Australia crushes West Indies in Adelaide
Relevant offers
The smallest crowd ever for an Australian limited overs match at Adelaide Oval witnessed the home side maul the West Indies by eight wickets on Tuesday night.
One day cricket has had many better days than this, with Doug Bollinger's first-ball dismissal of West Indies captain Chris Gayle effectively determining the outcome of the contest while dissuading whatever spectators might have swelled the attendance later on.
The West Indies slid as low as 4-16 and were ultimately bowled out for 170, leaving Australia a leisurely chase they duly completed inside 27 overs.
Shane Watson extended his outstanding summer by cracking 51 and captain Ricky Ponting was also smooth in compiling an unbeaten 57.
A weekday fixture and temperatures hovering around 36C had made the match a hard sell, but the official crowd figure of 8,378 was still startling, well short of the reduced capacity of 16,500.
Prior to this match no 50-over game involving Australia had returned a crowd of less than 10,000, the skinniest being the 11,129 who saw Australia play New Zealand in November 1980.
The South Australian Cricket Association made only an obstinate defence of the attendance figure.
We did not expect this match to be a sell-out," a SACA spokesperson said.
"The fact that this number of people have come out in the heat on a work and school day is testament to ODIs popularity."
Neither West Indies nor the match ever quite recovered from the hammer blow of Gayle's instant dismissal by the excellent Bollinger (4-28).
He had plenty of support as there were wickets for every bowler on an Adelaide pitch that offered plenty of bounce to the pacemen and turn for Nathan Hauritz (1-45).
Of the visitors only the middle order quartet of Narsingh Deonarine (23), Denesh Ramdin (30), South Australian Twenty20 representative Kieron Pollard (33) and Dwayne Smith (43) offered any sort of resistance.
Australia's chase was never going to be in any trouble from the moment Watson muscled two boundaries from Kemar Roach's opening over.
Watson added 51 with Shaun Marsh (27) before the left-hander dragged a ball onto his stumps via a crooked bat.
Ponting looked as sure as he had in any one day innings this summer and had little difficulty finding the winning runs alongside Michael Clarke (27no) after Watson fell to Roach.
Gayle had promised a far better West Indian batting effort than the one witnessed in Melbourne on Sunday, but his threats were soon made to look empty, giving up a clear lbw verdict to Bollinger.
Travis Dowlin was caught behind while trying to leave Clint McKay (2-33), before Runako Morton and Lendl Simmons departed cheaply.
The scoreline of 4-16 was the best start by an Australian bowling attack in any limited overs international, surpassing two instances of 4-17, against cricket minnows Kenya and Zimbabwe.
Regular wickets then ensured there would be no chance of the visitors reaching 200.
- AAP
Sponsored links
Hurricanes fight back to beat Chiefs
Phoenix's Muscat insists suspension not deliberate
Capital take chances at softball champs
Hurricanes prop Goodes ready for testing year
West Australian to wear gloves for Firebirds
Super teams prepare for mid-season interruption
Hurricanes looking for a confidence-boost
Josh Brodie out to prove his worth
Kiwis hope to stump Proteas with spinners
All Blacks to train twice during Super Rugby
Ngaio quake-prone classrooms closed
Hurricanes fight back to beat Chiefs
New artificial pitch planned for Kilbirnie
Student wins top dollar for top marks
Bolivian squirrel monkeys arrive at Wellington Zoo
Lloyd Morrison gets Town Hall funeral
Goodman Fielder to slash New Zealand jobs
$25k Sevens costume comp to return
Wellington start-up wins Webstock award
Reasons for visa denials to be kept secret
Cook Strait swim crossing today
Kiwi sales put sparkle back in jeweller
West Australian to wear gloves for Firebirds
Are you worried about a big earthquake in Wellington?