“We can make Test cricket work if we make it more of an event,” Badale told the BBC’s Tailenders Podcast.
“We should have it at the same time every year,played between a small set of nations that can actually afford it and Lord’s becomes like a Wimbledon,an event that is the diary.”
Badale warned that the commitment of leading players to the Test game mattered less than market preferences around the world. So far this year,lucrative new T20 leagues have already launched in the United Arab Emirates and South Africa. Major League Cricket launches in the USA in July this year,while there arerumours of a new competition being created in Saudi Arabia.
“The amount of times I hear arguments like ‘Ben Stokes wants to play Test cricket’ — that is important but what is really important is what the fans of the future want to watch and where are they going to spend their hard-earned money,” Badale said. “We are going to have to think creatively about Test cricket if we want it to work.”
Badale said that the Test game needed to adapt to remain relevant for a new generation of fans.
“It is difficult one for me because Test cricket is what you grow up on as a fan and I haven’t missed the first day at Lord’s for however many years,it is still my preferred format,” he said. “But it is not about me,it is about what the 10 to 15-year-olds in India and across the world are thinking.”