UK TimesUK Times
  • Home
  • News
  • TV & Showbiz
  • Money
  • Health
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Trending
    • Press Release
What's Hot

A47 eastbound exit for A146 | Eastbound | Road Works

25 March 2026
Major boost for young people in Wales with 12 new Youth Hubs and devolved employment support funding announced

Major boost for young people in Wales with 12 new Youth Hubs and devolved employment support funding announced

25 March 2026

Two men arrested over Jewish charity ambulance arson attacks | UK News

25 March 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
UK TimesUK Times
Subscribe
  • Home
  • News
  • TV & Showbiz
  • Money
  • Health
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Trending
    • Press Release
UK TimesUK Times
Home » The mind-boggling costs Cricket Australia ‘could incur’ after England seal two-day Boxing Day Test victory
TV & Showbiz

The mind-boggling costs Cricket Australia ‘could incur’ after England seal two-day Boxing Day Test victory

By uk-times.com27 December 2025No Comments7 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram Pinterest Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email
The mind-boggling costs Cricket Australia ‘could incur’ after England seal two-day Boxing Day Test victory
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Cricket Australia are reportedly set to lose a jaw-dropping sum of money after England snapped their 14-year wait to win a Test match Down Under inside just two days at the MCG.

A total of 36 wickets fell in less than two days during the marquee Boxing Day Test match, with many criticising the spicy MCG green top pitch, which had been set up heavily in favour of the bowlers.

Many fans waking up in the UK on Boxing Day were left bewildered to see Travis Head and Scott Boland walking to the crease for Australia’s second innings during the evening session. However, the home side were bowled out for 132 on Saturday, with the first three innings of the Boxing Day Test astonishingly lasting less than 110 overs.

Pitch preparation has been a major talking point during the 2025 Ashes series, with Cricket Australia understood to have lost around $4million (£1.99m) in revenue, following the opening Test in Perth, where England were beaten inside two days.

However, with record crowds of 94,199 and 92,045 filing into the MCG on days one and two of the Boxing Day Test, 7News are predicting the curtailed match to cost Cricket Australia a whopping $25m (£12.44m) in lost broadcasting revenue and tickets for days three and four.

Cricket Australia are reportedly set to lose a jaw-dropping sum of money after England snapped their 14-year wait to win a Test match Down Under inside two days at the MCG (Pictured: Mitchell Starc)

Ben Stokes' side claimed a four-wicket victory on Saturday against Australia at the MCG inside just two days of cricket

Ben Stokes’ side claimed a four-wicket victory on Saturday against Australia at the MCG inside just two days of cricket

It comes after the MCG pitch has been heavily criticised, with Steve Smith (pictured) claiming it was: 'Tricky, no one could really get in'

It comes after the MCG pitch has been heavily criticised, with Steve Smith (pictured) claiming it was: ‘Tricky, no one could really get in’

You’d have to go back 104 years to find the last time when an Ashes Test match lasted just two days, with Australia beating England by 10 wickets at Trent Bridge during the 1921 series.  

With this now being the second time in the space of a month that we’ve seen a two-day Test match, Cricket Australia CEO, Todd Greenberg, has voiced his concerns. 

When asked if 20 wickets falling in one day was too many, Greenberg said to SEN: ‘The short answer for that, in my opinion, is yes.

‘A simple phrase I’d use is: “Short Tests are bad for business”.

‘I can’t be much more blunt than that.

‘So I would like to see a slightly broader balance between the bat and the ball. I thought yesterday slightly favoured the ball.

‘The batters have some ownership in some of that, it’s not all around the pitch, but we’ve got some challenges.’

Financially, it has already been a difficult few years for Cricket Australia, who posted losses of $30m in 2023-24, before going on to announce in October that they had accounted for losses of $11.3m during 2024-25.

Cricket Australia chief executive Todd Greenberg (right, with Merv Hughes) stated that 'short Tests are bad for business'

Cricket Australia chief executive Todd Greenberg (right, with Merv Hughes) stated that ‘short Tests are bad for business’ 

Now, 7News claim that Cricket Australia could be set to lose $25million as a result of the two-day Boxing Day Test

Now, 7News claim that Cricket Australia could be set to lose $25million as a result of the two-day Boxing Day Test 

A total of 36 wickets fell in less than two days during the marquee Boxing Day Test match, with many criticising the spicy MCG green top pitch, which had been set up heavily in favour of the bowlers

A total of 36 wickets fell in less than two days during the marquee Boxing Day Test match, with many criticising the spicy MCG green top pitch, which had been set up heavily in favour of the bowlers

‘I didn’t sleep well last night, put it that way,’ Greenberg said, on Friday, reflecting on the prospect of another two-day Test.

‘It was an amazing day of Test cricket, so for that record number of people who were here, boy, they’ve had an experience.

‘But our challenge is to make sure we can continue those experiences day after day. That’s the challenge for all of us.’

Greenberg added that cricket bosses would be taking much more notice over how pitches are prepared in future.

‘Historically, we have taken a hands-off approach in all of our wicket preparation and allowed the staff and the conditions and those characteristics to be presented,’ Greenberg added.

‘But it’s hard not to get more involved when you see the impact on the sport, particularly commercially.

‘I’m not suggesting we’re going to go around talking to ground staff. 

‘But we do have to have a careful eye on what our expectations are over the course of a summer.’

The last time an Ashes Test match lasted just two days came at Trent Bridge back in 1921, where England lost to Australia by 10 wickets

The last time an Ashes Test match lasted just two days came at Trent Bridge back in 1921, where England lost to Australia by 10 wickets

Cricket greats slam MCG wicket

Granted, neither team’s batters performed brilliantly during the Boxing Day Test, with Travis Head amassing the highest score of 46 runs. But questions are now being asked of the playing surface.

Approximately 10mm of grass was left on the wicket at the MCG, with Aussie great Jason Gillespie claiming that the surface ‘has done too much’.

‘Bowlers have bowled well, but the bowlers are allowed to bowl well. Batters are allowed to trust their technique, strategise and figure out a game plan, and we just haven’t seen that today.’

Steve Smith was equally critical, asking grounds staff to drop the grass down to 8mm.

‘I think [it favoured the bowlers] a little bit too much. It was tricky, no one could really get in,’ the stand-in Aussie skipper told TNT Sports.

‘When you see 36 wickets across two days, that’s probably too much.’

Stokes, meanwhile, added that he wouldn’t be giving the match referee good feedback on the condition of the pitch.

”I don’t think he would have thought that was acceptable”

Nasser Hussain on the surface that nullified the role of the spin, which he believes Shane Warne would never have accepted 🤔 pic.twitter.com/OiLZ5fqEgW

— Sky Sports Cricket (@SkyCricket) December 27, 2025

Stokes, meanwhile, added that he wouldn¿t be giving the match referee good feedback on the condition of the pitch

Stokes, meanwhile, added that he wouldn’t be giving the match referee good feedback on the condition of the pitch

While Cricket Australia¿s bottom line was struck hard in the wake of the first Test, administrators at the Perth Stadium were able to donate all of the food that was not used during the third, fourth and fifth days to charity (pictured: Perth Stadium)

While Cricket Australia’s bottom line was struck hard in the wake of the first Test, administrators at the Perth Stadium were able to donate all of the food that was not used during the third, fourth and fifth days to charity (pictured: Perth Stadium)

‘If that was another condition somewhere else and that happened, you probably would get a pasting,’ Stokes said to BBC Test Match Special.

Nasser Hussain, meanwhile, believes that Victoria cricket icon Shane Warne would not have liked how the pitch had been set up at his home ground.

‘I’m sitting thinking of this great ground and our great friend and you’ve done a piece about him, Shane Warne,’ Hussain told Sky Sports. ‘I don’t think he would have thought that was acceptable.

‘I don’t think it’s acceptable not having spin at all and having so much movement in the surface. It was farcical at times, and when things are farcical, it is thrilling to watch. But your point is a good one, there are traditionalists in Test match cricket who like the ebbs and flows and the slow build.

‘That was not slow that was cricket in fast forward. And we have enough of that. Whether it be T20, T10, the Hundred, we have that. There will be Big Bash tonight or tomorrow night… This [the MCG] was supposed to have 90,000 fans in every day, and it was supposed to build slowly. That didn’t happen, but what did happen was England finally after 15 years have the win.’

While Cricket Australia’s bottom line was struck hard in the wake of the first Test, administrators at the Perth Stadium were able to donate all of the food that was not used during the third, fourth and fifth days to charity.

 The donation included 20 pallets of fruit and vegetables and two pallets of bread. Organisers also donated four pallets of sandwiches as well as four pallets of dairy products.

Food was sent to OzHarvest, an Australian food rescue organisation, who send the food to charities that distribute it to those who need it. It was the biggest single donation that OzHarvest had ever received.

‘Every effort has been made to maximise food recovery,’ Optus Stadium CEO Mike McKenna said.

‘Our chefs are busy turning about 450kg of sliced tomatoes into passata, some of the excess milk will become white sauce and lemon wedges preserved for future use.

‘Being able to support those in need is really a silver lining for the stadium team.’

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email

Related News

Bethenny Frankel compared this  L’Oréal serum to a 0 skincare product

Bethenny Frankel compared this $26 L’Oréal serum to a $500 skincare product

25 March 2026
March Madness coach Bryan Hodgson goes viral for joke about ‘recruiting’ his wife

March Madness coach Bryan Hodgson goes viral for joke about ‘recruiting’ his wife

25 March 2026
Baseball is BACK! Yankees fought off spiders and sewage in preseason… now Aaron Judge is plotting an even bigger shock

Baseball is BACK! Yankees fought off spiders and sewage in preseason… now Aaron Judge is plotting an even bigger shock

25 March 2026
Travis Kelce reveals he once had a job selling Obamacare before being drafted by Kansas City Chiefs

Travis Kelce reveals he once had a job selling Obamacare before being drafted by Kansas City Chiefs

25 March 2026
NBA star Luka Doncic makes shock claim about ex-fiancee as bitter legal war takes messy turn

NBA star Luka Doncic makes shock claim about ex-fiancee as bitter legal war takes messy turn

25 March 2026
Vanessa Trump and Tiger Woods pack on the PDA as she watches golf icon suffer humiliating loss on return to golf

Vanessa Trump and Tiger Woods pack on the PDA as she watches golf icon suffer humiliating loss on return to golf

25 March 2026
Top News

A47 eastbound exit for A146 | Eastbound | Road Works

25 March 2026
Major boost for young people in Wales with 12 new Youth Hubs and devolved employment support funding announced

Major boost for young people in Wales with 12 new Youth Hubs and devolved employment support funding announced

25 March 2026

Two men arrested over Jewish charity ambulance arson attacks | UK News

25 March 2026

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest UK news and updates directly to your inbox.

Recent Posts

  • A47 eastbound exit for A146 | Eastbound | Road Works
  • Major boost for young people in Wales with 12 new Youth Hubs and devolved employment support funding announced
  • Two men arrested over Jewish charity ambulance arson attacks | UK News
  • Everything you need to know about opening your ISA before the April deadline – UK Times
  • Bethenny Frankel compared this $26 L’Oréal serum to a $500 skincare product

Recent Comments

No comments to show.
© 2026 UK Times. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Go to mobile version