Adelaide Oval in Adelaide, Australia (53,583 capacity) has hosted cricket since 1873, making it one of the oldest continuously used cricket grounds in the Southern Hemisphere. It is renowned for its Victorian-era heritage scoreboard and the St Peter’s Cathedral backdrop, making it one of the most photographed grounds in world cricket. The cathedral’s twin spires frame every delivery bowled from the River Torrens end, and that beauty is not incidental to the cricket but inseparable from it. Nestled between the city centre and the parklands of North Adelaide, the oval’s 2014 redevelopment transformed it into a world-class multi-sport venue while preserving the fig tree-lined approach and the heritage scoreboard that still anchors the ground’s character. The Moreton Bay fig trees that line the walkway from the city centre to the ground have been there for over a century, and the walk beneath them on a match morning is one of the great rituals of Australian cricket.
Adelaide Oval changed cricket forever on November 27, 2015, when it hosted the first-ever day-night Test match with a pink ball. Australia defeated New Zealand under lights, and the experiment worked so well that the Adelaide day-night Test has become an annual fixture, typically the 2nd Test of each Australian home summer. The pink ball behaves differently from the traditional red ball, swinging more aggressively under lights and creating a twilight session (roughly 14:00 to 18:00 local time) that has produced some of the most dramatic cricket of the modern era. Batting under lights against the pink ball at Adelaide is a unique challenge, with the ball harder to sight against the dark sky and the seam movement exaggerated by the lacquer.
The 2025-26 Ashes 3rd Test at Adelaide Oval was played as a day-night fixture, with Australia winning by 82 runs in another dominant home performance. The atmosphere under lights, with 53,000 fans and the cathedral glowing in the background, was widely described as one of the best sporting experiences available anywhere in the world.
The pitch at Adelaide Oval has traditionally been among the best batting surfaces in Australia, true and even with consistent carry to the slips. It rewards patience early before offering something for spin bowlers as the match wears on, making it a ground that produces absorbing five-day contests. The ground’s redevelopment preserved its relationship with the surrounding parklands while adding modern stands that wrap around the oval in a continuous sweep. The combination of old and new, the cathedral, the fig trees, the heritage scoreboard alongside the sleek Western Stand, makes Adelaide Oval feel like a ground that respects what came before while embracing what comes next. Adelaide’s food and wine culture adds to the appeal: match-day dining at Adelaide Oval, with Barossa wines and local produce, is a level above what any other Australian cricket ground offers.
Adelaide operates on Australian Central Standard Time (ACST, UTC+9:30) in winter and Australian Central Daylight Time (ACDT, UTC+10:30) in summer. The half-hour offset creates unique timing: a day-night Test session starting at 14:00 ACDT is 03:30 GMT in London, 22:30 the previous evening in New York, and 09:00 IST in India. The Indian morning slot makes Adelaide day-night Tests surprisingly accessible for subcontinental fans, while US East Coast viewers get a comfortable late-evening start. Check whatisthetime.now/adelaide for current local time or whatisthetime.now/country/australia for Australian timezone details.