On Thursday, the England paceman will be playing an international match with them, one of a raft of new challenges facing him and his teammates in their first-ever day-night Test.
"It's stepping into the unknown completely," Broad said ahead of the first of three Tests against the touring West Indies.
That unknown includes the pink ball, changing sleep patterns and different mealtimes -- with the subsequent impact on energy levels.
"We're going to have to be so adaptable and figure out what's going on," Broad said. "The exciting thing is we are going in with a clear mind and learning on the job, almost."
This will be the fifth day-night Test match, with Australia involved in three of them -- first against New Zealand in 2015 and then against South Africa and Pakistan, before Pakistan beat West Indies in Dubai in October 2016.
It means, for example, that some spectators can drop in to the ground after school or work, and see more coverage on TV in the evenings.
Pink balls are used instead of red ones so that there can be better visibility for batsmen and fielders under the lights. England will be using a pink Dukes ball, rather than the Kookaburra used in Australia.
England's players have said the Dukes ball goes soft quickly, is hard to shine, and doesn't turn as much for spinners.
"It was a bit different," Woakes said Tuesday. "Not like a white ball, not like a red ball, somewhere in between."
Some of England's players played with a pink ball as a trial in a day-night round of County Championship matches in late June. They are scheduled to play a day-night Test at Adelaide during the upcoming Ashes series against Australia, and also one on the tour of New Zealand in March.
The terms "lunch" and "tea" will still be used for the intervals at Edgbaston, even though the lunch break will come at 4 pm local time, and will be the same length -- 40 minutes for lunch and 20 minutes for tea. The intervals were called tea and dinner during the day-nighters in Australia.
Broad spoke of players' needing to get the levels of food intake just right so they can have the energy to last through the evening, with play due to finish at 9 pm local time.
England beat South Africa 3-1 in its first series of the summer and starts as favourite against the West Indies, who are No. 8 in the Test rankings and have lost six straight Test series. They are also without a number of key players, such as Chris Gayle, Marlon Samuels and Darren Sammy, because of a previous dispute with the West Indies Cricket Board.
"I think people are writing the West Indies off too early," team manager Joel Garner said, "and it could be at their own peril.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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