The New Zealand Herald

Eden Park’s a silly point for test cricket

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Footage of the opening Blacks Caps v Australia test at the Basin Reserve highlighte­d what a majestic cricketing venue the Wellington ground is. The same will occur later this week when the test series moves to Christchur­ch and Hagley Oval hosts the second clash.

Thousands of sporting fans reclining on grass embankment­s or soaking up the views of top-level cricket being played on an oval venue.

Since Hagley Oval was renovated, lovers of both the grounds have claimed their preference is New Zealand’s spiritual “Home of Cricket”.

The tag that both those grounds battle it out for is a world away from what Eden Park No 1 offers as a top-level cricket venue.

An aerial view of the ground shows the unique boundary line it provides to cricket; at places more resembling the shape of half a tennis court than a traditiona­l round oval.

The lengths of the boundaries are also widely viewed as a bit of a joke; the square boundary is 68m, while the straight is just 55m and the smallest in the internatio­nal arena.Its continued hosting of internatio­nal cricket is thanks to a legacy issue.

Under Internatio­nal Cricket Council (ICC) regulation­s, including boundary sizes, if Eden Park applied to become a first-time host now it would likely be rejected.

The suitabilit­y of the suburban ground — which is proving it is a quality concert venue — to host top-level cricket was again in the spotlight as it hosted two T20 internatio­nals between the transtasma­n arrivals late last month.

The latest critic was Australian journalist Adam Hawse, who pointed at the ground’s size and said he “played in backyards with bigger boundaries than 55m”.

“This is kiddies’ cricket,” Hawse said on Sydney’s 2GB Radio. “It’s the home of rugby union, the spiritual home, but it’s not really a cricket oval.”

Eden Park chief executive Nick Sautner was upbeat in responding to Hawse’s criticism, saying: “Eden Park’s design guarantees an unmatched live cricket experience for fans at the ground or for those watching at home.

“Grounds like the MCG rarely see sixes hit due to the sheer size of the playing field.”

He didn’t mention that some of those sixes came via regular top edges over the keeper; shots that on a regular ground would be snaffled in the outfield.

Eden Park has been the scene of famous Black Caps test wins for decades and Cricket World Cup heroics in 1992 and 2015.

Some of those test victories were before a series of redevelopm­ents at the venue; when the boundary was more of a shape that you’d expect from a cricket oval.

A year ago, plans for potential future Eden Park redevelopm­ents were released.

But what so many cricket fans would love to see is for Auckland to have a true cricket venue; one which would see test cricket played in the City of Sails for the first time in six years.

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