/>

South Africa skipper Elgar asked umpires if Gabba wicket was unsafe

South Africa captain Dean Elgar said he asked the umpires if the green Gabba wicket was unsafe for playing after his team crumbled and suffered a six-wicket loss to Australia within two days in the first Test on Sunday.

Published : Dec 18, 2022 16:34 IST

South Africa captain Dean Elgar at the Gabba.
South Africa captain Dean Elgar at the Gabba. | Photo Credit: AFP
infoIcon

South Africa captain Dean Elgar at the Gabba. | Photo Credit: AFP

South Africa captain Dean Elgar said he asked the umpires if the green Gabba wicket was unsafe for playing after his team crumbled and suffered a six-wicket loss to Australia within two days in the first Test on Sunday.

South Africa was bowled out for 152 in the first innings at the formerly-named Brisbane Cricket Ground. It was then routed for 99 shortly after tea on day two, leaving Australia needing just 34 runs for a 1-0 lead in the three-match series.

The state of the pitch, which played into the home bowlers’ hands, raised questions after 19 wickets fell on day two and 15 on day one.

“You’ve got to ask yourself if that’s a good advertisement for our format. 34 wickets in two days, pretty one-sided affair I would say,” the Proteas captain told reporters. “I don’t think it was a very good test wicket, no.”

The wicket, which was so green it was indiscernible from the outfield on day one, quickened on day two and became pock-marked with divots as the match wore on.

“I did ask the umpires when KG (Kagiso Rabada) got hit at down leg. I said how long does it go on for until it’s potentially unsafe?” added Elgar.

“I know the game was dead and buried. It was never to try and change or put a halt to the game, no doubt. But I don’t know, that’s obviously where the umpire’s discretion comes into play, not us as players.”

Australia was 24-4 when Rabada claimed four quick wickets but Marnus Labuschagne (five not out) and a scoreless Cameron Green survived as they saw out the win.

Elgar felt there could have been a different outcome had South Africa set Australia another 60 runs to chase.

“I’m still trying to wrap my brain around what’s happened the last two days,” he added.

The Gabba has long been a fortress for Australia, who have lost just once at the ground since 1988. South Africa have now failed to win a test at the Gabba in five attempts.

The teams will meet next at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on Boxing Day for the second Test.

Sign in to unlock all user benefits
  • Get notified on top games and events
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign up / manage to our newsletters with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early bird access to discounts & offers to our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide to our community guidelines for posting your comment