Key Points

Jamaica's Sabina Park is preparing to host its first-ever day-night Test match between West Indies and Australia. The venue's floodlight installation has faced multiple delays, with final infrastructure approval still pending from ICC officials. JCA President Donovan Bennett remains confident the ground will be ready for the match. The historic event follows Australia's impressive day-night Test record, with 12 wins out of 13 matches played.

Key Points: Sabina Park Day-Night Test Awaits ICC Final Approval

  • Floodlight installation for Sabina Park delayed multiple times
  • ICC officials to conduct final venue inspection next week
  • Scoreboard upgrade funded by Indian government pending
  • Australia has impressive day-night Test record with 12 wins
2 min read

Sabina Park's floodlight for day-night Test between West Indies, Australia needs final approval from ICC

Jamaica Cricket Association prepares for historic first day-night Test between West Indies and Australia with pending infrastructure upgrades

"We're on target, I'm confident that we'll be okay - Donovan Bennett, JCA President"

New Delhi, July 6

Sabina Park's preparations to host its first day-night Test when Australia visit for the third test against West Indies.

The installation of the new floodlights had been initially delayed--originally scheduled for earlier this year, then for May, according to ESPNcricinfo.

The Jamaica Cricket Association (JCA) remains confident that the ground will be ready for the third Test between Australia and West Indies.

However, when ICC officials arrive next week, the amenities will still require final approval. Additionally, the Indian government's funding for the scoreboard and replay screen upgrade has been delayed, as further work was discovered to be necessary after the previous structure was removed.

"I'm pretty sure about that [being ready] I'm a little bit uneasy because I would have hoped that everything would have been completed by now but when you're doing construction, as you go along, there are a lot of unforeseen circumstances that you're challenged with which will push you back and that's exactly what has happened with the lights and the scoreboard," JCA president Donovan Bennett said as quoted from ESPNcricinfo.

"But we're on target, I'm confident that we'll be okay with both the lighting and the scoreboard for the 12th, when the games are scheduled, I'm sure we'll be okay," he added.

The Caribbean had only hosted one previous day-night Test when Sri Lanka played in Barbados in 2018. Australia have won 12 of their 13 day-night Tests, the only defeat being against West Indies at the Gabba last year, and have played comfortably the most given that every home summer features a pink-ball game.

After the conclusion of the Test series, the action will shift to white-ball cricket, with the West Indies squaring off against Australia in five T20Is from July 20 to July 28.

- ANI

Share this article:

Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Why is our government funding upgrades in Jamaica? Shouldn't this money be used for improving our own stadiums first? BCCI has enough funds to handle this independently.
A
Arjun K
Exciting times for West Indies cricket! But ICC should be strict with approvals - player safety comes first. Remember what happened with some stadiums during T20 World Cup?
S
Sarah B
As an Indian living in Jamaica, I'm so proud to see our country helping with cricket infrastructure here! The pink ball tests are so much fun to watch in the evening after work.
V
Vikram M
Australia's day-night record is scary good! But West Indies showed last year they can beat them. Hope the lights don't become an excuse if WI loses. Just play good cricket!
K
Kavya N
Construction delays happen everywhere, even in India we see this with stadium projects. Important thing is they're being transparent about it. Best of luck to WI team! 🇮🇳🤝🇯🇲

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50