MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — The pitch used for the fourth Ashes test that finished inside two days has been rated as “unsatisfactory” by cricket's world governing body.
No batter scored a half-century and 36 wickets fell across six sessions at Melbourne Cricket Ground as England beat Australia by four wickets in just 142 overs of play.
“The MCG pitch was too much in favor of the bowlers,” Jeff Crowe, the International Cricket Council's match referee for the test, said Monday.
“With 20 wickets falling on the first day, 16 on the second day and no batter even reaching a half-century, the pitch was ‘Unsatisfactory’ as per the guidelines and the venue gets one demerit point.”
James Allsopp, chief of cricket at Cricket Australia, expressed his disappointment for those fans who had bought tickets for Days 3 and 4 that the “pitch did not provide the MCG’s customary balance between bat and ball.”
Those comments came after Matt Page, the curator of the pitch at the MCG, acknowledged that leaving 10mm of grass on the surface proved excessive.
“I’ve never been involved in a test match like it,” Page said, “and hopefully never involved in a test match like it again.”
Australia leads the five-match series 3-1 and has already retained the urn heading into the final test in Sydney.
AP cricket: https://apnews.com/hub/cricket
England's Jamie Smith, left, Ben Stokes, second left, Harry Brook andJoe Root, right, shake hands after defeating Australia on Day 2 of their Ashes cricket test match in Melbourne, Saturday, Dec. 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Hamish Blair)
Australia's Alex Carey, second left, watches out England's Ben Stokes, second right, on Day 2 of their Ashes cricket test match in Melbourne, Saturday, Dec. 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Hamish Blair)
Australia's Steve Smith, center, watches a deliver from England's Brydon Carse, left, on Day 2 of their Ashes cricket test match in Melbourne, Saturday, Dec. 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Hamish Blair)
Memories from players who competed against Tiger Woods and the shots that stand out in honor of Woods turning 50 on Dec. 30:
“He's in grass I promise you is this deep,” Price said, holding his hands about 6 inches apart. “It was 230 yards to the flag. I was in the fairway and I hit a hybrid just on the front edge of the green. He hit 5-iron out of there and pitched it on the green, and I have no idea ... in a million years, I couldn't hit that shot. The ball came out like it was in the fairway and pitched in the green about 12 feet. The guy was never in trouble.”
“I was in the last group with him in Atlanta on a par 5. We both had 265 to the hole, and this was one when they were wound balls. I laid a 3-wood right of the green on the 10th at TPC Sugarloaf. And from the same distance — and I wasn't short — Tiger hits 2-iron straight up in the air, and it was like the same shape as a 7-iron for me, flew onto the green and released like this far (indicating 2 feet). And it was then I was like, ‘OK, he just hit his 2-iron as far as I hit my 3-wood, and it flew as high as my 7-iron and it stopped like a pitching wedge.’ This is a skill set I don't have.”
“I would think the shot he hit into Bridgestone on the 16th as one of the greatest shots I've ever seen, one of the craziest shots I've ever seen, one of the most spectacular shots I've ever seen, and pretty close to the only shot I feel in my career that got into my head.”
(Woods was on the slope of a bunker and hit 8-iron to 2 feet on a brick-hard green. Harrington from the fairway hit a shot that one-hopped over the green).
“It was the only shot that really went deeply ... it wasn't just his good shot, it affected my next shot. I went long and chipped it in the water. And then I didn't realize I should have dropped it where I was. It panicked me. That's how good that golf shot was.”
“I could not have been more nervous ever in my life. Both of us hit good drives. The pin was middle back — I remember it clear as can be. I hit it 20 feet short of the pin where you had to hit it. He hit it and one-hopped over the green. I looked at my dad like, ‘I can’t believe he hit it there.' You can't get up-and-down. It's a bogey right off the bat. And he hit the most amazing chip. It had more spin than I've ever seen on a short chip. That thing was a foot from the hole when it finished. I'd never seen anybody pull off a shot like that. I didn't know that was even possible.”
“The 17th hole got redone every other year. This was a new green, the green was rock-hard and the pin was front left. We hit our tee shots right next to each other — hit 3-wood, I hit driver. I hit this 5-iron as hard and as high as I could. It lands by the hole and bounds 25 feet by the hole. He hits this shot way up in the air and it was coming down like a parachute, lands by the cup and bounces 2 feet and stops. I figure he must have hit a 7-iron. I said, ‘Tiger, what club was that?’ He said, ‘That was a little, three-finger 5-iron.’ He just filleted it in there. When I think of him, that’s what I think of. Only one guy could hit that shot.”
“We were paired together and he hit a shot to a downhill, long, skinny green with a little tail in back left, and the pin was back there over a bunker. I hit this pretty 5-iron, it hit hard and took a big tumble and just trickled through the green. He took 6-iron and hit this high cut against a little breeze, and it came down soft and hit it to 3 feet. I just laughed. I couldn’t hit that shot. I immediately looked at the two guys we were playing (Vijay Singh and Stuart Appleby) and I’m sure I had the biggest grin on my face because I was like, ‘Well, we know you can’t hit that shot so what are we going to do now?’ I couldn’t hit it, they couldn’t hit it, just my partner.”
AP golf: https://apnews.com/hub/golf
FILE - Tiger Woods hits his second shot on the 18th hole from a fairway bunker during completion of his second round of the PGA Championship at Hazeltine National Golf Club, in Chaska Minn., Saturday, Aug. 17, 2002. (AP Photo/Doug Mills)
Jim Furyk watches his tee shot on the second hole during the final round of the PNC Championship golf tournament, Sunday, Dec. 21, 2025, in Orlando, Fla. (AP Photo/Phelan M. Ebenhack)
Stewart Cink, right, and his son Reagan Cink, discuss a tee shot on the second hole during the final round of the PNC Championship golf tournament, Sunday, Dec. 21, 2025, in Orlando, Fla. (AP Photo/Phelan M. Ebenhack)
Nick Price, left, of Zimbabwe, discusses their putt with his son Greg Price on the first green during the final round of the PNC Championship golf tournament, Sunday, Dec. 21, 2025, in Orlando, Fla. (AP Photo/Phelan M. Ebenhack)
FILE - Tiger Woods watches his approach shot to the 18th green during the third round of the U.S. Open golf tournament Saturday, June 19, 2010, at the Pebble Beach Golf Links, in Pebble Beach, Calif. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg, File)