The structure of a Test match

A Test match is played over up to five days, with six hours of play per day. Each team has two innings — meaning each team's 11 batters must be dismissed twice. There is no fixed number of overs; teams bat until they are bowled out (ten wickets taken) or declare (choose to end their innings voluntarily). A team wins by defeating the opposition in both innings; if the match is not completed in five days, it is drawn.

Why the format endures

In an era of T20 cricket played in three hours and one-day internationals completed in a day, the five-day Test format persists as the ultimate measure of cricketing quality. Its advocates argue that the extended format is the only one that tests the full range of cricketing skills: the ability to build innings over hours, to adapt as pitches wear and weather changes, to stay concentrated for sustained periods, and to respond to a match situation that evolves over days.

The Ashes

The Ashes series between England and Australia is the oldest international cricket rivalry, dating to 1882 when a mock obituary in The Sporting Times declared that English cricket had died and the body would be cremated and taken to Australia. England's captain Ivo Bligh vowed to recover the Ashes; he did, and a small urn has since symbolically changed hands between the countries. The Ashes is played every two years, alternating between England and Australia.

The modern challenges

Test cricket faces genuine structural challenges: broadcasters in some markets have reduced their live coverage, matches against smaller nations can attract small crowds, and the growth of T20 leagues creates a commercial and scheduling tension for players' commitments. However, high-quality Test series — particularly the Ashes and India vs England — consistently attract large television audiences.