Mercury (Hobart)

A case of ‘maybe this time’ for MCG

-

RUSSELL GOULD

AN eight-wicket opening day at the MCG in November provided curator Matt Page the template for his perfect Boxing Day Test pitch which Cricket Australia is highly confident he will deliver next week.

Page and his staff are facing extra scrutiny after the Sheffield Shield embarrassm­ent this month, when a match between Victoria and Western Australia was abandoned because of a dangerous pitch.

The pitch Page produced for the first shield clash at the MCG this summer, when Queensland defeated Victoria in the final over of the fourth day, was rated “very good” by match officials.

Only rain on the opening day prevented more than the eight wickets taken by a Victorian attack which included

Test contenders James Pattinson and Peter Siddle. The pitch was a result of Page “pushing the barrow” — a move endorsed by CA — after recent summers of lifeless MCG strips.

CA doesn’t expect an overcorrec­tion from Page, despite the last-start mess when excess moisture in the pitch allowed the ball to make divots which became dangerous when the surface hardened. Instead

Page has been encouraged to do what is needed to create the type of pitch which was agreed upon by all parties at the start of the summer.

“I think it’s fair to say we are having a bigger involvemen­t in this one given the circumstan­ces,” CA’s operations manager Peter Roach said.

“But we want them to keep pushing for a pitch that has pace, carry, spin, seam and hopefully over the course of the match can deteriorat­e. We don’t want them to overreact and be too conservati­ve.

“The first two shield wickets, they got them right and we hope they back themselves to get this one right as well.

“I’m sitting here today with a real level of comfort that everything the MCG and MCC have done in the last couple of years … they are in as good a place as they can be.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? CONFIDENT: Curator Matt Page.
CONFIDENT: Curator Matt Page.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia