Australia set for marathon home summer

Published May 8, 2019
CA has pushed the three-match New Zealand series back to the middle of March, with the final ODI in Hobart on March 20.
CA has pushed the three-match New Zealand series back to the middle of March, with the final ODI in Hobart on March 20.

MELBOURNE: Aust­ralia’s international schedule will stretch into late-March for the first time in 41 years in 2020 after the country’s cricket board was unable to cut a deal with India to move a one-day tour.

Cricket Australia had hoped to host New Zealand in an ODI series in January but Aaron Finch’s team will instead travel to the subcontinent after India’s board declined to shift their home series.

The team has pushed the three-match New Zealand series back to the middle of March, with the final ODI in Hobart on March 20 making it the latest finish to a home international schedule since Australia hosted Pakistan for a Test in Perth in March 1979.

“CA took the position that while January was our preference for these ODI matches there are times we need to honour our commitments to work in the greater context of international cricket scheduling,” CA’s Peter Roach said. “We evaluated different options for an alternative and saw the most value in the March opportunity to extend our window in the traditional cricket season.”

The Gabba returns as venue of the opening Test of the summer in a two-match series against Pakistan from Nov 21.

Last summer, the Brisbane ground was snubbed as one of the venues for the marquee Test series against India and relegated to a January Test match venue for the short Sri Lanka tour.

Adelaide Oval will host the second and final Test against Pakistan, a day-night match, from Nov 29.

Australia also host New Zealand in a day-night Test at Perth Stadium from Dec 12, before the three-match series moves to the Melbourne Cricket Ground for the traditional Boxing Day Test and to Sydney in the New Year.

In a tweak to the usual day-night scheduling, the Perth Test will start at 1:00pm local time and finish at 8L00pm to cater to Australia’s dominant TV audience in the east of the country.

It will also have the longer 40-minute lunch break at the first interval, while the Adelaide pink ball Test will continue to have the 20-minute tea break between the first and second sessions with the longer ‘dinner’ break in the evening.

The international summer opens in late-October with back-to-back three-match Twenty20 series against Sri Lanka and Pakistan.

Women’s international cricket will also play a prominent role in the schedule as Australia play a T20 tri-series against England and India from late-January in the lead-up to hosting the women’s T20 World Cup from Feb 21.

Schedule:

Oct 27: Australia vs Sri Lanka, 1st T20 (Adelaide).

Oct 30: Australia vs Sri Lanka, 2nd T20 (Brisbane).

Nov 1: Australia vs Sri Lanka, 3rd T20 (Melbourne).

Nov 3: Australia vs Pakistan, 1st T20 (Sydney).

Nov 5: Australia vs Pakistan, 2nd T20 (Canberra).

Nov 8: Australia vs Pakistan, 3rd T20 (Perth).

Nov 21-25: Australia vs Pakistan, 1st Test (Brisbane).

Nov 29-Dec 3: Australia vs Pakistan, 2nd Test (Adelaide, D/N).

Dec 12-16: Australia vs New Zealand, 1st Test (Perth, D/N).

Dec 26-30: Australia vs New Zealand, 2nd Test (Melbourne).

Jan 3-7: Australia vs New Zealand, 3rd Test (Sydney).

March 13: Australia vs New Zealand, 1st ODI (Sydney, D/N).

March 15: Australia vs New Zealand, 2nd ODI (Sydney).

March 20: Australia vs New Zealand, 3rd ODI (Hobart, D/N).

Published in Dawn, May 8th, 2019

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