doesn't impress the average Australian, substance does. Don't try the bling and trash talk in this country and expect respect and admiration. Prove you can fight like a mongrel dog and, win or lose, you will be loved.

Test cricket is the domain of the mongrel dog. If you don't have the heart for the fight, you will not last. Limited overs games come and go, and are often forgotten quickly, but the deeds of the warriors of Test cricket are remembered forever.

Our captains need to be the gutsiest of the gutsy - Chappell, Border, Taylor, Waugh and Ponting are 'street fighters' with the steely eyes of Clint Eastwood and the hearts of Phar Lap. They are the types of players that represent everything Australians want Australians to be. They made their names and reputations on the battle fields of Test cricket, and it is their legacy that will continue to drive Australians towards this form of the game - even if the rest of the world takes the money and runs to its lesser cousins.

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