Renegades plunder Thunder as fans stay away from BBL

By mds1970 / Roar Guru

The second season of the Big Bash League is in full swing, but the expectation of big crowds to take in the action hit a road-block at ANZ Stadium on Friday night.

Not even the return of Chris Gayle to the Sydney Thunder side or the appearance of Sri Lanka’s Muttiah Muralitharan for the visiting Melbourne Renegades was enough to entice the Sydney sporting public to attend.

Barely 7,000 patrons turned out to the cavernous ANZ Stadium and were vastly out-numbered by a factor of ten to one by empty seats.

But the Thunder, and their ground announcers, put up an admirable attempt to manufacture some atmosphere.

Before the game, a new mascot was unveiled. Max Thunder, despite being clad in a Norse helmet and brandishing a thunder-bolt, will never be taken seriously as a son of Thor without a DNA test. But he’s sure to be a hit with the kids.

A stage was set up, and dancing girls performed a routine to AC/DC’s ‘Thunderstruck’ as the players walked through a pyrotechnic display to begin the game.

The Renegades had won the toss and sent the Thunder in, with Usman Khawaja and Chris Gayle opening the batting.

The Renegades kept things tight early, and there were plenty of dot balls. But Chris Gayle finally opened the shoulders in the fourth over, lofting to the outfield twice, the second being a massive six into the crowd. The Thunder wouldn’t get another until the 16th over.

In the fifth over, Gayle took off for a suicidal single, but would have made it had he grounded his bat correctly. Instead, while still out of his ground, the bails lit up as the run out was affected and Gayle’s innings was over.

Muralitharan was introduced to the attack. The Sri Lankan Test wicket record holder’s action has been controversial in Australia, meaning his appearances in Australia have been limited, and the crowd hadn’t forgotten, with his every delivery sparking a call of “no ball” from the crowd.

But Muralitharan had the last laugh, as he bogged down Khawaja for four dot balls in a row before trapping him lbw.

Aaron O’Brien went into the attack, and the wickets crumbled. O’Brien took three wickets and Muralitharan two as the Thunder slumped to 7 for 60.

Chris Tremain and Cameron Borgas salvaged something from the innings with an unbroken 56-run partnership with number nine batsman Tremain being top scorer with 37. But a total of 116 didn’t look like it would be enough.

And the atmospheric tricks continued. Music was played between deliveries and at the fall of wickets.

The announcers did vox-pops with members of the crowd and interviewed Bulldogs players Brett Morris and Ben Barba who were at the game. There were merchandise giveaways for the kids who could do the best Gangnam Style and all the while the cheer girls danced on.

But the music and interviews echoed around the empty stadium.

If the Thunder were to have any hope of defending the total, they needed everything to go their way during the run chase. It didn’t.

In the first over, Dirk Nannes had three lbw shouts. The first two were rather optimistic, but the third must have been extremely close, Nannes falling to his knees as he desperately pleaded in vain with the umpire for the wicket.

A catch went down in the second over. The third over saw Nannes land a mid-pitch shirtfront on Renegade opener Aaron Finch, but the Thunder were unable to get the ball back to the wicket while Finch was out of his ground.

Azhar Mahmood struck twice for the Thunder to give them at least some hope; including bowling Marlon Samuels with a donkey drop that looked to have passed Samuels above hip height on the full but dropped to hit the stumps.

But they were rare moments of respite for the Thunder. The Renegades didn’t play many big hits; they didn’t need to. Staying comfortably above the run-rate required, it was a countdown until the runs were scored.

Three more wickets fell late in the game, but that was comfortably within the Renegades’ budget. There was a sense of inevitability about the result long before it was over, with no need to throw the bat around recklessly.

The crowd, small to begin with, was already filing out long before the winning runs were scored.

Although the game didn’t have as much of the explosive action as most Twenty20 games, it was still entertaining.

Tickets are affordable and it’s good family entertainment, so it was somewhat mysterious why the crowd number was so poor. The fans that did attend had a great time.

So why was the crowd number just over 7,000?

Maybe running the Big Bash League concurrently with the Tests is too confusing for the fans. Or maybe the Twenty20 season starts too early.

Last season, the Big Bash League crowds weren’t great at the start of the tournament but picked up after Christmas and into the new year. Maybe they will again this year. But they weren’t this low even at the start of last season.

Maybe the novelty of Twenty20 is wearing off. Maybe splitting Sydney into two teams was the wrong idea.

Or maybe it’s just an inexplicable rogue number, and crowds will be back to normal next game. That’s what the Sydney Thunder will be hoping is the case.

The Crowd Says:

2012-12-18T04:02:47+00:00

Titus

Guest


I can honestly say, I have seen better cricket and smaller beer guts watching a Hazelbrook Grade 4 match. If this doesn't call TV ratings figures into question I don't know what will.

2012-12-18T03:54:13+00:00

The High Shot

Roar Pro


That's no way to speak of the A-League!

AUTHOR

2012-12-16T02:59:24+00:00

mds1970

Roar Guru


Discussion over whether the game that is played with a round ball that the players aim to kick into a net should be called "football" or "soccer" isn't relevant to an article about T20 cricket.

2012-12-16T01:38:04+00:00

Trev

Roar Rookie


Yeah but the BBL when it was state base was drawing some good crowds, the seats were also cheap, I don;t know what they are like now because I haven't been too a match yet.

2012-12-16T00:04:56+00:00

Kasey

Guest


You might want to check with your supreme overlord(AD) first. Ask him what he called the round ball game when asked to address a Melbourne Victory sponsors lunch earlier this year.

2012-12-15T23:10:09+00:00

Brendon

Guest


Can we stop calling soccer football, given that the AFL in australia is so much bigger than the A-League I believe it reserves the right to be called football

2012-12-15T19:57:02+00:00

Rabbitz

Roar Guru


Except this is under the "Cricket" tab, so I guess confusion still reigns.... (Yes this was posted with my tongue firmly in my cheek)

2012-12-15T14:18:47+00:00

Football United

Guest


people want to stay away from a plastic league full of plastic teams and fans with a attention span of a retarded goldfish, surprise surprise

2012-12-15T14:16:30+00:00

Football United

Guest


If you are confused to which sports are which, then refer to the tabs at the top for clarity

2012-12-15T14:14:19+00:00

Football United

Guest


come on kase, i thought you were better than this. last thing we want is straya roolz types slagging football forums as well.

2012-12-15T12:38:08+00:00

pope paul v11

Guest


well at least there are BBL fans, some of which actually follow a team, Kasey you need to be more specific, you are a soccer nut. Football means different things to different people.

2012-12-15T12:09:02+00:00

Don Corleone

Guest


I can understand where you're coming from, but how much genuine, passionate support is there for the Bushrangers when there's 99,997 empty seats at Ryobi Cup and Sheffield Shield games?

2012-12-15T11:32:54+00:00

Trev

Roar Rookie


My biggest problem is they turned it into city based teams. They could have left it state based, I've never lived in Melbourne in my life but grew up in country Victoria, cheering for either off the two manufactured Melbourne teams just doesn't have the same appeal or passion as getting behind the Bushrangers. Sport without passion and history is nothing and this new BBL has neither.

2012-12-15T07:14:34+00:00

Don Corleone

Guest


The Big Bash still outrates the ALeague fourfold. So while the BBL will be getting free-to-air coverage on a major commercial television network....the ALeague will be getting a run on the 'Special' Broadcasting Service.

2012-12-15T05:35:16+00:00

Chris

Guest


Given that every BBL game broadcast in the same timeslot as an A-League game has outrated the A-League 3:1 I think that Cricket Australia is probably pretty confident.

2012-12-15T04:40:51+00:00

Ian Whitchurch

Guest


Kasey, If you want to play Code Wars, I can refer you to a number of fine threads about Melbourne Heart crowds.

2012-12-15T01:32:51+00:00

ojg1997

Roar Rookie


I am very worried about the Thunders crowd for the upcoming game against the Strikers. I am a Strikers fan and hope they defaet the Thunder next Thursday but if the Strikers win the Thunder crowds are going to get even worse which would be terrible for the BBL so I have mixed feelings about the Thunder V Strikers match. On the other hand it was good to see the Strikers get a sell out crowd, Perth only got 4k against the Stars because it was on a school night and there was a lot of rain before the match. I'm a bit concerned about the crowd size tonight between the Stars and Hurricanes though because I have heard there has been rain around Melbourne today. I am sure the T20 novelty is not wearing off the Strikers V Heat game was a classic and the crowd was really getting into. Crowds have only been low due to poor weather, poor scheduling and fans who only go if there team is winning. To all Thunder fans please to get to your team matches otherwise the BBL could turn into a massive flop.

2012-12-15T01:17:22+00:00

Kasey

Guest


I should reveal that I am a SACA member of over 10 years and love my cricket, I just prefer the serious battle of Test Cricket over the hit n giggle of T20 by the length of the Flemington Straight. As a football and cricket fan it is interesting to note the double standards in play used by the Australian Media and even the amateurs on here when reporting on things such as crowd behavior and size. (Cricket v Football.)

AUTHOR

2012-12-15T01:09:59+00:00

mds1970

Roar Guru


:D :D

2012-12-15T01:08:51+00:00

sheek

Roar Guru


On a more serious note, this is one of my principal arguments: If test cricket is still considered the most important element of the game, then this is where resources should be spent, protecting the premier product. Make test cricket more relevant to today's generations & equally importantly, preserve the pathways like Sheffield Shield. Things can be done without losing the essence of the game, like day/night tests & coloured national clothing. Spending money on manufactured 'here today, gone tomorrow' spinoffs doesn't make much sense to me as a long-term, sustainable plan.

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