Here's why the crowds at Optus Stadium were so poor

By Sam / Roar Rookie

By nearly every measure, the opening Test of the summer between Australia and the West Indies had much to appreciate: two double-centuries, another century (by one of the double centurions, no less), someone out on 99, a 6-fa, and a result on the fifth and final day.

And yet, Marnus Labuschagne’s heroics have received about the same amount of airtime and column inches as the paltry Perth crowd which sparsely filled a cavernous Optus Stadium on each day.

Only 42,723 fans got along over the five days – an undeniably pitiful result.

It’s strange for a sports-mad town with an elite stadium to ignore such a high-profile match – especially after two years of being shunned from the home Test schedule.

And yet… I was one those Sandgropers who didn’t go.

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Despite me proclaiming to everyone within earshot over the past three years that I would go to any Test cricket made available once it returned to Perth, I didn’t.

Here are 10 reasons the Perth crowd was pathetic.

And just to clarify, they aren’t all reasons why I personally didn’t get along, but may have influenced my fellow West Aussies

This isn’t a rationalisation, or an excuse – just an explanation.

And before anyone asks, no, I don’t believe it’s to do with the axing of Justin Langer.

West Aussies love a West Aussie, but we don’t boycott to prove our point: we show up and slag people off.

Just ask Ian Healy how we felt about Tim Zoehrer not being in the side…

1. We’ve had a lot of cricket

Ordinarily there’s a horrible “sports purgatory” which exists in Australia between the end of the footy season and the start of cricket.

But this year, we had a solid month of international cricket from mid-October to mid-November thanks to the T20 World Cup (plus several warm up games against England beforehand).

The usual fervour surrounding the start of meaningful international cricket was lost. By the time the Windies rolled into town, many Perth cricket fans had already got along to a T20, either their national team against Sri Lanka or England, or one of the several between two non-Australian teams.

Which helped factor into…

2. No build-up or marketing

In recent years, Cricket Australia has confused and irked everyone with a bunch of meaningless (more on this later) T20s and ODIs at the start of the summer, which while not exactly satiating anyone’s appetite for cricket, at least builds anticipation for games which actually mean something.

For many Aussies, this means Tests.

(Photo by James Worsfold/Getty Images)

But while many may deride T20s as a hit and giggle spectacle rather than a sporting event of any consequence, the T20 World Cup has grown in stature – especially since Australia has finally seemed to take it seriously, culminating in last year’s triumph.

So, while normally the first Test is seen as the first meaningful game of the summer, this year it became the latest in the long line of many.

Also – and this has been covered in depth a lot already, so I won’t dwell on it – we had arguably the most meaningless ODI series of all time, between Australia and England.

Where a dearth of cricket on our screens would build anticipation for a Test series, this year we were barely finished scratching our heads as to why we played three ODIs against the Poms as the first Test was starting.

There was a distinct lack of marketing in Perth; the only way I knew the game started November 30 was because of the signage around Optus Stadium (I go running there regularly, and yes that’s a humblebrag), and a few sponsored Facebook posts featuring a generic shot of Nathan Lyon appealing and required searching the text to discover what the post was about.

3. Wednesday start… in non-holiday time

When I discovered the starting day of the Test while smashing out the kilometres on foot, imagine my dismay at discovering November 30 was a Wednesday.

Day one is the best day to go to a Test, possibly day two. But who takes a Wednesday off work to go to the cricket? How crap would those final two days of the working week be?

And not only was it a midweek start, it was before everyone bails on work for the year. In fact, this is that annoying time of year when you’re busy trying to get stuff done before the Christmas shutdown, and kids are still at school.

Basically, taking a Friday off is a lot different to a Wednesday.

Or even a Thursday.

4. Opposition

Not all teams can be England or India.

But, as sad as it is, not many are less appealing to play in Test cricket in 2022 than the West Indies.

(Photo by Gareth Copley/Getty Images)

They are ranked eighth in the ICC rankings and haven’t been a realistic chance of beating Australia in Australia since they did just that in 1992-93.

5. Got used to not having it

In the 1980s, Eddie Murphy had a hilarious bit about a guy who is starving being thrown a cracker, and thinking it’s the most amazing food he’s ever eaten.

After three years without a Test (or much international cricket at all), it seems Cricket Australia thought WA punters would react the same to whatever product was tossed their way.

But many WA cricket lovers may have moved on. They may have gotten used to Perth Scorchers games and Sheffield Shield being their only cricket indulgences. Not to mention, there’s also a little tournament going on in Qatar which has captured a few people’s attention.

But, much like someone who finally gets rid of Foxtel, maybe WA cricket fans just realised they weren’t missing all that much.

6. Not at the WACA

To be clear, this author does not condone the use of the WACA ground for anything at all.

It’s a shade-less concrete hellhole with facilities which made the dying days of Subiaco Oval look palatial.

Honestly, raze it to the ground for all I care.

But a lot of people feel differently. There’s a romanticism about the place, understandably, from the scoreboard to the hill to the Fremantle Doctor offering some sweet, sweet swing for into the wind bowlers.

When Optus Stadium opened, it was stressed cricket games against smaller-drawing nations would be held at the WACA.

That hasn’t happened.

Not only would a crowd of 11,000 be positively buzzing at the WACA, the prospect of heading along to the old stomping ground may have brough it in a few extra punters keen on some nostalgia.

7. Young people don’t care

Which brings us to some of the bigger problems facing cricket today: if holding an event at an inferior, smaller stadium may in fact boost attendance numbers, then there are questions to be asked about your audience demographic.

Case in point: as a 38-year-old dad, Saturday was the day being eyed off to get along for a day’s play.

There were pre-game concerns the game would be over by the weekend, but credit to the Windies (well, Marnus and Steve Smith, mainly) for keeping the game not only alive by Friday night, but very attractive: the Aussies would go for quick runs on Saturday morning, and then may grab some wickets later in the day. And yet, my Friday evening calls to mates to go to the cricket went unrequited.

Yes, this says more about me than the state of cricket, and yes, I spent a few hours sobbing while spooning my pillow.

But the reasons given by my pyker mates were the same as many 30-somethings since, well forever: family commitments, play dates, work, weddings…

The difference is nowadays there’s no one else interested.

Cricket has spent the past 20 years marketing T20s to the younger generation, and it’s worked… but there’s a cost.
Low Test crowds are international cricket reaping what it’s sowed.

8. The TV experience is pretty good

Did you know it gets hot in Australia during summer months?

A day at the cricket can be less a viewing experience than an exercise in heatstroke survival.

And while we may all like to hate on cricket commentators, be they from Channel Seven or Fox Cricket, the cricket television-watching experience is pretty good.

You get a better view of DRS decisions and replays, can get some analysis and also go off and do other stuff while checking in for a few balls or overs now and then. I mean, if you’re choosing between hard seats and 40-degree heat, and listening to Isa Guha in air-conditioning…

9. Times are tough

Look, as we all know, money is tight for a lot of people right now for a number of reasons.

Choosing not to drop a significant amount of coin on a cricket game is a pretty easy way tighten a household’s purse strings.

10. Games mean nothing

I am equal parts AFL and cricket fan.

But while I can tell you every AFL premier off the top of my head since 1979, I struggle to recall who toured in Australia three years ago, let alone the results of those series.

Simply put, most international cricket games don’t mean anything.

Do you think England fans cares their national side lost those three ODIs against Australia after winning the T20 World Cup?

Regarding Tests, the frustrating part is the ICC has done the right thing in introducing the Test Championship to add a weight of meaning to games.

But it requires a shift in thinking: all Test matches and series should be discussed in their relation to the Test Championship: who is where on the standings, what are the ramifications of each series, what does it all mean?

Because as it is, a random two-Test series between Australia and the West Indies clearly means very little – and, I’m guessing, not just to the people of WA.

The Crowd Says:

2022-12-07T23:58:33+00:00

Kalva

Roar Rookie


Maybe, just maybe the fact that SA get good support and have a pretty good record there- think they have won the last 3 Tests there- might have been the reason for not playing a Test in Perth? Why give them an advantage might have been the thought process?

2022-12-07T22:04:57+00:00

DTM

Roar Rookie


Australia 6/780. West Indies 20/616.

2022-12-07T22:02:54+00:00

DTM

Roar Rookie


Yes. There are at least 22 AFL games there every season with an average crowd of about 40,000. There will probably be 6-10 days of international cricket each summer. In addition, there will be an occasional rugby league game, a rugby union game, a soccer game and a few concerts. The original plan was that the WACA retained test matches - other than England and India. However, this seems to have been forgotten.

2022-12-07T01:48:12+00:00

Grand Panjandrum

Guest


Clearly, CA still has an issue with WA and our government and seeks to further penalise the WA cricket community for the sins of our leader. Exactly. Everyone knew South Africa was the commercially sensible choice. That they knowingly disregarded that can only be explained to petty politics.

2022-12-07T01:45:26+00:00

Grand Panjandrum

Guest


Yeah, McGowan takes 20% of the blame in my book for his uncompromising position on this in the face of clearly changed global trends at the time. It was unreasonable to expect people to still quarantine when the rest of the world (minus Greater China, NZ and WA) had put that behind them. But the vengeance by CA is wholly disproportionate to the initial treatment.

2022-12-07T01:40:55+00:00

Grand Panjandrum

Guest


Exactly. It got to 5 days only because Australia chose to take 5 days to win. The game as a contest was over by stumps on day 1...and that's why a LOT of people were bored, and a lot more decided not to bother turning up. Why turn up on day 3 or 4 when you know the result already?

2022-12-06T23:24:11+00:00

DTM

Roar Rookie


I went on day one and was grateful of the low attendance - it allowed me to move around to avoid the sun (sitting in 36 degrees for 5 or so hours is not my idea of fun). I think there is general animosity felt from some WA cricket fans toward some of the Australian team and this may have been a factor for those who did not attend. Clearly, CA still has an issue with WA and our government and seeks to further penalise the WA cricket community for the sins of our leader. After not having a test for a few years, it would have made sense to me to host South Africa in Perth. There is a big population of ex Saffas in WA and that would have generated more interest. Most WA cricket fans also believe we are under represented in the test team despite.

2022-12-06T23:15:23+00:00

DTM

Roar Rookie


The Windies performed better than I expected but they really only got to day 5 because 1 Aus won the toss and batted for so long 2 they didn't enforce the follow on and 3 the pitch was prepared to suit batting so that the game wasn't over in 2 days! Had Windies won the toss and batted, I doubt we would have got much past lunch on day 4.

2022-12-06T12:45:57+00:00

Kalva

Roar Rookie


I have a question…why wasn’t the WACA redeveloped and maybe given sponsorship naming rights rather than building a brand new stadium which is rarely going to be full for Test matches? Was it done mainly for football?

2022-12-06T12:43:01+00:00

Kalva

Roar Rookie


I think you’re overselling the tradition a bit too much. I recall Perth hosting the first Test of the summer a number of times…in fact, it happened every year from 1981-82 to 1984-85 and usually the match was played in the 2nd week of November. I know as that weekend would be the weekend before my school exams which were often ruined! Adelaide was livid when they lost the Australia Day weekend Test( in those days, it was only a public holiday on the Monday afterwards not Jan 26th itself) but they were mollified with a 3 day ODI weekend!

2022-12-06T08:15:56+00:00

Mark Baptist

Guest


Ouch - that is a pretty horrible way to treat West Australia after all that. When you put it that way, CA basically phoned this one in.

2022-12-06T06:56:29+00:00

Jonathan Carroll

Guest


As a Brisvegan who got used to hosting the first test I know that: 1)There has too be a first test match of the summer and it probably has to be before the school holidays. 2) Outside of an odd ashes series it will never sell well 3) It basically exists to warm everyone up to the peak of the summer which will always be the Boxing day and New Years tests. Where Cricket needs to look at itself though is the limited over matches which no longer ride the quest of the wave but instead kicks around in the shallows two months before anyone wants to watch any cricket.

2022-12-06T05:09:47+00:00

Grand Panjandrum

Guest


Agreed. But cumulative crowds of 42k over 5 days also means that associations will never afford to build their own.

2022-12-06T05:08:39+00:00

Grand Panjandrum

Guest


42.5k over five days at Perth Stadium mean CA is, by any measure, in panic mode: They aren't. This was a chuck away test by CA and they didn't care. Perth got this test because CA are still angry at McGowan for the last two seasons. The OBVIOUS test that Perth should have been given was South Africa. Every one knows it. It would have drawn more viewers, more bums on seat and be a better quality match on that pitch. But CA need to punish WA for a year.

2022-12-06T05:04:01+00:00

Grand Panjandrum

Guest


Kids can't go to the cricket with their mum?

2022-12-06T01:39:44+00:00

Curmudgeon1961

Roar Rookie


Hah there we go again with the use of elite word. So Langer is involved? Its a pretty ugly stadium isnt it. Set in the middle of a massive bare space no trees the outside looks like a rotting wine barrel and the inside looks like an excel spreadsheet. Subiaco and Fremantle would be better to watch a Test

2022-12-05T22:47:16+00:00

liquorbox_

Roar Rookie


true, but I think that winning cricket games should involve being able to get the opposition out, not just reduce their score. This is why Test matches will always be the best form of cricket, you have to be a better team than your opponent from 1-11 (declarations pending). You can win a T20 or ODI game without taking a single wicket!

2022-12-05T20:24:40+00:00

Ad-O

Guest


This is another reason I dont think the Govt should be in the business of funding stadiums.

2022-12-05T20:22:37+00:00

Ad-O

Guest


Where do people get the idea that Australia is a sports mad country? Outside the AFL attendence for sports are paltrey. I've been in sold out stadiums when its minus 20 and there's a foot of snow about so any excuse we have is pretty weak in comparison. Maybe the product just isnt that compelling.

2022-12-05T12:16:26+00:00

Ren

Guest


You missed... it should have been a day night game. Stinking hot... no reason to not have it in the cooker evening

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