Bangladesh vows to improve cricket pitches after ICC rebuke

The International Cricket Council (ICC) penalized the Sher-e-Bangla National Stadium in Dhaka for its subpar pitch a week after rebuking Bangladesh’s other top venue in Chittagong. (AP)
Updated 15 February 2018
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Bangladesh vows to improve cricket pitches after ICC rebuke

DHAKA: It has not been a great week for Bangladesh cricket.
After being thrashed in Thursday’s T20 match by Sri Lanka, news came through that the nation’s cricket board were slapped with a penalty after its two best venues were rated “below average” by the sport’s governing body following the Sri Lanka Test series.
The Bangladesh cricket board has promised to improve pitches for international Test matches in the future.
The International Cricket Council (ICC) penalized the Sher-e-Bangla National Stadium in Dhaka for its subpar pitch a week after rebuking Bangladesh’s other top venue in Chittagong for its shoddy ground.
The latest Test against Sri Lanka ended inside three days, with the visitors thrashing Bangladesh by 215 runs in a match that saw both sides all-out twice in less than eight sessions.
The Chittagong Test, however, saw batsmen plunder more than 1,500 runs, with Sri Lanka declaring at a colossal 713 for nine in their first and only innings.
ICC match referee David Boon — who issued a demerit point to both venues for below-average pitches — said the Dhaka ground was poor from day one.
“There was evidence of the ball breaking the pitch surface, which resulted in uneven bounce throughout the match, along with inconsistent turn, which was even excessive at times,” he said in a statement.
“This pitch produced a contest that was too heavily skewed in favor of the bowlers, and didn’t give the batsmen a fair chance to display their skills.”
The opposite problem prevailed in Chittagong last week, when Boon said the pitch provided no seam movement and favored batsmen, who smashed five centuries and six half-centuries over five days.
The Bangladesh Cricket Board said it would consider appealing the demerit points but promised to take more precautions in future.
“Since we received this rating, we will be more careful about preparing the venues,” said the board’s chief executive officer Nizamuddin Chowdhury.
Any ground that receives five demerits from the ICC over five years is suspended from hosting international cricket for a year.
In September, the ICC rated the outfield of the Dhaka ground “poor” after the hosts defeated Australia by 20 runs in a Test.
But a demerit point was not issued as ICC guidelines for pitch and outfield monitoring were revised in January, a spokesman for the council said.