Cricket

ICC blasts Cricket Australia for ‘below average’ Gabba pitch

The International Cricket Council has issued the Brisbane Cricket Ground, generally often known as the Gabba, one demerit level and gave the pitch a ‘below average’ ranking after the primary Test between Australia and South Africa.

The state of the pitch in Brisbane that was used throughout the first Test between Baggy Greens and Proteas has copped widespread criticism after Australia beat the South Africans by six wickets inside two days throughout which 34 wickets fell.

ALSO READ: Australia legends, ICC slam Gabba pitch after 34 wickets fall in two days

High-profile critics of the ‘green top’ pitch embrace South Africa skipper Dean Elgar, legendary former Australian skipper Ricky Ponting and veteran Aussie batsman Matthew Hayden.

“I don’t think that was a very good Test wicket,” Elgar stated after the sport.

Ponting stated: “I haven’t seen one as green. There was excessive seam movement. These are very, very good bowling teams, no doubt, but I don’t think that the batting teams are that bad.”

ALSO READ: Proteas skipper, ICC finger pitch after two day humiliation

During one in all his his commentary stints, Hayden stated: “It started too green. And that’s from someone who has seen this [pitch] from a very young age. There is no need to make it so full of grass, such heavy grass content. It seamed too much.”

The ICC has now come out and lambasted Cricket Australia’s pitch preparation, saying the state of the pitch led to the primary Test being an uneven contest between bat and ball.

ICC MATCH REFERE’S PITCH REPORT FINDINGS:

ICC Elite Panel of Match Referees member Richie Richardson launched his pitch report on Monday, and the preliminary discovering is that the pitch was ‘below average’. 

“Overall, the Gabba pitch for this Test match was too much in favour of the bowlers. There was extra bounce and occasional excessive seam movement. The odd delivery also kept low on the second day, making it very difficult for batters to build partnerships.” 

“I found the pitch to be “below average” as per the ICC tips because it was not a good contest between bat and ball,” he added.

Due to the ‘below average’ ranking, the venue has obtained one demerit level below the ICC Pitch and Outfield monitoring course of. Demerit factors stay lively for a rolling five-year interval and when a venue accumulates 5 demerit factors it’s suspended from staging any worldwide cricket for a interval of 12 months.

Kagiso Rabada celebrates the wicket of David Warner. hoto: Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images.

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