So, is this the launch of an enlightened new policy, or the beginning of the end for everything that we hold dear about the grand old game of Test cricket?
Well, in case you haven’t been paying attention, England are due to play 18 Tests in a 12-month span, including nine against India, five in Australia, and two against the world’s best Test team, New Zealand. If Test cricket is about to die, then it sure as hell won’t be through neglect on their part.It might just be the death of a few Test careers, however, if every player in England’s starting XI is expected to plough on through injury and burnout to front up in each and every contest. Anderson and Broad would probably be keeling over… oh, right about now, while Archer’s hurty elbow would be reminding him that life was an awful lot simpler when he was just a T20 gun for hire, rather than the most prized cutting edge that an England captain has ever wielded.Instead, with a little bit of give and take – admittedly not always at the most opportune of moments – England are in the process of building “an army of amazing cricketers” to fight on all fronts, as Dale Steyn, no less, put it in a series of tweets last week. As selection policies go, that’s “pretty genius”, Steyn added.And lurking somewhere in Ahmedabad – probably behind the bowler’s arm with his stylishly mirrored shades glinting in the floodlights – you suspect that Smith won’t object if he can get that sort of a classification to stick.

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