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Will Gabba go the Perth way?

The Gabba, Brisbane's iconic cricket venue, may miss out on hosting annual Tests for the first time in 50 years due to a short-term agreement with Cricket Australia and upcoming renovations for the 2032 Olympics.

Updated on: Aug 19, 2024 09:58 pm IST
By Somshuvra Laha
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Kolkata: Australians have loved giving a hostile reception to visiting cricket teams at the Gabba. And for good reason too. With 42 wins and 10 defeats in 66 Tests, nowhere else at home do they have a better win-loss ratio. It has been a fortress, till it wasn’t. India still savour that heist of a win in 2021. Twenty summers ago, India drew first blood here with a draw after a fighting first-innings hundred from Sourav Ganguly.

The Gabba in Brisbane is one of Australia’s iconic venues. (Getty Images)

The iconic Brisbane venue lacks the sustained din of Melbourne (MCG) or Sydney (SCG) but Gabba is where dreams usually died for touring teams. That might change as the Gabba is set to miss out on an annual Test, for the first time in 50 years, after Cricket Australia signed only a two-year hosting agreement with the Queensland government.

At a time when most Australian cricket venues have secured seven-year contracts, this short deal doesn’t bode well for the Gabba, which is anyway expected to be renovated after 2030. The future of Gabba thus hangs by a thread after its 2025-26 Ashes Test. “In Brisbane it is harder (to plan) because of the infrastructure. There is just uncertainty, so we’re not sure of the long-term solution,” CA chairman Mike Baird is quoted as saying. “What we do know is the Gabba has a use for life that ends in 2030. We need a solution, and are working with the AFL as well on a long-term solution.”

Perth is an example of how a fifty-year love story with fast bowling was unceremoniously swept under the monotony of a concrete behemoth with entrances resembling those for five-star lounges, unnamed stands, tunnels instead of stairs for teams to walk out, and barely any breeze let in. The Optus Stadium is a futuristic multipurpose venue, a cultural epicentre in one of the most isolated cities in Australia, but starkly similar to the swanky arenas mushrooming worldwide. The switch from WACA to Optus undeniably led to the demise of a visual distinction attached globally to playing Test cricket at this Western Australia outpost. Gabba could go the same way.

And that is not great for the game, at least for Test cricket that tends to forge a bond with its surroundings. SCG has preserved its heritage members’ pavilion and the giant scoreboard while the Adelaide Oval has retained the red brick arches.

Apart from that, Australia seems to be slowly running out of venue-specific visual associations. Perth and MCG now bear a striking degree of sameness. The white boundary fence, once a trademark feature at Adelaide and MCG, had to give in to time. Constantly renovated since 1993, Gabba too was unrecognisable from the ground that had hosted cricket’s first tied Test in 1960. In the newer stands though stood out the haphazard pattern of seat colours that was apparently decided by a computer algorithm to give the impression of a crowd even when it was only half full.

That too could change in the future, but only time will tell if it was worth it.

 
Get the Cricket Live Score! including IPL Matches and track ICC rankings shifts, Cricket Schedule, and Players Stats along with detailed score profiles of Virat Kohli , Rohit Sharma, Shubman Gill and RCB vs LSG.
Get the Cricket Live Score! including IPL Matches and track ICC rankings shifts, Cricket Schedule, and Players Stats along with detailed score profiles of Virat Kohli , Rohit Sharma, Shubman Gill and RCB vs LSG.
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