Death, taxes and foul weather spoiling SCG Test: Umpires blasted over bad light call as Warner fails to fire for farewell

By Paul Suttor / Expert

The umpires came under fire for ending play early on day two due to bad light but rain ultimately had the final say as David Warner nicked off in what may be his last Test innings. 

It was an all too familiar tale at the SCG as inclement weather struck yet again, continuing a trend which has become a glaring issue in recent years and prompting calls from other states to claim the new year’s slot on the calendar. 

The chances of Cricket Australia moving the match away from the nation’s most populous city are next to zero but that won’t stop other vote-hungry state premiers from sticking their heads up to get some east publicity. 

Australia’s chances of completing a series clean sweep and sending Warner into Test retirement on a winning note hinge on Sydney’s skies clearing up over the next three days although the forecast is for no more rain.

Wet weather denied Australia victory two years ago in what turned out to be the only drawn match of the Ashes series and the 2023 Test against South Africa was ruined due to rain.

Due to rain and the placid wicket, Sydney has become the toughest ground in the country for Australia to get a win – six of the past nine Tests have ended in a draw.

The Aussies will resume on day three at 2-116 with Marnus Labuschagne and Steve Smith needing to restart their budding innings as they look to overhaul Pakistan’s 313. 

Only 46 overs were possible but more could have been played if not for the umpires, Michael Gough and Richard Illingworth, calling a halt to proceedings due to concerns about the light midway through the second session. 

With more than 25,000 fans growing impatient, 40 minutes ticked by and the tea break was taken early before rain started coming down. 

“It is so frustrating,” Justin Langer said on Seven commentary. “I have walked in all the shoes as a player and batsman. You want to be off and want perfect conditions, and then as coach you want what’s best for your team.

“But when you look at the big picture, it is crazy these guys aren’t playing Test cricket here. 

“You have a big crowd here, they have come here for David Warner’s last game. 

“It is the pink Test. It is a competitive and combative Test match, and yet we’re walking off the ground. 

“It’s not great for the game of cricket this is happening right now.”

Former England captain Michael Vaughan was also bemused by his countrymen in white coats deeming the light to be too bad for the batters.

“I can’t stand this happening,” Vaughan said. “Is it that dangerous?”

“We just seem to find a way of getting off the pitch, at any opportunity. T20 Cricket, 50-over cricket, you just stay out there!

“It’s an entertainment business, there’s no threat to the batters.”

Australian opener Usman Khawaja joked he would retire if cricket’s lawmakers switched permanently to a pink ball in a bid to solve the light problem.

“That’s just cricket, it’s been going on for 100 years,” he said. “The laws haven’t changed. Light is light. It’s a red ball. It’s still very hard to see the red balls.

“Unless you can replicate the sun, I’m not really sure what (can be done).

“It sucks, but this is Test cricket unfortunately. And when it rains or when you have bad light, you just have to cop it.”

After his nervous six not out overnight, Warner and Khawaja settled into accumulation rather than attack in the morning session. 

Warner was lucky to survive on 20 when Pakistan’s ongoing first slip nightmare continued when debutant Saim Ayub grassed a straightforward offering. 

He was filling in after Babar Adam switched to second when Salman Ali Agha needed a brief spell in the dressing room and even with the butterfingered Abdullah Shafique this time a long way from the cordon, the catching catastrophes continued. 

“I was off the field for a pee break,” Salman said. “Just for two overs. Probably seven or eight balls, actually. I was off for Sajid (Khan)’s over and when I came back one ball of the Jamal over had been bowled. 

“I was sitting next to the subs bench and I saw the video and I knew I was in trouble! I think there’s a curse on first slip.”

Luckily for Pakistan, Salman returned to the fray and managed to grip and rip an off break which steepled into the shoulder of Warner’s bat and Babar held on at slip although he too nearly let the chance slip through his fingers. 

Warner looked furious with himself after getting out to the spinner for 34 in his 112th and final Test and if rain or Australia racking up a huge total means he doesn’t bat again, he will finish his career with 8729 runs at 44.53.

His home crowd gave him a standing ovation as he trudged up the steps to the famous old pavilion

Khawaja was typically measured as he guided Australia to lunch without further loss but he struggled to convert his 143-ball stay at the crease into a big score. 

Just three shy of his half-century he was late on a hook shot off Aamer Jamal and after using a review, the tourists leapt for joy when HotSpot revealed the ball kissed Khawaja’s glove as it travelled to Mohammad Rizwan. 

David Warner walks off the field after being dismissed at the SCG. (Photo by Darrian Traynor/Getty Images)

The non-retiring 37-year-old left-hander has now been out in the 40s in each first innings in this series with a 90 in Perth and a duck in Melbourne from second digs.

Labuschagne also took a slow and steady approach with just one boundary in his 66-ball 23 before the early end of play while Smith will resume on six on Friday.

Australia could have pushed the pace much more on day two but cruised at 2.46 an over. 

If the rain stays away, they should still have plenty of time to build a sizeable first-innings lead to set up victory but even though play will start half an hour early on Friday and the umpires will try to regain lost ground each day, there is plenty of work to do for Australia. 

with AAP

The Crowd Says:

2024-01-06T06:58:11+00:00

Ruckin' Oaf

Roar Rookie


Unless you can replicate the sun, So in the 21st century we can't have lights on the same frequency as the sun ??

2024-01-05T08:55:44+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


As a high run scorer?

2024-01-05T07:57:01+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


You may have already mentioned him Don :stoked:

2024-01-05T03:19:35+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Did you see Cam Bancroft there? :happy:

2024-01-05T02:10:11+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


Which is why I didn’t pick it up, I just scanned the top run scorers list.

2024-01-05T01:06:05+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Yep. One innings.

2024-01-05T01:04:03+00:00

Barb Dwyer

Roar Rookie


Is that in Sheffield Shield this season, Don?

2024-01-05T01:03:55+00:00

Doctor Rotcod

Roar Rookie


It's hardly a series,is it? More a Test and a sequel.

2024-01-05T00:21:37+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Cam Green is averaging 96. People forget about him. One of the silly reasons for stopping Shield cricket when tests are on. Our starting point should be to play cricket in the cricket season. BBL can still be played in the fortnights between games.

2024-01-04T22:50:45+00:00

Gamechanger

Roar Rookie


I don’t like two test series.

2024-01-04T22:41:10+00:00

Gamechanger

Roar Rookie


Agreed it doesn’t solve the generational problem but it could get Green to four. The Smith move would then be short term. What if it were to revive Smiths career and hundreds start flowing again.?

2024-01-04T22:40:47+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


Starc and Richardson have the same first class average. Starc has declined though. I thought Cummins would come on more than he did, but I’m happy to let him practice his bowling :stoked:

2024-01-04T22:37:39+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


Oliver Davies is averaging 80 this year. Jake Doran is having a good season.

2024-01-04T22:03:56+00:00

Hunters

Roar Rookie


Khawaja may not be as good as he has been at times in the past but have you seen where he was in the list of batters for runs scored over the previous 12 months? The team is VERY happy to have him there at the start of the innings.

2024-01-04T21:29:17+00:00

Christo the Daddyo

Roar Rookie


Bizarre suggestion - on a couple of levels. Firstly, Smith has never opened and (to my knowledge) has never expressed an interest in opening. Secondly, it doesn’t solve the generational problem this team has.

AUTHOR

2024-01-04T21:21:00+00:00

Paul Suttor

Expert


Double-headers seem to work well - 6pm start in the east, 9pm in Perth but not sure if Seven would like too many of them in a condensed schedule

AUTHOR

2024-01-04T21:19:52+00:00

Paul Suttor

Expert


no, he was hosting a speaking engagement at the SCG and offered up that theory to Shane Watson who was also one of the speakers and he agreed

2024-01-04T13:59:05+00:00

Jeff

Roar Rookie


Continuously persisting with a Test in Sydney at this time of year simply smacks of "entitlement". But of course, let's now roll out the other justifications why the Sydney Test should be locked in to this 1st week in January - over and over and over again. Cue...various reasons. Those other than actually getting an uninterrupted match away. But hey...it's the SCG!

2024-01-04T13:09:57+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Green, Hardie, McSweeney, Webster, Bancroft.

2024-01-04T12:02:50+00:00

ColinT

Roar Rookie


Yes fair point, but WA have been screaming out for a test in school holidays.

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