Some hours before the first ball at the Gabba, word came through from New Zealand that the entire four ticketed days of Australia’s Test match in Wellington in March had sold out.

As the clock ticked towards 2pm in Brisbane, a big crowd filed in from Vulture Street and Stanley Street to the final Test of the home summer – and the first day’s cricket since the Brisbane Heat had taken out the Big Bash League.

Australian quick Josh Hazlewood appeals on day one of the Gabba Test.Credit: Getty

Irrespective of debate around using January 26 as Australia’s national day, there was no question that the day/night timeslot in Brisbane was a popular one, regardless of the lowly current status of the West Indies.

Despite what you might read in comments sections here and there, Pat Cummins’ team is both successful in terms of results and popular in terms of public opinion, a notion backed up by the historical dimensions of a Gabba crowd that saw the tourists put up a genuine fight.

A roll-up of 23,602 was the best attendance ever for day one of a Test match against the West Indies at the Gabba. That’s more than came to see day one of the world championship showdown here in 1996, when Ian Healy spanked a century.

More, too, than the crowd that turned up to see Steve Waugh’s side batter Jimmy Adams’ Caribbean team to extend a winning streak that ultimately reached 16 in a row. And it was more than twice the number who were here in 1960 to see a young Garfield Sobers hammer a century on day one of what became the legendary Tied Test

A bigger crowd is forecast for day two, meaning the attendance for two days may well push towards 50,000 – comparable to Adelaide Oval last week and in line with healthy throngs for the Melbourne and Sydney Tests - before the remainder of the game is threatened by a cyclone.

Forgetting for a moment the provincial vagaries of staging international cricket in Perth, this summer has overall provided a strong reminder of Test cricket’s vitality in Australia, despite what was thought to be slim drawing power for Pakistan and West Indies.

QOSHE - Big crowds mask the inequality threatening Test cricket, but there is hope - Daniel Brettig
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Big crowds mask the inequality threatening Test cricket, but there is hope

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25.01.2024

Some hours before the first ball at the Gabba, word came through from New Zealand that the entire four ticketed days of Australia’s Test match in Wellington in March had sold out.

As the clock ticked towards 2pm in Brisbane, a big crowd filed in from Vulture Street and Stanley Street to the final Test of the home summer – and the first day’s cricket since the Brisbane Heat had taken out the Big Bash League.

Australian quick Josh Hazlewood appeals on day one of the Gabba Test.Credit: Getty

Irrespective of........

© The Sydney Morning Herald


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