Australian cricket’s pitch power rankings: From the best to the SCG - how each surface stacks up in national turf war

By Paul Suttor / Expert

As we reach the end of another Australian summer and with the scourge of pigskin on pristine cricket fields not too far around the corner, it’s time to look back on how the wickets have fared over the course of the season. 

Of the seven major venues for Test cricket and the BBL, one thing is for certain, the grand old Sydney Cricket Ground is by far the worst pitch in the country at the moment. 

For international matches, BBL clashes and even Sheffield Shield matches, it has been unpredictable and not up to standard way too many times. 

There’s been plenty of talk (mostly from interstate politicians) in recent years from other states about taking the New Year’s Test away to another venue because of Sydney’s rain at that time of summer. 

But if Cricket Australia was allocating the venues based on the quality of the pitches, Sydney would struggle to get hosting rights in a six-Test summer. 

From top to bottom, here’s how the pitches have stacked up in 2023-24.

1. Melbourne Cricket Ground: From being a low, slow wasteland a few years ago, the centre-wicket has been transformed into a surface with the quality that the best pitches have – something for everyone. 

Batters can play off the front and back foot knowing the bounce will be true but the bowlers know they can extract movement if they bend their back. There’s even a bit more spin than was previously the case. 

The Test wicket for the Boxing Day showdown with Pakistan was slightly in the favour of the bowlers with each of the four innings totals ranging from 237-318 but it produced a thrilling encounter which could have gone either way depending on the Mohammad Rizwan third umpire controversy.

In the BBL it produced plenty of high scores but unfortunately for the home fans, usually by visiting teams.

Victoria and Queensland face off at the Melbourne Cricket Ground in November. (Photo by Morgan Hancock/Getty Images)

2 Adelaide Oval: Has been the best wicket in Australia for a fair few years but drops from top spot after a dud Test strip was rolled out for last month’s Windies series opener. 

The switch back to a day Test for the first time in six years caused more problems than it should have and the groundstaff conceded they used the wrong grass. 

Make the Adelaide Test a pink-ball affair under lights every year – they have struck the right balance with their preparations and length of grass for those conditions.

Mind you, even though it was a bowler-friendly wicket, it was not entirely the groundstaff’s fault that the match only lasted seven sessions with some poor shots, mainly but not exclusively from the West Indies.

3 Manuka Oval: There was nothing wrong with the surface earlier this week when the Windies were rolled for 86 in their ODI thrashing at the hands of Australia. Jake Fraser-McGurk and Josh Inglis proved that when they went out to bat and flayed the opening bowlers all over the wide expanses of the ground. 

It’s a shame that Canberra doesn’t get to see more top-level cricket apart from the one ODI and a couple of BBL matches that came to the national capital this summer because it’s a beautiful venue for cricket and the pitch is consistently a belter.

Jake Fraser-McGurk bats at Manuka Oval. (Photo by Matt King/Getty Images)

4 The Gabba: On the comeback trail after the previous summer’s disastrous deck for the two-day Test against South Africa. 

The pitch for the recent clash against the West Indies was criticised by Mitchell Starc as being too friendly for batting but the curator had to swing the pendulum back that way given that it was a day-night Test against a team that had capitulated inside seven sessions the previous week. 

And in the end, the West Indies made the most of batting first and third on the less potent than usual Gabba surface to not only be competitive but cause one of the biggest upset results in recent international cricketing history.

5 Blundstone Arena: It’s pretty much always somewhere in the middle when it comes to Australia’s pitches.

Hobart used to vary from being a road to a seam bowler’s dream but in recent years it has been fine without having a particularly unique characteristic. 

There has only been a couple of Shield games at the venue this summer with CA trying to avoid the spring weather in Tassie but the fact that the Tigers were able to chase down a target of 432 in the fourth innings against Queensland suggests that the surface is a decent quality.

Batting was a breeze at Blundstone in the BBL with pretty much every innings topping 150.

6 Optus Stadium: It’s still living in the shadows of the WACA Ground. It’s a shiny, new state-of-the-art stadium but the pitch is not quite as bouncy as its traditional predecessor on the other side of the Swan River. 

The pitch that was rolled out for this summer’s Test against Pakistan was better than the damp squib that faced Australia and the West Indies 12 months earlier.

But some of the bounce that the fast bowlers extracted from the surface was dangerously uneven and several batters wore bruises from deliveries which rose up sharply.

Australia take on Pakistan at the Sydney Cricket Ground. (Photo by Mike Owen – CA/Cricket Australia via Getty Images)

7 SCG: They’re trying new methods but it’s still not working. In a bid to go back to the old days of a spinning Sydney track, the groundstaff have been experimenting to spice up the surface.

But the combination of the famous Bulli soil and a new grass called Tahoma 31 has not solved the SCG’s ongoing problems with producing a top-quality track. 

The surface for the Test a month ago was OK but there have been constant problems in the Shield and BBL for batters as they have been confronted with inconsistent bounce from the motley pitches. 

There was a Shield match in November against Tasmania just before the BBL break where each team made around 200 in the first innings then less than 200 combined in their second digs.

Last Sunday’s track for the ODI against the Windies was terrible with several deliveries nipping back sharply off the seam or keeping low. 

The SCG has resisted the temptation to follow the lead of other AFL venues by using drop-in wickets for many years but perhaps the time has come to consider whether that could be the solution. 

It is not just a recent problem – Sydney’s wicket has been below par for several years and despite the venue itself never looking better, the centre wicket is unfortunately the worst in the country and it’s not even close.

The Crowd Says:

2024-02-11T13:31:00+00:00

DTM

Roar Rookie


Possibly.

2024-02-11T07:47:10+00:00

Leebola

Roar Rookie


Perhaps if there was a prospect of Test cricket, the Manuka pitch might be prepared differently?

2024-02-09T10:06:08+00:00

Tufanooo

Roar Rookie


So be it then. It worked for other stadiums across the world and life moved on.

2024-02-09T09:44:19+00:00

Sgt Pepperoni

Roar Rookie


Demolish the lot then tufanooo. Brilliant solution

2024-02-09T02:49:18+00:00

Tufanooo

Roar Rookie


WACA? Look, not many. 5-6 times. First time I went was as a young kid in the mid 90's watching Sri Lanka play the Windies in a ODI, and then a couple of days here and there for tests in the 00's and a couple of BBL games about 10 years ago. The last test i saw was the shellacking South Africa gave them in 2012 when the Australian fast bowling unit had John Hastings in it. Don't get me wrong, I do think the less popular test teams (and in WA, that means ALL of them) should play out of a smaller stadium instead of Optus. But it doesn't change the fact that the WACA is not a great venue. Russell Jackson said it best about the WACA: "The Waca’s other eternal problem was that it sat in no man’s land; a little too shabby for major events, not antique or precious enough to be worthy of the teary-eyed lament drawn by Adelaide and Melbourne’s redevelopments. Neither boutique nor grand, its charms are a little like rotary phones or analog cameras – quirky but not functional." Pretty fair.

2024-02-09T02:34:47+00:00

Tufanooo

Roar Rookie


Disagree, sorry. You only need to look 150m across the oval to see a significantly superior stand. And if the brewongle/churchill stand and the o'reilly stands are so poor, you may as well just demolish the trumper and build one giant modern one that will last, instead of the eventual need to keep replacing a stand one by one.

2024-02-09T02:28:16+00:00

DTM

Roar Rookie


How many times have you been there Tuf?

2024-02-09T02:25:14+00:00

Sgt Pepperoni

Roar Rookie


The trumper stand is absolutely fine

2024-02-09T01:39:32+00:00

Tufanooo

Roar Rookie


Good pitch, crap stadium.

2024-02-09T01:38:57+00:00

Tufanooo

Roar Rookie


The Trumper stand for its age is pretty hopeless. Seats are fine. Facilities are bog ordinary. Plenty of other stands built in a comparable era are much much better. The new members stand was only 6 years younger and blows it away.

2024-02-08T21:17:19+00:00

Sgt Pepperoni

Roar Rookie


The trumper stand is pretty comfortable with excellent facilities, hardly pathetic. My only complaints relate to ticket prices and the quality/price of the food It's hard to fix the OReilly stand due to the direction of the sun that blasts it in the afternoons. The Churchill/Brewongle needs a facelift tho

2024-02-08T21:11:24+00:00

Sgt Pepperoni

Roar Rookie


Golden comment

2024-02-08T20:55:19+00:00

13th Man

Roar Rookie


Sadly they don't use the best pitch in the country for International Cricket anymore. The WACA has been the best wicket for a very long time - fast, bouncy, good for batsmen when they get in, and even took a little bit of turn at the end of a game. The issue with Optus is whilst they've tried to replicate the WACA they've sometimes gone too far where it's almost dangerous, or not far enough and it's too flat. Bring back tests against lesser drawing teams to the Iconic WACA ground!

2024-02-08T20:53:19+00:00

Gibbo

Roar Pro


Agreed. This year's Gabba pitch had enough in it for disciplined bowlers but also enough if people were willing to knuckle down and graft.

2024-02-08T15:52:00+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


Perhaps he was showering him with praise?

2024-02-08T12:56:41+00:00

AR

Roar Rookie


"And I know they’re pretty to look at, but the Members and Ladies Pavilions are woeful to watch sport from these days. I would knock the O’Reilly Stand down, move the Ladies and Members structures to replace it and build a big. modern stand running pretty much the whole way round the western side of the ground." It's been a few years since I've attended live sport at the SCG, but I must say, I wince at the suggestion of knocking down these historic features. As an MCC member, I obviously love the G. It's a marvel the way the stadium has been reconfigured over the years to resemble a modern behemoth, whilst retaining so much of its extraordinary history - all of the galleries of old photos, the old seating and decor, the trophy cabinets, the museums inside...I love it all. But I do look wistfully at the SCG and Adelaide Oval (the hill and scoreboard at least), which retain their physical visage and heritage in a way that very few stadiums do these days. I'll defer to you as a local, but I say...please don't touch 'em!

2024-02-08T09:21:59+00:00

Tufanooo

Roar Rookie


Yeah, that's beyond creepy. So many questions... Bizarre showers aside, perhaps it's been a while since Maxwell watched a game of cricket outside the plum spot of the Bradman stand commentary box and the members area of the SCG. I would guarantee his opinion would be different if he joined the peasants sitting in the open sun of the O'Reilly stand with nothing but a $11 mid strength beer to keep him company.

2024-02-08T09:10:47+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Oh no, the pitch at Optus has many qualities of the WACA of old.

2024-02-08T09:09:12+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Jim Maxwell said the SCG is the best because it's the only cricket ground in Oz that has showers where Bradman washed himself. That's a bit creepy but Jim thinks it's good.

2024-02-08T07:44:25+00:00

Tufanooo

Roar Rookie


The SCG is an absolute embarrassment Jammel. Truth be told, my old man is a long time member so I use his passes, but from time to time I go in the general areas. The whole stadium has issues. Even members. The new members stand is perfect for cricket, but comfortably the worst stand in the country for AFL. Your member dues should be giving you a side on view, not one behind the posts. The whole experience sucks. There's little on outside the stadium, the food options inside the non-members are atrocious, the beer is too expensive and the sightlines are horrible. The bottom tier of the SCG is pretty rubbish. So much of it is exposed to the elements. You can bake a cake on the O'Reilly seats in the afternoon. I'd rebuild, cap it at it's current capacity (lets be honest, that thing rarely fills so no need to make it bigger). Finance? A combination of Govt, AFL, CA contributions and revenue driven from boosting entertainment at the stadium next door. I'd consider selling off the "entertainment quarter" (pfft, what a misnomer for that space) and the old showground to developers to fund it as well. Who knows, perhaps even build some affordable housing options in the east on that land!

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