Daily Dispatch

No pitch demons this time

- By TELFORD VICE

THE focus at Centurion yesterday, three days before the second Test between SA and New Zealand‚ wasn’t on the pitch.

For a change it was on the outfield.

But that was not surprising considerin­g play in the first Test at Kingsmead was truncated to a total of 99.4 overs‚ largely by unseasonal rain that rendered the outfield unplayable for what should have been the last three days of the match.

Grass that had not knitted properly after being relaid at the end of June was the villain of the piece.

Centurion’s outfield has also been decompacte­d this winter.

Should enough rain fall during the match could we have another debacle on our hands? No.

No rain has been forecast for Centurion until September 7 – two weeks after the match.

And the outfield has been carpeted with rye grass‚ which survives Gauteng’s winters.

Consequent­ly it gleamed green and glorious in the sunshine yesterday.

“It looks pretty good‚” Zealand’s Trent Boult said.

He may be less excited when he does assess the pitch‚ a yellow slab of winter that doesn’t seem likely to assist the quicks as much as it does during the summer.

The irony of the Durban disaster was that the pitch was the most responsive seen at Kingsmead in several seasons‚ offering plenty of bounce.

But Boult‚ who took 3/52 in SA’s first innings of 263‚ should not expect something similar this time.

Rudolph du Preez, groundsman at Centurion, said this week he would spend twice as long preparing the surface compared to during the season.

Consequent­ly batsmen might not have to deal with as much deteriorat­ion later in the match as would normally be the case.

“It might be a little bit slower‚ it might be holding back‚” Du Preez was quoted as saying in a Cricket SA release.

That’s not what Boult wanted to hear. — TMG Digital New

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