Steven Smith To Use Anti-Glare Tape In Gabba Pink-Ball Test After Chanderpaul Tip

The Cricket Standard Desk
December 8, 2025
2 min read
Steven Smith applying black anti-glare tape under eyes ahead of day-night Ashes Test at Gabba Brisbane

‘I’ll Be Wearing Them’ - Smith Commits To Anti-Glare Tape In Day-Night Test

Australian batting maestro Steven Smith has confirmed he’ll use anti-glare strips under his eyes during the upcoming day-night Test at the Gabba, crediting West Indies legend Shivnarine Chanderpaul

for perfecting his technique. After initial trial-and-error with the black adhesive ‘eye blacks’—common in American sports for reducing floodlight glare—Smith felt a clear benefit under lights and will deploy them strategically against the pink ball.

Smith’s Anti-Glare Innovation Journey

Smith messaged Chanderpaul for advice: “He said the strips… blocks out 65% of the glare. And he also said, ‘I’ve seen photos and you’re wearing them the wrong way’.” Corrected orientation made the difference: “I agree with him. I think it certainly stops the glare. Yeah, I’ll be wearing them.”

These strips absorb light reflecting off cheekbones, crucial in twilight sessions where pink-ball glare challenges visibility. Smith’s pink-ball record (37.04 average, 1 century in day-nighters vs 58.31/35 in day Tests) underscores the need—Gabba’s hard surface softens the ball faster than Adelaide’s grassier pitches.

Pink-Ball Challenges At Gabba

“It’s hard to bat all the time… The ball reacts differently… can change quickly… start moving randomly,” Smith noted. Tactics vary: aggression when swinging, defense during spells. Gabba’s pace (unlike Adelaide’s seam-friendly fur) demands adaptation—Starc noted 2024’s WI epic where surface hardness softened the pink ball prematurely.

Batting Order Flexibility Debate

Amid XI uncertainty (Cummins’ fitness, Lyon/Doggett), Smith endorsed in-match changes like dual nightwatchmen for pink-ball volatility: “Anything’s possible… play what’s in front of you.” He respectfully disagreed with Cummins/Head’s “batting orders overrated” view: “It’s nice to have a single role… get used to that.” Smith opened four 2024 Tests (including Gabba pink-ball carry-bat 91*), valuing consistency over constant shuffling.

Australia delays XI naming, balancing Cummins’ return with Brisbane conditions.

Related Topics

Steven Smith eye blacks GabbaShivnarine Chanderpaul glare tipAshes 2025 pink ball TestSmith batting order commentsCummins Gabba fitness Ashes

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