‘It's great cricket': Angry, abrasive England an Ashes goldmine for CA
CA has trumpeted the prospect of England bringing a record-breaking summer of attendances and TV ratings given the interest in Stokes' side.
Every opening day of the five Ashes Tests across Perth, Brisbane, Adelaide, Melbourne and Sydney is now sold out. Ticket allocations for days 1-3 at the Gabba, Adelaide Oval and SCG have also been exhausted.
Pre-sale tickets for Ashes Tests more than doubled those of last summer's Border-Gavaskar series, when 837,879 fans turned out for the highest attended Test campaign in Australian history outside of the Ashes.
The all-time attendance record for a Test series on home soil stands at 946,750, which was set during the 1936-37 Ashes when Sir Donald Bradman was in his pomp.
England's tour from November will be the first Ashes clash since the enthralling 2023 series, in which Australia retained the urn and fallout from the infamous Lord's Test dominated coverage.
While Stokes was a notable withdrawal from England's fifth Test against India due to what is tipped as a 10-week shoulder injury, Greenberg and CA chair Mike Baird's immediate focus is sifting through the advice of an independent report on privatising Big Bash League franchises.
Recommendations from the Boston Consulting Group that will be considered by CA powerbrokers include a later start to the BBL season from Christmas to February and how to ensure Australia's stars turn out in the domestic T20 tournament.
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Greenberg and Baird stressed an open mind will be kept on the prospect of selling off stakes in BBL clubs, though Greenberg emphatically dismissed any suggestion of the MCG and SCG Tests being shifted from their Boxing Day and New Year's Eve slots.
'They've been anchored for a long period of time and you'll only have to turn up to these Test matches this year to see the scale that they bring to cricket,' Greenberg said.
'So there's been no discussions about moving them.'
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