There were many such minds. In total 373,691 attended the MCG across the five days, a number “bigger than Bradman”, or at least the best-attended Test during the era of Australia’s greatest proponent.These days Test cricket is in most countries played out in front of empty stadiums. The red ball remains a feature of the […]
There were many such minds. In total 373,691 attended the MCG across the five days, a number “bigger than Bradman”, or at least the best-attended Test during the era of Australia’s greatest proponent.These days Test cricket is in most countries played out in front of empty stadiums. The red ball remains a feature of the international calendar, for now, and the format of prestige for the game’s purists. But put simply, people don’t often come to watch it.
So lasting is the match’s lustre, this is being written some 15 hours after the final wicket fell. And yet, still people will come to read, the headline and accompanying image igniting within Australians something irresistible. The world should have moved on. But this Test – in the minds of those who witnessed even just a ball – will long linger.Konstas’ deadly naivety was just one of the character studies that enriched the five days. Like a glazed ham, Indian captain Rohit Sharma withered in the hours following Christmas, a legend surely now on the way out. The impetuous Kohli fighting Father Time who has set up camp outside his off stump.So when a match of cricket delivers far beyond what fans could dream, it is worth celebrating. There can be no doubt that the Boxing Day Test was among sport’s finest moments. The most culturally significant annual sporting event in Australia, bringing together two rivals, ebbing and flowing right down to the ultimate hour of the final day. A victory that will forever now be associated with captain Pat Cummins and his peers, a loss sure to motivate a new generation of Indian cricketers.Just today The Guardian published a list of Australia’s 10 biggest sporting moments of 2024. Although the calendar wouldn’t allow it, the article needed to wait another day. This five-day cricketing spectacular was at times funnier than Raygun. Fresher than Gout. Tougher than the Blues. Slyer than a Fox. Certainly, more unpredictable than Angeball.
But there is extra significance in its status now as the highest-attended Test ever in Australia. No longer is this merely a British outpost where beating the Old Enemy is the most compelling motivation in sport. Now, a modern Australia has a New Frenemy.