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I found it quite hard to tell when the bowler

 

"But overall he thought the pink balls "played quite well".The historic Test is scheduled for Adelaide Oval on November 27 between Australia and New Zealand in a move authorities hope will boost television audiences and usher in a lucrative new era for the five-day game. It's difficult to get people to the cricket," the spokesman said.Senior Australian batsman Adam Voges added that the pink ball did not hold up well in recent games against New Zealand in Canberra, while one-day international paceman John Hastings scoffed: "The ball doesn't move off the straight."It looked like it held together quite well throughout the day, probably a lot better than it did on the more abrasive surface of Canberra, so that is I guess good signs.

Manufacturer Kookaburra said it has tried to sculpt a suitable ball for the occasion -- something that is visible under lights but behaves similar to a traditional red ball."It's here to stay," he said of the pink ball.Smith, batting this week for his New South Wales state side, said he had trouble sighting the pink ball, even though the entirety of his innings against Queensland was played in daylight. We are challenged in the early parts of the season -- the first month of the summer when kids are still at school and adults are working.In the pink:Kookaburra has defended its pink ball and said it had gone through rigorous testing."CA said the move to stage part of each day's play under lights was to suit fans. Players had to adapt to it and that's what they will have to do here."."I found it quite hard to see the seam," he told reporters."Former Test fast bowler Ryan Harris said it was time players accepted the radical change."All you got to do is set straight fields, it's quite a boring brand of cricket when you do have that pink ball," he said.It has sparked calls from some for Cricket Australia to revert the Adelaide Test back to its traditional day-time schedule, but the organisation is having none of it."We're confident with the work that's been done on the pink ball over many years and Kookaburra have been developing it over seven years," a CA spokesman told AFP."CA said ticket sales for the Test have been "incredibly strong" with the interest shown by fans on par with an Ashes series against England.

"It's new, it's like when Twenty20 China Acrylic letter signs Manufacturers came in -- no one knew how it was going to go."The day-night Test is all about the fans.But the innovation has been criticised by players, with new Australia skipper Steve Smith saying on Wednesday he had trouble seeing the seam after batting against it for the first time."I found it quite hard to tell when the bowler was sort of trying to swing it a certain way, or sometimes with the spinners, it was a bit hard to pick up."We've had two successive seasons of Sheffield Shield cricket where pink balls have been trialled."I don't think any Test ball has gone through the level of testing and development that the pink ball has got and the number of trials and feedback," Kookaburra managing director Brett Elliott said."That's why time shifting the ordinary hours of the Test match to later in the day will allow more people to attend the matches and watch on TV."I think there is probably more data on the development of this ball than there is on any ball before it was entered into the first-class arena."But still there are questions about its use, just weeks before the hotly debated day-night Test in Adelaide.'The ball doesn't move off the straight' Sydney: Cricket Australia says it intends to proceed with next month's contentious first-ever day-night Test despite player unease over the experimental pink ball to be used