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Pink balls and floodlights

LONDON (AP) — The traditional curtain raiser to the English cricket season will be the first four-day fixture to be played under floodlights using pink balls when it is staged in Abu Dhabi for the first time next year.

The experiment will take place at the Sheikh Zayed Stadium from March 29 when the Marylebone Cricket Club play the county champions, who are currently Durham.

"We've been asking cricket authorities around the world to help us trial the pink ball under floodlights," MCC head of cricket John Stephenson said in yesterday's announcement. "If this match is a success, it could help to reinvigorate Test cricket. We have an opportunity to play our part for the good of the game and we're determined to grasp it."

Traditionally, white balls are used for one-day and Twenty20 matches and red balls are used for Test and all other cricket.

But the MCC, who create and uphold the rules of cricket, have been working with experts to determine the merits of a bright pink ball to compensate for visibility difficulties with white balls under floodlights. The MCC, who have no regular team, field a side once a year for the curtain raising game. "Although it is a disappointment not to have the traditional season opener at Lord's we fully understand and support the reasons for that," Durham head coach Geoff Cook said.