India stays in Adelaide, fuels speculation on first Test venue

The Indian squad’s decision not to travel to Brisbane led to speculation that the scheduled second test in Adelaide, from Dec. 12, might now open the series.

December 01, 2014 10:36 am | Updated November 16, 2021 04:53 pm IST - SYDNEY:

The first Test was due to begin at the Gabba on Thursday but Cricket Australia and the BCCI agreed on Sunday to postpone the start to allow Australian players to mourn the death of teammate Phil Hughes. File photo shows a row of bats with messages lined up as a tribute for Hughes at the Sydney Cricket Ground.

The first Test was due to begin at the Gabba on Thursday but Cricket Australia and the BCCI agreed on Sunday to postpone the start to allow Australian players to mourn the death of teammate Phil Hughes. File photo shows a row of bats with messages lined up as a tribute for Hughes at the Sydney Cricket Ground.

India’s decision to remain in Adelaide rather than move to Brisbane ahead of the delayed first cricket test against Australia fueled speculation Monday about a change of venues for the series—opening match.

The first test was due to begin at the Gabba on Thursday but Cricket Australia and the Board of Control for Cricket in India agreed on Sunday to postpone the start to allow Australian players to mourn the death of teammate Phil Hughes.

There was no indication from Cricket Australia on a new start date and the Indian squad’s decision not to travel to Brisbane led to speculation that the scheduled second test in Adelaide, from Dec. 12, might now open the series.

That was one of the scenarios available to officials who faced logistical dilemmas in rescheduling the Brisbane test and the series.

Cricket Australia now has to weigh a number of options in rescheduling the match, which will have to fit within a schedule unusually crowded because of the World Cup in Australia and New Zealand in February and March.

Those options include delaying the Brisbane test by a matter of days, cancelling the match and making the Adelaide test the first in a series reduced to three matches, or trying to fit the Brisbane test into the schedule. Whatever decision it reaches will have to be approved by the BCCI.

The next round of matches in the Sheffield Shield competition, due to begin on Friday in Sydney, Perth and Hobart, are also likely to be postponed as players grieve. Hughes played for New South Wales before moving to South Australia. Players from both of those teams are expected to attend his funeral in Macksville, on the mid-north coast of New South Wales state.

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