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BGT Pitch Rating: ICC Rate SCG Wicket For IND vs AUS 'Satisfactory' Despite Being Labelled 'Not Ideal' by Experts

By MyKhel Staff

The International Cricket Council (ICC) has announced the pitch ratings for each match of the recently concluded Border-Gavaskar series between Australia and India with the global body rating the Sydney pitch as 'satsfactory' despite several experts calling the SCG wicket as 'not ideal'.

Few former players, including Indian great Sunil Gavaskar, criticized the wicket being used at the SCG after the fifth and final Test of the five-match Test series ended inside three days with 34 wickets falling in seven and a half sessions of play.

SCG pitch receives satsfactory rating Image Courtesy X

The traditionally batting-friendly pitch at Sydney Cricket Ground, ended up a notch below in the ratings compared to the other four venues wickets as it predominantly favoured bowlers this time with batters from both the teams struggling for the majority of the Test which ended in two and half days.

While SCG was rated 'satisfactory', the wickets used in Perth, Adelaide, Brisbane and Melbourne were rated 'very good' by the ICC, Cricket Australia announced on Wednesday (January 8). In 2023, the ICC revamped its pitch rating system, reducing it from six categories to four - very good, satisfactory, unsatisfactory and unfit.

The marquee five-match series ended 3-1 in favour of the hosts, who regained the BGT after a decade and also qualified for the World Test Championship final in June against South Africa.

The tracks at the Optus Stadium in Perth, the Adelaide Oval, the Gabba in Brisbane and the iconic Melbourne Cricket Ground received the highest rating, Cricket Australia stated in a press release.

"We encourage pitches that bring out the unique characteristics of that venue and this has long been a feature of Australian cricket," Cricket Australia's Head of Cricket Operations Peter Roach said in a media release while reacting to the ICC's ratings.

"We don't look to prepare wickets that favour the home side or suit our situation in a series. What we seek is a good contest between bat and ball and pitches that are likely to produce a result.

"Weather obviously plays a significant part in preparation and we know that even our most skilled curators are challenged at times by adverse weather," he added.

The Sydney track had a green top with variable bounce on offer and as many as 26 wickets fell on the first two days while four Indians and as many Australians were dismissed on day three as bowlers largely dominated the proceedings.

"The SCG has been striving to bring out their unique characteristics of early pace and bounce before the pitch wears and spins," Roach said.  "This year was a step in the right direction to achieving this which provided an exciting finish to the Border Gavaskar Trophy series and bodes well for the Ashes summer in 2025-26," he added.

"The series also emphasised the benefits of playing first-class cricket at major venues," Roach said. "It allows our curators to become more familiar with the different challenges that go into preparing wickets in different weather conditions, and also allows players to enter the Test team familiar with the conditions they will confront," he added.

Story first published: Wednesday, January 8, 2025, 14:20 [IST]
Other articles published on Jan 8, 2025
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