18 May 2018

Cricket considers giving the toss the flick

11:36 am on 18 May 2018

The International Cricket Council is looking at dropping the coin toss before Test matches.

Captains Steve Smith (Australia) and Brendon McCullum (New Zealand) make the toss in the inaugural day-night cricket test,

Captains Steve Smith (Australia) and Brendon McCullum (New Zealand) make the toss in the inaugural day-night cricket test, Photo: Photosport

Briefing notes for an ICC committee meeting at the end of this month indicate time may be up for the toss in the majority of Tests to help address concerns about exaggerated home advantage.

The age-old spectacle of captains tossing up and calling heads or tails is a pre-match staple on the first morning of Tests, and has been throughout the format's near 150-year history.

But depending on the deliberations of the ICC's cricket committee in Mumbai, it may be sacrificed in time for next year's Ashes - due to be the starting point for matches which will count towards the inaugural Test championship.

Instead, the visiting captain would simply be given the option of whether to bat or bowl first - depending on his reading of conditions - although it is understood the change will not pertain to bilateral series outside the Test championship.

Cricinfo has published content from a "briefing note circulated before the ICC cricket committee meeting".

It reads: "There is serious concern about the current level of home team interference in Test pitch preparation, and more than one committee member believes that the toss should be automatically awarded to the visiting team in each match - although there are some others on the committee who do not share that view."

The toss has already become optional in first-class county matches in England, where the visiting captain can opt to bowl first if he wishes - but if he would prefer to bat, must still rely on the way the coin lands.

The unluckiest coin tossers in cricket are two Indian skippers.

MS Dhoni lost nine straights tosses in 2010 while Sunil Gavaskar also lost nine straight in the early eighties.

Former New Zealand skipper Brendon McCullum apparently lost eight in a row.

-AAP/RNZ