st.byron wrote: ↑Wed 08 Mar 2023 11:20am
I think that Australian wickets are consistent. Brisbane is nearly always a green top, Adelaide good for batting with a bit of movement, WACA was always quick.
Melbourne bit of a mixed bag and Sydney a turner.
Not so much nowadays. It's been homogenised with the era of drop in wickets. But no I don't think CA is in the background giving directions to the curators on what kind of wicket to prepare. Do you have any evidence of that? I recall earlier in this thread you surmised that one day we will find that CA was directly involved in sandpaper gate. Never seen any evidence of that either.
Not in any way defending sandpaper gate. Disgraceful. behaviour. I do though think the Ausiies got hung out to dry on the issue - not saying they shouldn't have been punished - am saying other teams have been ball tampering for a long time without account. Hello Poms and boiled lollies.
What is clear is that the Indian board and management are directly involved in directing their curators on what kind of wicket to prepare. Do you think its okay behaviour to not water a part of the wicket because the other team has numerous left handers?
At the very best it's highly unsporting and systemically so. At worst - and I can agree to some extent with Curly here - it's tantamount to cheating.
To me it lies somewhere in the middle of those poles.
It's also cultural. I've lived in India for over a year and visited there half a dozen times in my life. They will shamelessly take whatever they can get away with. They're pretty brazen about shafting others if the opportunity presents. That's my experience of them, broadly speaking. It's no.co-incidence that the world epicentre of scam call centres is India.
I agree Australian pitches used to have character, but the drop-in pitch years have taken all that away (apart from the debacle that was Brisbane this season).
Here are a few paragraphs from cricket.com.au articles from the past:
(Regarding the upcoming Ashes Test at Lords in 2019)
"If there's no lateral movement, as we've seen in the last few days, Australia on exactly the same pitch have got so much more out of that surface than England got.
"It's a real problem now for England; they're going to have to go to their next ground and ask for a bit of grass on it. And their number one bowler Jimmy Anderson is probably not going to be available."
After the Ireland Test, Root was measured in his criticism of the surface prepared by Lord's groundsman Karl McDermott – who is in his first season as the venue's head curator – but said he would be surprised if a similar pitch was produced for the Ashes Test, which starts on August 14.
"I don't like saying this but the wicket was substandard for a Test match," Root said. "I thought it was … not even close to a fair contest between bat and ball throughout the whole game.
"When you are getting scores like that, that tells a story in itself.
(Regarding the pitch used for the 2017 Boxing Day Test)
If Australia and England were still playing the fourth Magellan Ashes Test on New Year's Day, Steve Smith believes the lifeless MCG pitch would still play the same way it did on Boxing Day.
The flat, slow wicket was widely criticised as an unfit stage for the storied Boxing Day Test match and the Australia skipper joined the chorus of condemnation after the game ended in a draw.
"I think it just needs to do something ... it hasn't changed over five days and I'd say if we were playing for the next couple of days it wouldn't change at all either," Smith said.
"It's got to find a way to have some pace and bounce or take some spin or do something.
"We saw some reverse swing but the ball just gets so soft so quickly because the surface is quite hard.
"It gets soft, doesn't carry through and it's really difficult to get people out.
"I just don't think it's good for anyone."
With the match lacking as a spectacle, Cricket Victoria chief executive Tony Dodemaide went so far as to suggest it might be time to dig up the drop-in wickets and start afresh with new soil and turf.
You still claim national cricket authorities across the world don't have influence over the pitches being produced? Influence can come in many different ways, but it's definitely there.
And I'll use some of your language back at you, do you have any evidence about selective watering, did you see them out in the middle with the hose? I saw a few photos days before with different coloured patches on the pitch (which easily could have been produced with a mower, before then mowing it all done to final height) and some quotes from groundsman. But as I said earlier, "mental warfare" is a very Australian tactic. Those photos won India the Test before a ball was bowled.
The evidence I did actually see when it came to play the Test was two ends that looked and played exactly the same for the left and right hand batsmen.
Your cultural assessment is also a good point I think. Having a population 50x and population density 140x that of Australia will lead to some differences. I am not comfortable as a nation saying to the world "this is the way we do it, it is the right way, everybody should do it the same as us" when clearly everyone is in different circumstances.
Maybe they do it the right way and we do it the worng way? Who knows. As I said earlier it's all a matter of perspective.