New Zealand: Trophy game test for pitch (25 Sep 1998)
A Canterbury Shell Trophy cricket match in February is likely to be the first-class trial game for the portable pitch at Jade Stadium (Lancaster Park)
25-Sep-1998
25 September 1998
Trophy game test for pitch
The Christchurch Press
A Canterbury Shell Trophy cricket match in February is likely to be
the first-class trial game for the portable pitch at Jade Stadium
(Lancaster Park).
However, some further modifications to the pitch will be undertaken
before then to ensure a favourable International Cricket Council
report. A rubber stamp from the ICC could then allow for
international matches to played on the pitch in coming seasons.
New Zealand Cricket's operations manager, John Reid, Canterbury
Cricket's executive director, Tony Murdoch, and Victory Park Board
general manager Campbell Prentice met yesterday at the ground to
discuss the next step for the experimental wicket.
It was first trialled at the end of last season when a Fuji-Xerox
inter-district match was successfully staged at Jade Stadium.
However, Reid wants to see a greater clay depth in the Waikari soil
used to guarantee the best possible playing surface.
"A depth of 100ml or about four inches is the absolute minimum
required. Last season that was the depth of the soil loose, but with
compaction it came down to three to three and a half inches across
the surface."
Reid said the cricket tray will have to be emptied and started again
as it would be unwise to attempt to put another covering of clay
across the top of the already rolled soil from last season. "That
could be asking for trouble with two surfaces and you could get
cracking and lifting."
Reid said that by the time the relaying and preparation work was
done, February looked an appropriate time frame to schedule a game,
with Canterbury's match against Central Districts from February 11-14
looming as a possibility.
Meanwhile, Reid has been impressed with the early tests done in
Auckland of covering a wicket block with artificial turf grass to
protect the cricket wicket.
The system was used in Canterbury's pre-NPC rugby trial match against
Auckland this season and also on Eden Park's outer oval.
It is intended to use the cover in Christchurch on February 26 when
the Crusaders are likely to start the Super 12 season with a home
match, just two weeks before the second cricket test between New
Zealand and South Africa at the ground.
"It seems fair that if cricket is to compromise the quality of its
surrounds with rugby then it is not too much to ask rugby for a
relatively small strip of the ground to be covered," Reid said.
Prentice expressed confidence in the ability of the ground to cope
with its cricket programme this year, including the possibility of a
12-day turnaround if Canterbury hosts the NPC rugby final before a
Cricket Max game is played there.
Source :: The Christchurch Press (https://www.press.co.nz/)