A tale of two pitches


A month or so ago, I discussed how in cricket, especially when played at the highest level in the five-day version known as Test matches between national teams, the nature of the central playing surface (known as the ‘pitch’) is very important. The goal of the groundskeepers should be to produce a pitch that provides a good balance between bat and ball, providing batters with the opportunity to score runs while giving the bowlers enough help that they feel that getting the batter out is something that can happen at any moment.

A good pitch is one that starts with some ‘life’ in it, in that it is of assistance to fast bowlers by providing them with good bounce and speed off the ground, but then starts to play easier so that batters can score runs. Then due to wear and tear and the pitch drying out, over the last two days you would expect the advantage to shift more to the bowlers, especially the slow spin bowlers, who find that they can turn the ball more and thus make it hard to hit.

This affects strategy especially as to who bats first. This is decided by a coin toss and the winning captain gets to choose whether his team bats first or to ask his opponents to bat first. This decision is determined by their judgment of the state of the pitch. Since each team gets two innings, the winning captain has to decide whether it is better to bat first (and hence have their opponents bat last in their second innings on a difficult pitch) or field first and risk having to bat last. The first option is usually preferred, unless they think that the pitch shows a lot of initial life with unpredictable bounce that their fast bowlers can exploit, hoping that they can cause enough damage to the opponents early that they can get them out for a fairly low score before the pitch becomes easier to bat on. If so, they will ask the opponents to bat first, though that decision can backfire if the pitch is easier to bat on than initially appeared.

But sometimes the pitches are not balanced, strongly favoring either bowlers or batters form the get-go. This was what happened in the two Test matches played recently between Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, two teams that are pretty equally matched. The second Test was played just three days after the first ended with almost the same teams on both sides. But what happened in the two matches was wildly different and this can be put down to the most significant difference and that is different pitches that had been prepared for the two matches in the two stadiums in different cities in Bnagladesh.

The first Test in Chittagong was played pretty much on a dead pitch that offered no help to the bowlers at all at any time. Bangladesh won the toss and chose to bat and got off to an excellent start, scoring 513 runs. Such a high score when batting first almost guarantees that your side will not lose. But then in response Sri Lanka scored a mammoth 713 runs. By this time, almost four full days had elapsed and now Bangladesh faced the prospect of batting the second innings on the traditionally difficult last day. But the pitch proved to be so dead that they batted out the whole day scoring 307 runs without difficulty, and the game petered out in a no-decision that is called a ‘draw’ in cricket. So over the five days, we saw 1533 runs scored with the loss of only 24 wickets, a rate of 64 runs per wicket and only 0.8 wickets falling per hour of playing time. The entire match consisted of largely batting practice with the bowlers toiling away with little reward.

The two teams then went to Dhaka and encountered diametrically opposite conditions, one where the bowlers were highly favored right from the start and where the batters were always in difficulty. As a result, the match was a low-scoring one that ended in just two and a half days, half the time allotted. In that short time, all 40 wickets fell and only 681 runs were scored in total, for an average of only 17 runs per wicket (about a quarter that of the previous match) and 2.6 wickets falling per hour of playing time, more than three times that of the previous Test. Both teams’ batters struggled but the Sri Lankan batters fared slightly better and so their team won.

The example of these two matches shows how important it is to prepare pitches that are well-balanced so that both elements of the game are on display at their best.

Comments

  1. jrkrideau says

    Cricket is enjoyable to watch and reaffirms my belief that there is alien life in other parts of the galaxy.

    I do remember one spectacular catch I saw many years ago. India was playing Pakistan in Toronto. The fielder dove for the ball and his body was almost parallel to the ground and perhaps a metre above it.

    He caught the ball and dropped it. Somehow, he spun in the air, and caught it again for an out. He may have been Catwoman’s son.

  2. rjw1 says

    I’ve heard rumours that the pitch is sometimes prepared by a host Test nation to favour their bowlers.

    Just rumours, I’m sure.

  3. Mano Singham says

    rjw1,

    Preparing pitches that favor the strengths of the home side and the weaknesses the visitors is a time-honored tradition in cricket and quite legal, as I discussed in the previous post that dealt with this topic. But this has to be within reasonable bounds. If it is too extreme, the host country can face censure from the international governing body and may lose the right to host future events at that particular stadium.

    A pitch that results in a Test match ending in less than three days is simply a bad pitch. In the case of the second Test, what was puzzling was that the pitch that had been prepared was not only bad, it was bad in a way that favored the strengths of the visitors. One has to put that down to incompetence.

  4. boof says

    Ian Chappell’s advice was always “If you win the toss, then 9 times out of ten you elect to bat first. The other time you think about it for a second and then elect to bat first.”

  5. Mano Singham says

    Sometimes the state of the pitch is so hard to judge and hence the decision of whether to bat first or not is so difficult to make that people say that it would be a good toss to lose, so that the other captain will take the heat for a decision that goes wrong.

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