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Pitch curator Matt Page “in a state of shock”
The pitch from the two-day Ashes Test in Melbourne has been rated as “unsatisfactory” by the International Cricket Council (ICC).
The decision means the Melbourne Cricket Ground receives one demerit point. If a venue receives six demerit points across a five-year period it is suspended from hosting international cricket for 12 months.
It is the first time a pitch in Australia has been deemed substandard since the ICC overhauled its system two years ago.
Thirty-six wickets fell in six sessions in the showpiece Boxing Day match, with excessive seam movement on offer for pace bowlers.
“The MCG pitch was too much in favour of the bowlers,” said match referee Jeff Crowe.
“With 20 wickets falling on the first day, 16 on the second day and no batter even reaching a half-century, the pitch was ‘Unsatisfactory’ as per the guidelines and the venue gets one demerit point.”
The MCG’s head curator Matt Page left 10mm of grass on the pitch to counter hot conditions forecast later in the match but this has been given as a reason for the lively conditions.
Page said he was in a “state of shock” during the match, which England won by four wickets. Travis Head’s 46 in Australia’s second innings was the highest score.
The Boxing Day Test was the second two-day affair of this Ashes series but the surface for the other, the first Test in Perth, was rated as “very good” suggesting batter error was more to blame there.
“Unsatisfactory” is the ICC’s second lowest ranking for a pitch.
Though this is the first time an Australian strip has been rated substandard under the current system, there has been trouble with the MCG pitch before.
In the drawn match of 2017, the surface did not offer enough assistance for the bowlers, resulting in a dull contest in which only 24 wickets fell. That was rated as “poor”.