In 2018, the
International Cricket Council (ICC) proposed the scrapping of the traditional coin toss in Test cricket matches, citing instances when host nations were criticised for, and sometimes found guilty of, changing the pitch conditions to suit themselves when playing this longest format of the game. The ICC proposed instead that the away (visiting) team should be given the right to choose whether to bat first or field first. The ICC announced that this would be implemented in the
2019 Ashes series between Australia and England, giving Australia (the away team) the comparative advantage to either bat first or field first. In an ICC committee meeting in May 2018, the ICC announced that the traditional method of the coin toss in test cricket would be retained, as it is an "integral part" of the sport that also "forms part of the narrative of the game". Between 2016 and 2019 in the English
County Championship there was no mandatory toss, with the away side having the choice to field first. If the away side declined to field first, the toss still took place. For the
2018–19 Big Bash League season in Australia, the toss was replaced by a bat flip, with "hills and flats" used instead of heads or tails. ==Batting first==