Isnβt it a minster like Beverley?
Isnβt it a minster like Beverley?
Pelham Warner, admittedly never slow to congratulate himself, on MCCβs training sessions before the 1903/04 Ashes: βNor we did neglect to practice fielding, for every day we gave an hour to practising catching, and a high catch requires a great deal of judging in the bright sunlight of Australia.β
who-only-cricket-know.uk/highways-and...
Two articles with a Guyanese flavour posted to the book website: a bibliographical note on historian Clem Seecharan and a biographical paper on curator-umpire Badge Menzies written by his grandson Donald
A splendid evening: great questions from Raf Nicholson and the audience, great answers from Neil and good to see the great man himself, Howard Milton, present the award that carries his name
You pears!
A day full of tension - even for the neutral - yesterday in what remains the best domestic red ball competition - despite all sabotage attempts
I hadnβt realised how important the βBattle of Visβ was, closing off any chance of Napoleon threatening India, until researching a reference to it in Byronβs poem βFarewell to Maltaβ
These undignified ends are a feature of the period because souvenired stumps were an important source of income for underpaid pros?
Iβd love to see some research on what percentage of t20 games are alive with three balls to go
Enjoying a re-read of Barclays World of Cricket for the next WCM column on 50 Books: here is an extract from Benny Greenβs essay on βSome Cricket Eccentricsβ
Top night for a top man
Particularly given the βSoros-fundedβ dog whistle
Popped in last week to the free @senatehouselib.bsky.social exhibition In The Grip of Change: a great little collection of written and oral history paying tribute to Caribbean pioneers, including two familiar to all cricket lovers. Recommended for anyone at a loose end in London - closes 12 April
Having established himself as the best batter in the world, Len Hutton became the first official professional captain of England in 1952, breaking a long-standing tradition of amateur leadership. From there, it was a bumpy β if ultimately successful β ride
IT IS HERE! The next edition of County Cricket Matters.
For those of you that like Patrick Eagarβs work there is my interview with him and featuring some of his early photographs.
And the usual fantastic articles.
To order please follow the link below -
www.countycricketmatters.com/shop
So sad to hear this - a writer whose delight in and insights into the βcosmic jokesβ of football and life brought such pleasure to his readers
The brothersβ collaboration, Opening Up, is one of the more thoughtful cricketing memoirs
Yes, an admirer of this work, one of the best in the βstate of the gameβ genre: John Arlott judged it βcompulsory readingβ in his (last) book review for Wisden in 1992
Iβm currently trying to tell something of The Story of Cricket in 50 Books for Wisden Cricket Monthly and will occasionally post some supplementary material here @wisdencricket.bsky.social
Donβt disagree with the point but if you ever do a reprint it was Sir Hubert Parry not Sir Edward Elgar who wrote the music for Jerusalem