‘The Test’ Season 3 docu-series review: Short, engaging peek into cricketing drama
The Hindu
The Test Season 3 review: Engaging cricketing drama with highs and lows, showcasing Australian team's journey in the WTC Final and Ashes 2023.
Around halfway of the second episode of the latest season of The Test, drama erupts.
English batter Jonny Bairstow ducks a bouncer, the ball goes to the keeper and the batter walks out of the crease. Pretty much a normal thing that happens during a Test match, you’d think. But there’s tense music in the background, almost like you know something is going to happen.
And then it does. Bairstow walks out of the crease thinking the over was done, and wicketkeeper Carey has thrown at the stumps and is claiming a dismissal.
“Sort of within one ball yeah, it happened,” Alex Carey recalls in the docuseries.
The crowd at Lord’s Cricket Ground would go on to chant, “Same old Aussies, always cheating,” even as a disappointed Bairstow exits.
It’s the equivalent of an action-packed interval block in the movies, the kind that leaves you on a high as you make your way through to the bathroom, probably grinning all the way at how good it is.
The current season of The Test, a sports docuseries that follows the Australian men’s cricket team, throws up such excellent moments. Following the Bairstow runout, Alex Carey is made villain in the eyes of the English public, something that affects him mentally, which his teammate Steve Smith reveals in the documentary.