Friday, May 31, 2019

A look back at Australia at the 1999 World Cup

While Australia’s win at the 1999 World Cup is a remarkable triumph in its own terms, it’s even more of an achievement considering the tumult the side went through in the years leading up to the tournament.

Post-1996 World Cup, Australia went into a rapid decline, one of their worst in the history of the format. For example, Australia twice lost 5 ODI matches in a row in the space of a few months, unthinkable by the standards Australian cricket had set in the previous decade
The situation turned into panic mode for Australian cricket in their home tri-series against Pakistan and the West Indies in the 1996/97 home summer. Even when they had been an ordinary side, Australia had always done well in this annual event; indeed the last time they’d missed the finals was in its inaugural 1979/80 version.

But after a couple of comfortable early wins against the West Indies, Australia imploded to lose five in a row and be out of the finals before their final qualifying match. They looked a stale and uninspired side, especially so when compared with the inventiveness and boldness of Pakistan (who would go on to win the tournament).

Inevitably the pressure went onto captain Mark Taylor and it shouldn’t have been a major surprise. Even in top form, he never was totally convincing as an ODI opener as he simply didn’t make enough runs and at too slow a rate; only his undoubted captaincy skills ensured there wasn’t scrutiny. But once Australia started losing constantly in the 1996/97 he’d lost his justification for staying in the side.

Taylor’s ODI woes continued in 1997 and by the time of a whitewash ODI series loss in England with Taylor scoring 17, 7 & 11 (all at sub-50 strike rates), his axing was inevitable.

Before the 1997/98, Taylor was sacked as captain, replaced by Steve Waugh. But the other major selection change – and even more significant – was keeper Ian Healy being replaced by Adam Gilchrist, as it led to a major change to how ODI cricket is played.
After a modest initial period of playing in the then traditional ODI keeper spot of 7, Gilchrist was moved up to opener in a tri-series final in South Africa and the rest is history. Now, it’s unthinkable that any ODI side picks a keeper for their keeping first, they have to be viable as a batsman above all else.

As for Healy, he was an unlucky victim of timing. He had been a solid and reliable member of the ODI team for close to a decade; not just for his keeping but for regularly providing handy batting cameos at the end of innings. But his time as an ODI player was over.
Despite Taylor’s departure, Australia continued to face difficulties as Steve Waugh struggled to adapt to the role. During Australia’s home tri-series against South Africa & New Zealand, Waugh was dismissed for single figures six times in a row, leading to the possibility that he may himself he dropped. However he not only recovered form but Australia – after looking miles behind South Africa in the qualifiers – won the last two finals to pull off a memorable win.

Even so and with Australia’s overall ODI form improving, there were tensions in the 1998/99 summer when Steve Waugh missed most of the tri-series through injury, Shane Warne took over as captain and had immediate success, not only winning constantly but also impressively with his tactics, such as getting Australia’s pacemen to bounce out Sri Lanka’s batting lineup (who had just chased down over 300 against England) with great aggression and purpose. Many wondered whether Warne should be the full-time ODI captain?

But by the time the World Cup started, Steve Waugh was still in the role and had an imposing team behind him. The batting looked even stronger than the 1996 version with Gilchrist already one of the stars of ODI cricket as an opener – he already had Australia’s highest-ever ODI individual score record. Mark Waugh – Australia’s star player of the 1996 tournament – was still as reliable as ever and with Ricky Ponting and Darren Lehmann in the middle order, Australia had formidable firepower few could match. And with champion bowlers Warne and Glenn McGrath to count on, Australia looked one of the major favourites when the tournament started.

However, Australia’s first few matches were so poor that there existed the possibility they might not even last to the Super Six stage – and almost certainly Steve Waugh’s ODI captaincy reign would be over. A mediocre start against lowly Scotland was followed by losses to New Zealand and Pakistan as Australia had to deal with the likes of Gilchrist being out of form and also misguided tactics like using McGrath as a first-change bowler. And there were media reports that there was division within the Australian camp about the leadership of the side and that perhaps some preferred Warne’s leadership.

But from a difficult situation, Australia got only stronger and stronger the longer the tournament progressed. They ruthlessly dismantled the West Indies to guarantee their spot in the Super Six segment, and then had comfortable wins against India and New Zealand. However to qualify for the semis they had to beat a formidable South African team that looked the tournament’s clear favourites. And when Australia slumped to 3/48 chasing a substantial 271, their tournament looked almost certainly over.

But Steve Waugh was to cement his captaincy credentials in more ways than one with probably his finest knock of an unbeaten 120 (albeit with the help of an infamous Herschelle Gibbs dropped catch) helping Australia win in the final over and set for a repeat match against the same opponent in the semis.

What else can be said about the Australia v South Africa semi-final match that’s regarded by many as the finest ODI match ever? Certainly it could be argued that it showcased all the best aspects of ODI cricket in terms of defiant rearguard batting (S Waugh, Bevan, Kallis, Rhodes) aggressive brute force batting (Klusener), dazzling spin bowling (Warne) and superb pace bowling to the tail (Donald).

And of course it had the most remarkable finish to a ODI match that is still talked about today (it’s 20th anniversary is only weeks away) as South Africa lost their nerve when victory was there for the taking just as the West Indies did against the same opponent at the previous WC semi-final.

It wouldn’t be hyperbolic to say that this match was the starting point of Australia transitioning from a great side to an all-time great side. Under Steve Waugh, whom many doubted was the right man to lead the side in more ways than one, they found the person to take the side to new heights through his purpose and ruthlessness that set the stage for Australia to dominate the next decade of cricket.

After the Edgbaston semi-final, the final at Lord’s was an inevitable letdown. Not for Australia though who learnt the mental lessons from their 1996 finals performance by putting on a ruthless display against an overawed Pakistan lineup. Apart from Glenn McGrath dropping a sitter on the boundary, Australia were practically flawless in what is still the most one-sided WC final to date.



from Cricket Web http://bit.ly/2wvIudw

Thursday, May 30, 2019

5 Best Batsmen to Watch in Cricket World Cup 2019

Feisty Warner:

Controversial opener David Warner, 32, is back on the international scene, alongside Steve Smith, once a year-long suspension for his role during a ball-tampering adventure story that destroyed Australian cricket. English crowds are fast to cue the belligerent left-hander of his fall from grace however that would spur him on to bigger heights. Warner established the attributes that created him such a devastating presence at the crease haven’t low-beam as he topped the batting charts — 692 runs in 12 matches — in the Indian Premier League, wherever he formed an unlikely alliance with England´s Jonny Bairstow.

 

Virat Kholi:

Indisputably the best batsman in the 2019 cricket world cup, Virat Kohli includes a strong case to be considered the best of all-time in ODIs. His statistics alone are staggering: 10,843 runs in 227 matches at a median of virtually 60, a strike-rate in way over 90 and 41 hundred. a youngster when India prevailed on home soil eight years ago, Kohli was firmly in theshadow of Sachin Tendulkar. currently the 30-year-old is shouldering the expectation of quite a billion Indian fans however, with 14 centuries in his last 39 ODIs, is for certain to be savouring the challenge.

 

Fakhar Zaman:

Fakhar zaman, 29, was a key player in Pakistan´s rise from no-hopers to shock victors within the Champions Trophy in England 2 years past once the left-hander was a man of the match in the final when a century against India. Fakhar zaman became only the sixth batsman to record an ODI double century once he smashed 210 not out against Zimbabwe in Bulawayo last year and averages quite 50. He once more showed what he’s capable of throughout the recent ODI series against England and, alongside babar Azam, will be counted on to deliver.

 

Chris Gayle:

Self-proclaimed “Universe Boss” Chris Gayle reminded bowlers they have every reason to worry him, smashing 424 runs for the West Indies within the recent one-day series against England that complete 2-2. The 39-year-old declared his intention to retire from one-day internationals after the world Cup however he has since prevaricated. Gayle is not a top fielder though he quite makes up for it together with his freewheeling and sometimes devastating batting. allow him time to take his task and he can penalise any side.

 

Freak Butter:

In a star-studded batting line-up that will strike concern into many bowling line-ups, England’s Jos Buttler can betheir most valuable trade goods. a median of quite 40 with a strike-rate approaching 120 paints its own image. Buttler, 28, will destroy attacks and change the course of matches within the blink of an eye fixed and is especiallydevastating towards the tip of an innings. England´s Jofra Archer found himself up against a number of the world´s best batsmen throughout the recent Indian Premier League however he still reckoned his most tough challenge was bowling to Rajasthan Royals teammate Buttler in training. “The best player I visaged was Jos Buttler in the nets,” said Archer.



from Cricket Web http://bit.ly/2Mhr1As

ICC World Cup 2019 Predictions – Time for the Big Boys

Forget the dozens of T20 leagues around the world, forget whether India and Pakistan don’t play a bilateral series, forget the Ashes. The biggest cricketing tournament in the world the quadrennial ICC Cricket World Cups is now part of the discourse among fans and punters. No other tournament garbs as much attention and eyeballs as the Cricket World Cup does. As a punter you may already be busy with your maths and analytics. From judging team form to studying the conditions you have your hands full as you anticipate what’s expected to happen in this year’s tournament. So which team is ahead in the race and which players are likely to do well? Bookmakers and cricket analysts have already come up with their ICC World Cup betting predictions.

The 2019 edition of the ICC Cricket World Cup is expected to be a competitive one. The tournament has been cut down to 10 teams from the 14 in last two editions and 16 that played in 2007 World Cup. Each team will play 9 games in the league stage before the best four advanced to the semi-finals. There are no short-cuts to success here and only the best teams can hope to make it to the knockout stage of the tournament. So which are the teams that are likely to make it to the semi-finals? Here’s our ICC World Cup Predictions for the 2019 edition where we look at teams that might make it to the semi-finals.

worldcup2019-2

 

 

  • Australia – They don’t come with the tag of ‘favorites’ that has followed them in most editions since the start of the millennia. In fact their form over the last two years has been pretty poor. But the team will definitely be one to watch out for given the strength in their batting with former skipper Steven Smith and David Warner having returned to the side. Glenn Maxwell, skipper Aaron Finch and Uswman Khawaja make the batting strong. Australia’s bowling hasn’t done well especially Mitchell Starc in the last two years and it would be interesting to see how they fare in this tournament. The team has always done well in crunch situations and this justifies them being one of the contenders for the title.
  • India – They have been one of the best ODI sides in the world in the last two years and have done well in all conditions. They finished runner-up in the last major ICC event the Champions Trophy that was also held in England in 2017. The team has one of the best top-orders in the world with their skipper Virat Kohli being the lynchpin along with MS Dhoni, Rohit Sharma and Shikhar Dhawan. With two excellent finger spinners Kuldeep Yadav and Yuzvendra Chahal and the best death bowler in the world in Jasprit Bumrah they have it in them to go all the way and win the tournament.
  • England – The team of 4 J’s (Jason Roy, Jos Buttler, Joe Root and Jonny Bairstow) and one M (Eoin Morgan) the hosts are the best team in the world at the moment and have the most destructive batting line-up in the world which is quite a turnaround for a side which was known for playing slow and unattractive cricket. They have been putting up huge scores on the board for fun in the last few years. But it is the English bowling that would worry the skipper the most. They haven’t been able to win as many games as the side would have liked and often throw away the momentum at crucial stages. Also they will have the pressure of playing in front of their fans but they will definitely start as the tournament favorites.
  • New Zealand – They have never won a World Cup and came close in the last edition only to lose in the final. But Kane Williamson’s side definitely has the strength to go the distance. With Martin Guptil, Williamson and Ross Taylor in the batting and some powerful hitters down at the bottom they have a good batting line-up going into this event. It is their bowling that will have to stand the test in the tournament as other than their new ball bowlers Tim Southee and Trent Boult none of the others have been able to impress in the last few series that the side has played.

Dark Horses…   

  • South Africa – They have always gone into the event with a good team and failed. In 2019 they have the best fast bowling unit for any time. They may be able to go the distance but the side has to win the mental battle within more than anything else. The ‘chokers’ tag has stuck too long and they need to get rid of it this time.
  • West Indies – On their day they can put up 400+ scores and also dismiss a side for less than 200 with their good yet inconsistent bowling unit. The team would do well if it gains some consistency during the tournament. This is perhaps the first World Cup since the 1999 edition where they have a team that can possibly pull


from Cricket Web http://bit.ly/2Kcuopv

Get Ready for the Cricket World Cup

Bettors all over the world will soon have the chance to engage in online sports betting on thebossbet.com. From 30 May to 14 July 2019, the Cricket World Cup will take place, and it will happen in Wales and England. If you’re into bets, then you’ll surely enjoy watching the ten countries try their best to win the big prize in the final.

What Is the Format of the Event?

The Cricket World Cup 2019 will have a total of 10 teams. Each of the teams will play the others once, and the ones that make it to the top four will proceed to the semi-finals in the first week of July.

Apparently, this format wasn’t so well received because it’s lacking Associate teams. It’s the first World Cup without Associate members, resulting from their elimination in the qualifying tournament. Even so, the tournament will go like this.

The winners of the semi-finals will go, as expected, to the finals.

What Is the Prize?

For such a big event, it’s only normal that there would be a big prize pool. Apparently, this year, the pool will be exactly like it was in the 2015 edition – a total of $10 million. With that being said, the winner will win $4 million, the runner up will win $2 million, while the losing semi-finalists will receive $800,000.

Concurrently, each league stage match winner will get $40,000, and the teams that don’t go past the league stage will get $100,000 each.

If you want to bet on sports and win some money out of watching cricket, the Cricket World Cup is the right time to do so, being able to bet on Australia, Sri Lanka, and many more. Make sure you check the odds and keep an eye on the scores, thus increasing your chances of making an outstanding betting strategy and being successful.



from Cricket Web http://bit.ly/2JL8rP6

The Overview of the ICC World Cup Warm-Up Games

With the World Cup in England and Wales being just around the corner, it is time to begin paying attention to the warm-up fixtures that may provide fans and pundits with some answers as to what could be expected from the teams over the course of the competition.

The matches took place at different venues all over Great Britain so that the international players could get the taste of real action and accustom themselves to the weather and playing environment.

And while the cricketers are gearing up for the upcoming clashes, punters are watching closely and elaborating the strategies which they will apply when betting during the ICC Cricket World Cup 2019 on Sportsbet.io.

Pakistan – Afghanistan

The game took place on May 24 at the County Ground in Bristol. Afghanistan celebrated the victory over the Pakistani national team by 3 wickets with the final score being 263-7 to 262, 49.4 and 47.5 overs respectively. This game marked the continuation of the pitiful losing streak of Pakistan which now amounts to 11 consecutive games.

Despite Babar Azam delivering the 108-ball 112, Afghanistan turned it into a prime showing of how discipline and coordinated teamplay provides for a favorable result. Hazratullah Zazai hit 49 at the initial stage of the game with Mohammad Nabi contributing another 34 to seal a confident victory which showed that Afghanistan is the force to be considered during the ICC World Cup.

Sri-Lanka – South Africa

The second game kicked off the same day at the Sophia Gardens in the capital of Wales. Sri Lanka prepared for the game in good spirits, having won the previous match against Scotland thus putting their lingering losing streak to an end.

However, their optimism was short-lived as the Proteas have once again proved to be a very uncomfortable opponent for the Lions as their last meeting, which happened in March within the framework of the ODI series, ended in a 5-0 thrashing of the South Asian team. Apparently, they did not learn from that lesson since South Africa has once again enjoyed a comfortable victory by as much as 87 runs that will definitely boost their morale prior to the first Cup game against England on May 30.

England – Australia

This was the grand repetition to the official World Cup game that is due to happen on June 25 at Lord’s in London. The match, which gathered an immense crowd at the Rose Bowl in Southampton, has left the fans disappointed as Australian manager decided to leave three key players: Starc, Maxwell, and Cummings, out of action and fielded 12 players.

The English team was battered by the injuries of Morgan, Rashid, Wood, Roy, Dawson, and Archer – a disaster indeed. Nevertheless, the game proved to be fairly amusing as Jos Butler getting half century while Steve Smith bagged a hundred. Australia scored 297 runs to overcome England by a small margin of 12.

India – New Zealand

On May 25, another World Cup favorites went head-to-head at Kennington Oval in a game which the Kiwis won by 6 wickets whilst having 12.5 extra overs. New Zealand didn’t have to go above and beyond to score 180 runs while India struggled despite putting up seven bowlers and striking a searing yorker early in the game, credit to Jasprit Bumrah. Unfortunately for the Men in Blue, Bhuvneshwar Kumar has set the teammates’ efforts down the drain by conceding 27 runs in all of his overs and having a sub-par overall performance. Mohammed Shami has also disappointed India supporters after bowling the pathetic four overs.

As for New Zealand, their victory has been inspired by Kane Williamson and Ross Taylor as both have made 114 runs to the third wicket, which marked the 50+ partnership for these two cricketers.

India has little time before the next warm-up game against Bangladesh, which will take place on Tuesday in Cardiff, to ponder on the mistakes, especially the one that concerns them playing against the moving ball. That is of course if they ever hope of getting to the World Cup final, let alone win the competition.

South Africa – West Indies

The match in Bristol was called off shortly after its commencement because of the heavy rain. South Africa was the only team that batted this day, reaching 95 runs, courtesy of Amla and De Kock, playing 12.4 overs. West Indies will put their playing skills on display in the next warm-up game against New Zealand.

 Pakistan – Bangladesh

The weather in Bristol was also unsuitable for cricket as the match was canceled without a ball bowled.



from Cricket Web http://bit.ly/2Kj99SW

Monday, May 27, 2019

Fantasy Cricket – Cricket World Cup 2019

We are pleased to announce that we will be offering cash prizes for our upcoming World Cup 2019 Fantasy Cricket competition which starts in a couple of days.

Cricket Web’s Fantasy Cricket

If there are more than 1,500 teams registered we will offer:

1st Prize – USD$100
2nd Prize – USD$75
3rd Prize – USD$25

Start inviting your friends and family and be into win some great cash prizes! Payments will be made via PayPal and if you don’t have a PayPal account we will offer the money through an Amazon gift voucher.



from Cricket Web http://bit.ly/2XhdXw9

England are perfectly positioned to win World Cup says Root

The hosts of a World Cup, whatever sport it may be, are always in a challenging position when asked about their chances of going all the way on home soil when they are the favourites. Do you go full out on the offensive and robustly justify your claim to the trophy or do you talk down your chances in the hope that actions will speak louder than words?

There’s probably no right or wrong answer but the ultimate goal has to be a mixture of unwavering confidence with a sprinkling of humility as you set out to win the hearts and minds of the neutrals. For England, there really is no better time for them to win their first ever World Cup now that they are on home soil and also in sensational form.

 
 
 
 

That was the opinion of Joe Root, at least, as he carried out media duty on behalf of the England team. The 28-year-old told the BBC that the Three Lions are in the best position to lift the World Cup now that they have the strongest squad that they have had in years – you can watch the video at https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/av/cricket/48216455. There’s absolutely nothing to disagree with there, as Root has hit the nail on the head with regards to the English team and the momentum that they have been able to build since the dark days in Australia four years previously.

After a disastrous World Cup campaign in 2015 where England were knocked out in the group stages by Bangladesh, as reported on in an article from The Guardian at https://www.theguardian.com/, the ECB decided that a complete overhaul was needed. It started with the sacking of coach Peter Moores which saw England’s conservative and dated approach to ODI cricket also make a timely departure. Since then, the brand of cricket that has been played has seen England move streets ahead of their international competition.

This change of direction since 2015 has Trevor Bayliss’ men currently sitting at the top of the ODI rankings and more than deserving of their tag as favourites heading into the World Cup, something punters can see when they visit https://www.paddypower.com/cricket/icc-cricket-world-cup. Never has an English team gone into a World Cup at odds of 9/4 to win and it has to be said, this is a golden opportunity for the Three Lions to enjoy an unforgettable summer by winning their maiden World Cup title.

The atmosphere may not reach fever pitch like it did when the men’s football team reached the semifinals of the World Cup in Russia last year, but there will be considerable interest from the English public should Root and co. prove their worth in the tournament.

There’s never been a better time to showcase the game of cricket in England with the host nation in a great position to retain a captive audience even after the tournament ends, thanks to the style of cricket they have adopted. England may be perfectly positioned to win the World Cup according to Joe Root and he is right, but they are also ideally placed to charm the nation over a hot 2019 summer.



from Cricket Web http://bit.ly/2YTmtlo

Saturday, May 25, 2019

England v India In Print

India toured England for the first Time as a Test playing country in 1932. There is one book on the tour, which had but a single Test, All-India Cricketers’ Tour 1932 being published in Madras by “Three Stumps”. That is all I can report as I have never seen a copy. Thanks to Gulu Ezekiel we did at one point have a copy in our sights but, sadly, it turned out to be incomplete and our interest cooled. It is a series that much interests Gulu, so any publisher who finds the idea attractive might well meet with a favourable response if they put a proposal to him.

England’s visit to India in 1933/34 under the captaincy of Douglas Jardine went almost unnoticed at the time, but Brian Heald published Jardine’s Last Tour in 2010. To be fair it is not a particularly exciting book, but is nonetheless a valuable record of a trip that, perhaps, looks rather more interesting with hindsight than it did at the time.

According to Padwick’s Bibliography of Cricket PH Seervai contributed Cricket Comments to the literature of the game on the subject of the Indians’1936 visit to England. That one is a book I do have a copy of, and a very odd little thing it is too. Taken up in some ways with the events of the tour, the book is nothing like a traditional tour account.

India were England’s first visitors after the war when, in 1946, former England player the Nawab of Pataudi Senior led what was still ‘All India’ in a three Test series. Indian Summer was the first of many tour books from the pen of John Arlott and whilst not common copies do turn up from time to time. Rather trickier to find is LN Mathur’s The Fight for the Rubber, a book that was published in India.

In 1951/52 England visited India, Lancashire skipper Nigel Howard leading what was very much a second string side. The series was drawn 1-1 and the only two books of the tour were published in India, one by Mathur and the other by NS Phadke. Both are tricky to find, and expensive for the relatively slim paperbacks that they are.

The Indian delight at winning their first Test against England  did not last long as the party who made the return trip in 1952 were blown away by Fred Trueman. Again English publishers showed no interest and only Raju Bharatan, with Rivals in the Sun, published a book in India. The book doesn’t look much, but is a decent account and, for some reason, seems rather easier and less expensive to track down than the two accounts of the previous tour.

The 1959 Indians had a chastening experience as they became and are likely to remain the only touring side to suffer a 5-0 reverse in England. The writers stayed well away, other than Arlott who featured the series in his Cricket Journal 2.

England visited India in 1961/62 and lost 2-0. There would never have been any expectation of an English book, but it is a surprise no Indian publisher felt it worthwhile to publish an account of the tour. Two winters later it was off  to India again for England. This time all five Tests were drawn, but there was a book, or at least half of one, Rusi Modi’s Cricket Forever, and a very good book it is too.

In 1967 England entertained and beat India again with some ease, but the Indians next visit was very different. Led by Ray Illingworth and fresh from winning back the Ashes in Australia for the first time since the ‘Bodyline’ tour of 1932/33 England would not have expected the 1971 Indians to extend them. In the event Ajit Wadekar’s side, with a little help from the weather, avoided defeat in the first two Tests before Chandra’s match winning spell at the Oval brought a famous series victory. There were no UK published books but in India Sunder Rajan celebrated his country’s win with the unimaginatively titled India v England 1971.

There was no Illingworth in India in 1972/73, nor John Snow, Geoffrey Boycott or John Edrich. The Indians won again, and Rajan published another small paperback, The Hat Trick, a title referencing also the famous Indian victory in the Caribbean that had preceded the 1971 trip to England.

After losing somewhat ignominiously to Clive Lloyd’s West Indies in 1976 Tony Greig took his England team to India and a solid performance saw him return with a 3-0 victory to his credit. Following the tour was Christopher Martin-Jenkins, and his MCC in India 1976/77 was published after the side’s return. For anyone wanting a more Indian centred account New Delhi based ‘Dicky’ Rutnager wrote Test Commentary; A Diary of India vs England 1976/77.

India visited England in 1982 with Pakistan. Both of the subcontinental sides were beaten and there was a book to celebrate with. The previous summer Alan Ross had added his peerless prose to a selection of Patrick Eagar’s photographs of ‘Botham’s Ashes’ and the result had been a great success. Summer of the All-Rounder was the title of the 1982 effort.

To show just how strong the mid 1980s West Indians were David Gower’s men went off to India after their 5-0 humiliation at home in 1984 and won. There was a solitary account of the trip from England’s off spinning all-rounder Vic Marks; Marks out of XI.

The second blackwash, in 1985/86, did not have the same galvanising when India came to England in 1986 however. That summer was a grim one for the home side as they lost series to both India and New Zealand. By definition a far from memorable season for England there is a record for posterity in another Eagar/Ross effort; Summer of Suspense.

In 1990 Boundary Books published Gooch’s Golden Summer, a very nice limited edition written by Bill Frindall and including reproductions of his scoresheets from the Tests against India, including that containing the England skipper’s 333. A rather less ambitious project was Joy of a Lifetime, Harsha Bhogle’s account of the same series.

After losing at home to Pakistan in 1992 England then travelled to India for three Tests, and lost all three, as well one in Sri Lanka. Unsurprisingly a couple of Indian writers went into print. Chandra Senan wittily called his book Spin Washed and Kumble Dried. Syed Parvez Qaiser was more predictable, his title being England Tour of India 1992/93.

Nearly thirty years on we are, surprisingly, yet to see any further tour books devoted solely to matches between England and India although, inevitably, the many Tests that have been played are widely covered in biographies, autobiographies and books of a more general nature, particularly Wisden which, since 2013, has had an Indian incarnation as well.

And finally, having mentioned a similar volume at the end of Part 2 of my post on South African tours I will mention Samuel Canynge Caple’s England v India 1886-1959, which covers all the Tests played by the two countries up to and including the 1952 series, and a similar book published in India by SK Roy following the 1946 tour of England, India – England Cricket Visits, 1911- 1946.



from Cricket Web http://bit.ly/2YP9Pnq

Friday, May 24, 2019

The Story of an Essex Fast Bowler

Even now 6’ 5’’ is tall, and in the 1930s it meant the owner of that frame was almost a giant. Ken Farnes was one such. Born in 1911 in Leytonstone in Essex his was a middle class upbringing and he was an exceptionally gifted schoolboy sportsman. He became an international cricketer, bowling fast for Essex and England, but he was a fine all-round athlete, gaining an Athletics blue at Cambridge for the shot putt, as well as for cricket. As a schoolboy he set records in the high jump and long jump.

His school days over this intelligent young man worked briefly in insurance, and then banking, the tedium of both of which eventually led, in May 1930, to his taking in a day at the Australians tour match at Leyton. He didn’t go back and instead decided to go to Cambridge University to study History and Geography. On completing his degree Farnes went into teaching and, until he joined the RAF in 1940, was a master at Worksop College.

As well as making the momentous decision to abandon his banking career Farnes also made his First Class debut in 1930. An opening bowler he was genuinely fast, in the opinion of many the only Englishman, Harold Larwood apart, who merited that description between the wars for any length of time. The tall Essex amateur worshipped Larwood, who he described as a demon of destruction to batsmen, with all the concentrated antagonism that a fast bowler should have.

Speed apart there was little similarity between Farnes and Larwood. Almost a foot in height was the first difference, and they had vastly different backgrounds. Unlike Larwood’s glorious long approach to the wicket Farnes adopted a much shorter run up, just eleven paces, and appeared to amble up to the wicket, his pace being generated by the arm speed and body turn and, to a certain extent, by his mood. The much higher trajectory was inevitable a major difference between the pair, but both men relied on more than mere speed, both being capable of moving the ball both ways.

On debut Farnes failed to take a wicket, but he took 5-36 against Kent in his second match and was a model of consistency after that, always taking wickets at a modest cost and ending up with a career total of 690 at 21.45. He only had three summers that were anything approaching full seasons, those when he was at Cambridge between 1931 and 1933. After graduating he was able to play only during the school holidays, save for the occasional brief release for Tests against Australia or to appear for the Gentlemen against the Players.

The years of 1932 and 1933 are momentous ones in cricket history. In the Australian summer Douglas Jardine’s England unleashed on Australia the fast leg theory bowling that rapidly became known as Bodyline, and the Ashes series in which it was used remains the most talked about and written about in the game’s history. At just 21 when the touring party was selected Farnes did not expect to be chosen, in his own words he was certainly not ripe for it, but he is a small part of the story nonetheless.

In his 1940 autobiography, Tours and Tests, Farnes wrote, of 1932; That was in the bad old days when bumping the ball was in vogue as a technique. The comment suggests, that at that stage at least, Farnes had come to disapprove of Bodyline. The point was made as a preliminary observation before Farnes related a story of an encounter with Yorkshire pace bowler Bill Bowes. The pair cannot have known each other well, and had certainly not played in the same First Class match prior to Bowes appearing for the MCC against Cambridge University at Lord’s in 1932. Nonetheless the two were sufficiently acquainted to have a conversation about field placings for the short pitched delivery whilst walking to the ground from St John’s Wood tube station during the match. Bowes was so enthusiastic about the subject that he even drew a diagram for Farnes to illustrate his point.

The MCC had the better of a draw in their match with Cambridge, with neither Farnes nor Bowes making a spectacular contribution. The students stayed in London as the next game at Lord’s was the 1932 Varsity match against Oxford, in those days one still one of the highlights of the season. The game was a high scoring draw in the end with Farnes, taking 5-98, being the pick of the Cambridge bowlers. The only blemish on his bowling noted by Wisden was a tendency to bowl no balls, perhaps through striving for extra pace and bounce. In any event he must have been bowling very aggressively as he hit a few of the Oxford batsmen. Notable amongst his ‘victims’ was the South African Pieter Van der Bijl. Like Farnes Van der Bijl was a very tall man, but he was a batsman good enough to average more than 50 in the one Test series in which he played. His size meant that Van der Bijl was not quick on his feet, much like the Australian batsmen who came off worst against Harold Larwood and Bill Voce, and despite his innings only extending to seven runs, according to the watching EW ‘Jim’ Swanton Van der Bijl was struck several times by Farnes.

We know that Farnes must have been in the selectors thoughts at this stage because three weeks later he was selected to play in a match between England and The Rest, arranged for the very purpose of assisting the selectors in their deliberations. Farnes found himself opening the bowling with Larwood, put in the Rest’s side because the selectors wanted to see how their frontline batsmen shaped up against him. Unfortunately the match did not help them very much, just 79 overs being possible, all on the first day. England won the toss and batted and there was a fine innings from Duleepsinhji as Jardine’s side got to 180-3. Farnes had figures of 18-5-37-0 and Wisden described him as bowling uncommonly well without, however, meeting with any success. Unbeaten on 40 when the rain came Jardine must have had a good look at Farnes.

Shortly before Jardine’s men sailed another quick bowler was added to the party, and the man who got the nod was Bowes. Late in the season Jardine had spent plenty of time at the wicket for Surrey against Yorkshire, watching Bowes bowl so many bouncers at Jack Hobbs that the normally unflappable ‘Master’ rather lost his cool. It is inevitable that Bowes’ performance in that game would have impacted on the selection decision made, as would Farnes’ at Scarborough a couple of weeks earlier. The famous old ground at North Marine Road is not a forgiving place for any bowler whose direction falters let alone a fast one and it is likely that the rough treatment meted out to Farnes by Herbert Sutcliffe and Maurice Leyland, who at one point took 75 runs off just four of his overs, put paid to the possibility of his going to Australia.

The following English summer was an interesting one. Once the English players saw what Bodyline was attitudes began to harden against it and, given the status the match had, Farnes bowling in the Varsity match attracted much comment. Despite his later ‘bad old days’ comment Farnes was a willing participant in his captain’s plans to bowl Bodyline, and happy to accept that intimidation played a role in what he was doing. His figures in a drawn game were pretty good as well, 3-44 and 4-27, but the press were not impressed. It was not so much the principle that seemed to cause objection as the shortcomings in the way the bowling was actually delivered, The Times observing that Farnes was so inaccurate his short legs might as well have been positioned in the Mound Stand.

The public had another good look at Bodyline a couple of weeks later when Learie Constantine and Manny Martindale hurled it down at England in the second Test at Old Trafford. As at Lord’s in the Varsity match the wicket was not a fast one, so in some ways what was seen was just a shadow of what the Australians had faced. Jardine showed everyone how to deal with that sort of bowling however as he took his only Test century from the West Indies. But the tide had turned against Jardine and by the time the Australians arrived in 1934 Bodyline had, effectively, been outlawed.

1934 was never going to be easy for England. With Larwood and Voce out of the running as a result of their refusals to apologise for their bowling in Australia, Gubby Allen not available and, for the first Test, Bowes injured, the fast bowling stocks were low and Farnes lined up for a debut in the first match of the series despite having taken only five wickets in the three matches he had appeared in. Three of them were Australians, but there had been an unimpressive 1-132 in the Test trial, although there was a second victim there, skipper Bob Wyatt, whose thumb Farnes broke.

With a pace attack comprising Farnes, Leicestershire’s George Geary and the reluctant bowler Walter Hammond England lost the first Test by 238 runs. Farnes, however, had a fine debut and, had he had some support, the result may have been different. His figures were 5-102 and 5-77 and his bowling was praised by all who saw it. When he got back to school after the match he was chaired up the drive by his pupils. Retained for the second Test at Lord’s Farnes was not fully fit, having hurt his heel in the crumbling footmarks in the first Test. He failed to take a wicket, although that itself mattered little as Hedley Verity took 15 to take England to victory, but the injury was aggravated and Farnes missed the rest of the series.

When Farnes did return he took plenty of cheap wickets for Essex in the closing weeks of the summer and was rewarded with an invitation to tour West Indies with England. The College were prepared to let him go, although he would have to forego £100 of his salary. To go some way to making that up the MCC were prepared to award £25 to Farnes who decided the opportunity was one he could not miss.

The West Indians had not troubled England unduly in 1933, but it was a different story in 1934/35 when they won the series 2-1. England had not taken a full strength side, but the real problem was that there were only 14 men chosen and the team was often lopsided. Farnes strained a muscle in his neck early in the tour and the effects of it were with him throughout. He did play in two Tests, the first and last, but the injury meant he was some way below his top speed.

Looking forward to playing against South Africa in 1935 Farnes hoped his luck would change, but in fact he missed the whole season. It was a ridiculous accident that caused the problem. Out walking Farnes had a fence to negotiate, which involved utilizing a tall tree stump. Putting his left foot on that and levering himself up he damaged his knee so badly he needed surgery. Fortunately the operation went well, and although the recovery was a long one, it was also a complete one.

Still only 24 when the 1936 season began Farnes was extremely fast for the Gentlemen against the Players in the Lord’s showpiece, a match that doubled as a trial to assist the selectors to choose a side to tour Australia in 1936/37, a trip Farnes was keen to make. When term ended, having made him unavailable for the Tests against India, he also took plenty of wickets for Essex and, in the game at Taunton, came tantalisingly close to what would have been his only First Class century. He and wicketkeeper Tom Wade put on 149 for the tenth wicket and on Wade’s dismissal Farnes was left high and dry on 97. He had made 56 for Cambridge against Middlesex in 1932, but those were his only two half centuries and a career batting average of 8.32 tells its own story.

In Australia Farnes had a mixed time. He did not do enough to get into the side for the first Test, unexpectedly won by England. When the second Test was won as well the side was fixed until, for the fourth, there were concerns over an injury to Voce. The Notts left armer played but, to provide some cover, so did Farnes. He bowled pretty well, and took a couple of wickets in each innings but couldn’t stop Bradman making the second innings double century that carried Australia to victory.

The final Test was reminiscent of Farnes’ debut. It was a crushing Australian victory by an innings and 200 runs as they completed their comeback from 2-0 down. The Australians totalled 604 in their innings, Bradman scoring 169 before being bowled by Farnes, one of six victims for him. His final haul of 6-96 was to remain his best Test performance.

For 1937 England’s visitors were New Zealand, although teaching commitments meant that Farnes was only ever going to be available for the final Test. Not for the first time by the time the game arrived he was not fully fit anyway, a side strain affecting his pace. He did play for Essex and bowled within himself but, unsurprisingly the selectors did not want to pick him on that basis. It was unfortunate as in the Gentlemen v Players fixture at Lord’s he had shown fine form, taking 5-65 and 1-28.

Only once did Farnes take a hundred wickets in a season, and that was to be in 1938. As it was an Ashes summer Worksop were happy for him to appear in all the Tests, so greater availability was part of the reason, but his season was still restricted to 19 First Class matches, in which he took 107 wickets at 18.84. Duly selected for the first Test Farnes did pretty well. On an excellent pitch at Trent Bridge England piled up 658-8 before declaring and might have won had Stan McCabe, a man who Farnes often dismissed, not recorded 232, an innings of such quality that Bradman summoned the entire team onto the pavilion balcony in order to watch it. The next best score was 51 from Bradman himself, and while McCabe could not save the follow on, he took sufficient time out of the game to ensure the draw was within easy reach. For Farnes there were figures of 4-106 in the first innings.

Moving on to Lord’s another draw followed with Farnes taking three more wickets although, surprisingly, that was not enough to keep him in the 13 for the third Test at Old Trafford. In the event it mattered little however as that match was abandoned without a ball bowled, and events at the Gentlemen v Players match shortly afterwards guaranteed that Farnes would be reinstated for the fourth Test.

The amateurs won the toss, decided to bat and got to 411 before leaving the Players with a quarter of an hour’s batting. In the event there was time for just one incident packed over from Farnes. First of all he produced a very fast delivery that leapt at Bill Edrich. The delivery brushed Edrich’s glove before hitting him on the forehead and flying to Hugh Bartlett at slip. Edrich was knocked senseless and it was several minutes before he was well enough to realise he was out. There was then another long delay before Middlesex wicketkeeper Fred Price emerged from the pavilion. He had not wanted the job of nightwatchman and was out second ball, touching another fast one from Farnes to slip. By the time Eddie Paynter got to the crease there was just time for him to block out the rest of the over. Next day there were six more wickets for Farnes, five of them bowled, to leave him with 8-43, the best return of his career. In the second innings he added three more wickets as the Gentlemen recorded a rare victory.

The fourth and fifth Tests were the two that produced results, Australia winning the fourth and, in that timeless match at the Oval England winning the fifth by the massive margin of an innings and 579 after Len Hutton’s 364. There were five wickets in each of the two matches for Farnes, who ended the series with 17 wickets at 34.17. He was England’s leading wicket taker.

What turned out to be Farnes’ final series was in South Africa in 1938/39, an immensely enjoyable tour for all concerned even if the cricket was a little disappointing, ending as it did with the notorious timeless Test, left drawn after ten days to enable England to catch their boat home. Wisden expressed disappointment in all the England bowlers, no doubt with some justification but the wickets appear to have given little encouragement and Farnes’ bare figures, 16 wickets at 32.43 do not look too bad at all, and were second only to Hedley Verity.

The trip to South Africa had meant that Farnes missed two complete terms and Worksop would not therefore allow any further leave to enable him to play any early season cricket in 1939 other than the Gents v Players fixture where, despite the Players winning comfortably enough, Farnes took 5-78 in the victors’ first innings. He then had seven matches for Essex in August, in which he did enough to end his final season with 38 wickets at 19.10.

After the outbreak of war Farnes spent another academic year at Worksop before leaving teaching in order to serve his country. He played a little cricket in 1940, one of his last matches being for a Lord’s XI against the Public Schools. Some mighty fast bowlers, and still not yet 30 Farnes was still in his prime, might have gone easy on the youngsters, but Farnes afforded them the respect of doing his best. In their first effort his 7-25, hitting the stumps six times, overwhelmed the youngsters but they put up a better display second time round, Farnes second innings figures being 3-62.

Farnes joined the RAF and trained as a pilot, largely in Canada, and returned to the UK in 1941 where he was killed on the evening of 20 October 1941 near Chipping Warden in Northamptonshire. He had been based there for a month, readying himself for the job of flying Wellington bombers. He had wanted to be a fighter pilot but his height prevented that. On the evening of his death he was taking his first unsupervised night flight as a training exercise. A landing went wrong and Farnes was killed instantly. He was single at the time of his death and had never been married, although it seems he had found his life partner, a divorcee whose only daughter went on to marry the film critic Barry Norman and who retained into old age fond memories of the man she believed would have been her step father but for that tragic night.



from Cricket Web http://bit.ly/2M4aobb

Thursday, May 23, 2019

Cricket World Cup 2019: A Run Through of The Top Contending Nations

It’s less than a week to the start of the Cricket World Cup and with all the squads now announced, it’s time to discuss the chances of the three favourites.

England

England will never get a better chance than this one to win the World Cup for the first time. As if their form, players and leadership wasn’t enough of a reason to respect them, the fact they’re on home soil is the icing on the cake. They’re certainly the team to beat according to the cricket betting markets but they’re also the team to beat according to good old common sense.

Strengths:

Batting

No side can compete with their Top 7 where Jonny Bairstow, Joe Root, Jos Buttler and skipper Eoin Morgan are their most effective players, though in truth, any one of those seven would get into just about any side in the world.

The batting power, improvisation and skill doesn’t stop there, either. With the likes of Chris Woakes, Jofra Archer and Adil Rashid in the side, they bat all the way down to 10, at the very least.

 Home Advantage

There’s probably no sport where home advantage counts as much as it does in cricket so it’s a big bonus they’re on home soil and in conditions they know so well.

A good seam attack and batsmen who enjoy playing on quite flat pitches where they can play through the line of the ball, are therefore invaluable assets to the side.

A raucous home support at grounds like Edgbaston and Old Trafford will certainly help their cause, too.

Chasing

As if a win percentage of 63% when batting first wasn’t impressive enough, how about the 74% when they’re chasing? No total seems to be big enough when they’re batting second and they seem to be at their most dangerous when knowing what their target is. They’ll chase whenever they win the toss, so opposing teams would be wise to put England in first.

Weaknesses:

Where’s the Star Death Bowler?

There’s plenty to like about their bowling attack but they might just be lacking a specialist death bowler who can bowl all of the fashionable variations: the Yorker, the slow Yorker, the ball out of the back of the hand and the full-length delivery outside the off stump. There are other sides you’d back above England to defend nine off the last over.

India

Winners the World Cup before last, winners in the Champions Trophy in 2013, finalists at the Champions Trophy in 2017; those last two played in England. Led by the inimitable Virat Kohli, they seem to have all the bases covered to go very deep indeed.

Strengths:

Top 3

Rohit Sharma and Shikhar Dhawan have been statistically the most effective opening partnership in ODI cricket over the past four years. Particularly punishing on anything short and wide outside the off stump or anything heading towards leg stump, they can take the game away from you in a flash and love scoring big hundreds rather than getting to their landmark and then just getting out. No-one in history has more ODI double-centuries than Sharma.

Your reward for getting one of them out? Virat Kohli arrives at the crease, the Number 1 ranked batsman in the world, no less.

Spinners

 England isn’t the first place in the world you’d think of where spinners are particularly effective but it promises to be a warm, dry summer and that will play into the hands of the spinners.

And there’s no shortage of quality twirlers in the India side. Kuldeep Yadav caused England’s batsmen no shortage of problems last summer over here, Yuzvendra Chahal is a class act and the spinning all-rounder Ravindra Jadeja is a big threat with his darts and ‘straight ones’ that bring LBW and bowled into the equation on almost every delivery. The hard bit is deciding who plays alongside Yadav.

Even if they’re not taking bundles of wickets, their ability to keep things tight in the middle overs is priceless.

Jasprit Bumrah’s Variations

What England wouldn’t give to have this guy in their team. Now he really is a world-class death bowler who seems to bowl six different balls an over at the death and makes lower-order batsmen wonder what’s just hit them. Even proper batsmen struggle to get him away in the final overs thanks to his variations.

Weaknesses

No 4

India missed a trick by not picking the exciting Rishabh Pant in their squad. He would have been perfect as an aggressive number four who can turn the game back India’s way when they’re behind or kick a team when they’re down.

It means that either Kedar Jadhav, KL Rahul or Vijay Shankar will bat there and none of those three are in the same class as other Number 4s in the tournament. Rahul is an excellent batsman coming off the back of an impressive IPL but he’s an opener who might be asked to bat there, rather than a natural in that position.

Australia

The defending champions have been through quite a lot over the last year, mostly due to the Sandpapergate affair. Though results have been much better of late, we’ll have to wait and see whether the recalls of Steve Smith and David Warner are the best decision they made… or the worst.

Strengths

Pace bowlers

A trio of pace bowlers in Mitchell Starc, Pat Cummins and Nathan Coulter-Nile will be the envy of many. Games are often won and lost in the first 10 overs and right there are three bowlers perfectly suited to English conditions, who can make huge dents in opponent’s scorecards.

Smith and Warner

Warner reminded us all in the IPL in March/April just what Australia missed for the past year. Smith wasn’t quite as impressive in that tournament but few players in world cricket can compete with either of their ODI records. With a point to prove, these two could pile on tonnes of runs and get them in no time.

All-Rounders

Marcus Stoinis, with his accurate medium pace bowling and big-hitting, is one of cricket’s most under-rated players. Glenn Maxwell’s off-spin gets plenty of batsmen in a muddle while only a handful of players in world cricket can clear the boundary like he does or improvise as many shots, making it a nightmare for bowlers to know where to bowl. Their presence in the side provides plenty of balance and means that even if the top order gets out cheaply, those two can provide a serious rescue act.

Weaknesses

Smith and Warner.

Again.

Only time will tell whether calling them up was a master-stroke or a shocking one that ruined team morale. Skipper Aaron Finch did a good job of getting his side to win without them since being appointed six months ago and now has the task of integrating them in a side where there will inevitably be some animosity towards them. Not only by players who felt let down by them and their actions in Cape Town but also by those who are about to lose their places to them.



from Cricket Web http://bit.ly/2XaAfj7

Windies set for improved showing at the World Cup

One of the great cricket tragedies post-millennia has been the slow disintegration of the West Indian cricket team. Traditionalists and those who followed the great West Indian teams of the 1970s and 1980s have all watched on in disbelief as the once proud cricketing nation slumped to new lows and lost that indomitable identity that made them feared the world over.

Since the turn of the century, the West Indies haven’t made an impact at the World Cup with the Islanders failing to make it out of the group stage in 2003 and 2007. Things improved ever so slightly with quarter-final exits in 2011 and then 2015 after losing to New Zealand by 143 runs, but it probably looks slightly better on paper than it does in reality as the Windies looked limp and unconvincing.   

 
 
 

The 2007 group stage exit was a particular disappointment as the Windies were hosting the tournament and this was definitely seen as a time that could spark the revival of West Indian cricket. It wasn’t to be and for years the Islanders would spend time in the wilderness as their best players opted for the lucrative pull of the T20 circus instead of reporting for international duty.

It would take Jason holder’s appointment as West Indies captain for the tide to begin to turn but it has been a painstakingly slow process that mercifully for Windies fans, has now begun to pay handsome dividends. Winning the 2016 T20 World Cup final in India was a result that reminded the world that they weren’t the spent force many had them down as, but many wanted to see more, particularly in the Test arena as that would show if the discipline had truly returned to the Windies setup.

The start of 2019 would see Holder lead his side in a thrashing of England on home soil and provide the long-suffering West Indies fans with some thoroughly deserved joy. It was this Test series victory that suggests that the Windies are beginning to work as a team once more and not solely rely on a few individuals to get the job done which could well mean an improved showing at the World Cup.

Punters may raise an eyebrow or two at that, especially the ones monitoring the cricket tips from Betfair who have seen the Windies at odds of 15/1 to win the tournament, and to a certain extent, it will be an unbelievably hard job just to make the semi-finals but momentum is now on the side of the Islanders.

Sooner or later it is going to click for the Windies at the World Cup and they will blow away the opposition as they did in days gone by.

What’s more, is that they do like it when the World Cup is played in England as they have won it twice when the event is staged there. That may be a stretch this time around but they will certainly not be the whipping boys anymore and may in actual fact, do a bit of whipping themselves.



from Cricket Web http://bit.ly/2EsKWGg

Sunday, May 19, 2019

Alan Ross – Cricketer, Poet, Journalist, Publisher and Author

There have always been cricket writers who played the game at the highest level, and some of them proved to be equally outstanding with a pen in their hand. Richie Benaud and Michael Atherton are two obvious examples, but there are many more. In this day and age most sports journalists and authors who did not play professionally have studied journalism in institutes of higher education. And then the internet has brought with it a whole new school of writers, those of us who can see that the living that can be made from writing about sport is too elusive, or insufficiently regular or substantial. We therefore stick at other professions and freely give our thoughts to the world, motivated to do so by a combination of pleasure of writing and, of course, a degree of vanity.

However it hasn’t always been so, and in days gone by many writers came from more varied backgrounds and Alan Ross, one of my personal favourites, is one such. The cricketing bibliography of Ross is fairly brief, but he is responsible for some of the finest examples of the forgotten genre that is the old-fashioned tour account. In addition he wrote one biography, and also edited a famous anthology of the work of his old friend, Raymond Robertson-Glasgow, Crusoe on Cricket. There were also, over the years, travel books, volumes of poetry and autobiographies.

A few pieces in an anthology of his own work apart I have only ever read Ross’s cricketing output. Maybe one day I will look at some of his other work, but his cricket writing alone represents an impressive oeuvre. The classic tour accounts are Australia ’55, Cape Summer, Through the Caribbean, Australia ’63 and The West Indies at Lord’s, although it should be added that in a series of books through the 1980s Ross added a commentary to publications designed to showcase the photographic skills of Patrick Eagar.

The story of Alan Ross began in India in 1922. He was born in Calcutta, as it then was, to a father who had emigrated from Clydeside and a mother from a family who had been in India for several generations. They must have been an important family as one of his mother’s forebears had been Governor of the Punjab. One of Ross’s obituarists made the interesting observation that by the 1920s the exotic ancestry had slithered into general extravagance and decline, manifested in drink, good living, Afghan horse dealing and women. Ross himself wrote in later life that I inherited from my father a love of racehorses, cigars and whisky.

India introduced Ross to cricket but although he, apparently, spoke fluent Hindi as a child he seems not to have returned to the country for any length of time after the age of seven, at which point he was sent to England to be educated. Initially he was based in Cornwall during school holidays, but latterly in Sussex where he spent much time at the County Ground in Hove developing a lifelong attachment to the county, who he once described as a raffish club always, in keeping with Regency Brighton, often in the dumps, but sometimes a shooting star.

After leaving school Ross went up to Oxford to study modern languages. He only stayed a year before joining the Royal Navy. It seems Ross was not enthused by the world of academia and the year he did spend in Oxford was largely consumed with pursuing outside interests, including earning blues for cricket and squash. The significance of that of course is that it demonstrates Ross was a decent cricketer, and had it not been war time he would certainly have been a First Class one.

The exigencies of the conflict meant that the Varsity Match in 1941, played as always at Lord’s, was a one day affair, and with a duck from number nine and no wickets in his five overs Ross did not leave his mark on the famous fixture. He was a seam bowler, from what I have read more Alec Bedser than Frank Tyson in pace and, by all accounts, not a keen fielder. Despite that failure in his one major fixture Ross clearly had some ability with the bat as in a match a month before his Lord’s appearance, when representing Northamptonshire against Leicestershire, he had opened the batting and, with 19, been joint top scorer in a disappointing all out total of 57. Leicestershire passed that total with their openers still at the crease and therefore won by ten wickets, but they carried on batting to entertain the crowd. The top class New Zealander Stewie Dempster passed his century, but did eventually become Ross’s only victim with the ball.

War was to prove one of the themes that was frequently chosen for Ross’s poetry. He spent much of his time in the services in one of the grimmer and least glamorous theatres of the conflict, protecting the North Atlantic convoys.  Ross’s experiences in the Navy inspired a considerable part of the body of poetry for which, the more so than his cricket writing, he was to become known by many.

Once peace returned Ross married Jennifer Fry, a member of the family who owned the eponymous chocolatiers. In the years that followed Ross had cause to be grateful to his wife’s means, something that allowed him to take over The London Magazine, which he edited from 1961 until his death in 2001. The Ross/Fry marriage was a long one although eventually, in 1978, the couple separated and later divorced.

Ross was soon appointed to the staff of The Observer. Initially he was a soccer writer, and it comes as no surprise to learn that he was a Tottenham Hotspur supporter. That position lasted until 1953 when, on the retirement of Robertson-Glasgow he became the paper’s cricket correspondent, a position he held for two decades.

The London Magazine is still with us. It is a literary review that can trace its origins back to 1732. Under Ross’s control it shortened its name to London Magazine and broadened its base to cover the arts more generally. Books were published as well and, just once as far as I can see, a cricket title was amongst them. The book was a biography of a great Sussex bowler by a great Sussex enthusiast, Maurice Tate by Gerald Brodribb.

In time, in 1983, Ross himself wrote a biography. Again the subject was a Sussex great, Ranji. It is a fine book, by a distance the second best biography of the Jam Sahib that has been written. The romantic in me would like to say it is the best, but the reality is that Simon Wilde’s 1991 book Ranji: A Genius Rich and Strange, shades it for that particular accolade.

One factor in Ross’s appeal is the welcome absence of any of the sort of the ‘it was better in my day’ type of writing that has a tendency to bedevil many writers of every generation as they pass middle age. This is demonstrated by Ross’s own summary of his craft; the challenge for a writer is to convey the music of the game, a sweetly-timed cover drive by David Gower, or a long defence-splitting pass by Glenn Hoddle, without neglecting its nuts and bolts. One might reasonably have expected Ross’s classic examples to be men like Len Hutton, Stanley Matthews or Danny Blanchflower, rather than the likes of Gower and Hoddle.

Hutton was amongst Ross’s great favourites as, from rather different backgrounds, were Peter May and Colin Cowdrey. Ross was from a generation who enjoyed cavalier cricket, but still revered the dogged struggles that Test cricket provided;  In the whole picture the defiance of a Trevor Bailey is often as important as the heroics of an Ian Botham, that wholly adventurous superstar, half charlatan, half avenging angel, who hit sixes with glorious abandon, took wickets with the most harmless seeming of deliveries, and who proved, ultimately, endearingly vulnerable.

Foremost amongst Ross’s other qualities was how sharp his observation was. In South Africa in 1956/57, one of the tours he covered for The Observer, Ross witnessed the international swansong of Denis Compton, for many the most gifted English batsman of his generation. Ross had seen Compton at his unorthodox best on many occasions, and his description of the 1956/57 edition facing Hugh Tayfield is a haunting one; tied to his crease like a dog in a kennel by mercilessly accurate off spin, I could sense the mind straining to escape but the legs were moored.

I shall end with what is certainly one of my favourite pieces of Ross’s writing, the more impressive because he was already 75 when he wrote it. In his description of West Indian Curtley Ambrose he demonstrates once more that he is not a writer to pass judgment on a man on the strength of the era in which he played; he begins his run, high stepping like a show pony, arms and legs struggling for priority. Mouth like a slice of cut papaya, teeth like a keyboard, he glares down the pitch as if sighting Van Diemen’s land from the bridge of a frigate. His gaze goes far beyond the batsman, a treasure to be located on a tropical isle, if only he can find it.

Cricket Books of Alan Ross

Tour Accounts

Australia 55                                 (A v E 1954/55)

Cape Summer and the Australians in England                (E v A 1956 and SA v E 1956/57)

Through the Caribbean              (WI v E 1959/60)

Australia ’63                               (A v E 1962/63)

The West Indies at Lords           (E v WI 1963)

Biography

Ranji   (1983)

With Patrick Eagar

A Summer to Remember   (E v A 81)

Summer of the All-rounder  (E v P and E v I 82)

Summer of Speed  (A v E 82/83)

Kiwis and Indians  (E v NZ and 1983 World Cup)

An Australian Summer (E v A 85)

Summer of Suspense (E v NZ and E v I 86)

West Indian Summer (E v WI 88)

Tour of Tours (E v A 89)

As Editor

Cricketer’s Companion   (an anthology that went through a number of editions and publishers)

Crusoe on Cricket           (an anthology of Robertson-Glasgow)

Green Fading Into Blue   (an anthology of Ross’s own work)



from Cricket Web http://bit.ly/2VyZl9B

Friday, May 17, 2019

ICC Cricket World Cup 2019 – England or India

On 14 July we’ll find out the 2019 ICC World Cup winners at Lord’s. Will it be the hosts? Will it be India who host the next one? It’s going to be a great tournament with plenty of twists and turns, but, as always, there can only be one victor. India are in fact second favourites behind England to go all the way. If you fancy putting a bet on them to win it, make sure you use legal indian betting sites only. Everything’s safe a secure that way.

Both sides are in decent form as we head into an exciting couple of months. Let’s talk about their chances…

England’s Chances

For a start, this could well be the best, and maybe, last chance for England to win the 50 over World Cup. This is because the ECB have decided to do away with the 50 over game. Well, not completely, but it’s being downgraded essentially. We’ll see what happens with that, but don’t expect England to be competing at the top in future World Cups if what everyone thinks will happen happens.

Anyway, England’s chances. They’re good to be completely honest. After sneaking past Ireland and playing ok against Pakistan, it’s difficult to find anyone who can come close to England on their day. If they’re on top of their game, they should make the final at the very least.

England are top of the one-day rankings, and, at the time of writing, have not lost an ODI series since June 2017. It will probably come down to the batting prowess of Root, Buttler, Bairstow and Morgan as to whether they’ll do the home fans proud or not. All four are in the top 20 ICC rankings, and their form will probably determine England’s success in this tournament.

India’s Chances

They’ve won it twice before, and they’ll come very close again this year if they bring their A game. Cricket is the most popular sport in India, which is why they keep producing so many talented individuals. Who are the best two ODI batsmen in the world at the moment? Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli. Who’s the number one ODI bowler in the world right now? Jasprit Bumrah. Three names that will strike fear into any side if they’re playing well. These three guys can win the World Cup alone for India, so they’ll certainly be looking at them to produce the goods.

In the last two ICC Champions Trophies held in England, India fell short as runners up. However, this experience proves that they are more than capable of coping with the conditions in England for this tournament. Write them off at your peril.

England vs India

Edgbaston is the venue for this matchup at the end of June. This might give us an idea of how the final will pan out if both sides get there. However, it’s worth noting that India have a better record when it comes to matches against England at Edgbaston. In the last two meetings in Birmingham between the two sides, India have won both. Let’s not forget, though, that England have won the last two ODI’s against India, which is what really matters as this is, after all, an ODI tournament.

Although it was a test match, England prevailed over India 4-1 last year too in a five-game series. So it could be argued that the hosts have the psychological advantage ahead of June’s matchup. At the time of writing, there’s still some time before the two sides meet, so who knows what injuries could crop up. They will play a significant part in this tournament that’s for sure. Can either side cope with losing one of their star players? Arguably not.

Taking everything into consideration for the 2019 ICC Cricket World Cup, it’s difficult to separate either side with so much talent in both squads. Home advantage could well be the deciding factor. Enjoy it, it’s going to be a cracking tournament and a great final whoever makes it.



from Cricket Web http://bit.ly/2WYHU3y

Sunday, May 12, 2019

England v South Africa in Print – Part 2

When peace returned after the end of World War Two the South Africans were next in England in 1947, a glorious summer in which legend has it the sun never stopped shining, and Denis Compton and Bill Edrich never stopped scoring runs. England won the Test series 3-0 before huge and enthusiastic crowds. Paper was still in short supply, but John Arlott published Gone to the Cricket, and twenty years later reprised the series in a new book, Vintage Summer.

In 1948/49 Arlott accompanied the first post war England tourists to South Africa. Apartheid was deeply offensive to Arlott’s liberal values and he never returned to the Cape, but he did write Gone With the Cricketers, the only account of a series in which George Mann emulated his father by leading England to a series victory.

The normal pattern of tours was then interrupted as the next two series both took place in England, in 1951 and 1955. South African cricket was at a low ebb in 1951 and they duly lost that series 2-1, but not before a heroic performance from Dudley Nourse took the first Test. The only account of the series in book form came from South African journalist Cyril Medworth. Noursemen in England is an interesting and well written account.

By 1955 the wartime paper restrictions were gone and tour books were in vogue. In an exciting series England went 2-0 up, were pegged back and then won the final Test to take the series 3-2. Peter May led England for the first time and his opposite number was Jack Cheetham. There were as many as three books on the series. Cheetham’s own I Declare is probably the best, but Norman Cutler’s Behind the South African Tests and Bruce Harris’s England Versus South Africa 1955 were also published.

The next English visit to South Africa came in 1956/57, and another exciting series saw England go 2-0 in front before being pegged back. There were four books this time. Two were by South Africans, player Roy McLean and writer Charles Fortune. On the English side EW ‘Jim” Swanton went into print, but by a distance the best account came from Alan Ross, Cape Summer and the Australians in England a book which,as its title suggests, deals with the 1956 Ashes summer as well.

By 1960 Tour books were on the wane, but there were still three on the subject of South Africa’s disappointing 3-0 defeat that summer. The contribution from a South African player was from John Waite, and his countryman Charles Fortune also wrote an account of the series. The best account was from Arlott, whose Cricket Journal 3 is a wide ranging and interesting account.

By the end of the 1960s, by which time the South Africans were all but lost to Test cricket, the Springboks were an immensely powerful side. They were well on the way to becoming that when England visited in 1964/65 and, to the surprise of some, secured a 1-0 victory. No English writer went into print with a tour book, but Fortune did, as did former star batsman Jackie McGlew.

In 1965 the South Africans came to England for the second part of the first ever twin tour English summer and, thanks to a famous innings from Graeme Pollock, had their revenge for the defeat a few months earlier. There was no book on the tour and, sadly, that proved to be that. England were due to tour South Africa in 1968/69, but the D’Oliveira Affair put a stop to that and, although it took a long time for the MCC to accept it, the 1970 South African tour of England was never going to happen. They aren’t tour books of course, but on that topic two contemporary books, Peter Hain’s Don’t Play With Apartheid and Derek Humphry’s The Cricket Conspiracy are both well worth a read.

And that was that until, in 1994, the new rainbow nation visited these shores for their first Tests against England for 29 years. With a thumping victory for the visitors in the first of the three matches, and Devon Malcolm’s astonishing spell that tied the series at the Oval a tour book might have created some interest and indeed there was one, published in South Africa and written by pace bowler Fanie De Villiers – the problem with it is it is written in Afrikaans.

And that, realistically, is it. A Year On – Hansie and the Boys by Rod Hartman deals in part with the South Africans visit to England in 1998, and Graeme Smith’s A Captain’s Diary 2007-2009 contains an account of South Africa’s visit a decade on. A particularly tenuous one, of that ilk, is Alec Stewart’s diary of the 1998/99 Ashes tour which, when it was released in paperback a year later, had added to it a chapter dealing with England’s 1999/2000 trip to South Africa. Those apart anyone interested in recent series will have too look at Wisden, The Cricketer and other periodicals or the autobiographies of those concerned.

Finally I will make mention of one slightly different book, The Springboks at Cricket, by Samuel Canynge Caple, published in 1960. In a bulky book Canynge Caple takes an extended look at every Test played between the two countries to the end of the 1956/57 series, including therefore those tours looked at in Part 1 of this article which otherwise do not have a record in print.



from Cricket Web http://bit.ly/2vS5y6f

Tuesday, May 7, 2019

ICC World Cup 2019 predictions: England, South Africa, and West Indies

England

England are listed as favourites despite having never previously won the Cricket World Cup trophy. This is not entirely surprising as the England cricket team is currently the world’s top ranked men’s ODI team. The bookmarkers around world have England slightly ahead of India at present, with the Australians next in the betting. With betting odds of 3.60, they are the present favourites to win the Cricket World Cup this summer on their home soil.

Strengths: Much better line-up than in previous competitions, aggressive brand of cricket, victories in UAE, Australia, New Zealand, and West Indies.

Key players: Bairstow, Roy, Root, Morgan, Strokes, Buttler, and Ali. Eoin Morgan stands as England’s top scorer in ODI history, Ben Stroke is celebrated as both, hard-hitter and run accumulator. Further, Jos Buttler is known as a destructive batsman, especially in the death overs of anyone in the world while Ali has all the skills to bat in the top 4 for any international side.

*Betting odds: 3.60

World Cup 2019 Prediction: Semi-finalists

You can find all the latest bookmaker offers for cricket world cup betting here on betopin.com

South Africa

The South African Cricket Team were perhaps the best team in 1992. However, the team has never won the Cricket World Cup trophy. The team had a heart-stopping semi-final loss against New Zealand in 2015 Cricket World Cup. So, are they worth betting on this time around? Well the team has some great all-rounder players, vital strength, and high-hopes to win the 2019 World Cup.

Strengths: Brilliant batting order, the fittest, the most talented, and one of the best-balanced line-ups in the world.

Key players: Aiden Markram, Kagiso Rabada, Faf du Plessis (one of the shrewdest brains and does not craks under pressure), Imran Tahir, Batting order: Quinton de Kock, Aiden Markram, Hashim Amla, JP Duminy, and David Miller. All-rounders: Chris Morris and Andile Phehlukwayo. Bowling unit: Kagiso Rabada, Lungi Ngidi, Dale Steyn, Imran Tahir, and Tabraiz Shamsi (capable of destroying any lineup)

*Betting Odds: 9.00

World Cup 2019 Prediction: Semi-finalists

West Indies

Cricket fans will know that the West Indies has some hope left for this World Cup as some of the ‘major’ West Indian players are expected to be back for the World Cup, and that is going to be a big boost for the team’s performance.

Strengths: Players that can easily play match-winning innings, Chris Gayle as a star player, all-rounders, good bowlers, and potential personnel with high hopes

Key players: Chris Gayle, Evin Lewis, Shimron Hetmyer, Shai Hope, Shimron Hetmyer and Darren Bravo in the middle order for the West Indies. Hope and Hetmyer are young players that have made their mark in international cricket. Rovman Powell, Andre Russell (maybe), and Jason Holder could prove to the heavy hitter, and make a big difference. On the other hand, Oshane Thomas, Kemar Roach, Obed McCoy, Devendra Bishoo, and Ashley Nurse are the bowlers that are likely to be picked in the West Indian squad.

*Betting Odds- 17.00

World Cup 2019 Prediction: 7th position

 

*Note that these are the latest odds from Betway to win the ICC Cricket World Cup 2019



from Cricket Web http://bit.ly/2H6lMyI

Sunday, May 5, 2019

The Publications of Richard Walsh

Back in 1991 West Country journalist Richard Walsh published a poem, written by John Arlott, about a famous century that Somerset opener Harold Gimblett scored on debut in 1935. There were 135 copies of the poem, 110 of them in card covers, numbered and signed by Arlott (who was to pass away later that year). The remaining 25 are case bound and additionally signed by five survivors of that famous game, played at Frome, against Essex.

Suitably encouraged by the reaction to the Gimblett project Walsh published a further 13 limited editions throughout the 1990s. They began, as befitted a man from the West Country, on the theme of county cricket in that idyllic part of England, although in due course the scope of the books expanded to cover a wider choice of subjects.

Walsh himself wrote several of the books, and his first was one of the longer essays in the series. It told the story of a County Championship match between Kent and Worcestershire in 1960, which runs to 20 pages and was published in 1995. Like the Arlott/Gimblett offering All Over in a Day appeared in two versions. The total limitation was 150, the case bound version again bearing signatures of those involved. I am not sure how many case bound copies there are, but mine is numbered 44, so I suspect it must be 50. In 1995 Walsh also penned a 24 page essay on the captain of Kent in that remarkable match, Colin Cowdrey, which appeared the same year.

The name of Alan Gibson is not revered in the way that those of Arlott, Cardus and Robertson-Glasgow are, probably as a result of the bulk of his work appearing in newspapers and magazines rather than in book form. But his writing loses nothing in comparison with such giants of cricket literature, and in 1992 Walsh published short essays by Gibson on former Gloucestershire left arm spinner Sam Cook, and the county’s left arm seamer from the 1960s and 1970s, Jack Davey.

Gibson is also credited with an essay on Dennis Silk that appeared in 1993. Silk was best known as an administrator, but was also a stylish amateur batsman for Cambridge and Sussex in the 1950s. Gibson died four years later and when he wrote for Walsh was already effectively retired as a result of the heavy toll that depression and alcoholism had taken on him. None of the Walsh published essays stand comparison with the writing from Gibson’s halcyon days, but all have their moments.

Another renowned West Country writer, David Foot, was showcased by Walsh in 1993, in an essay written about Mark Lathwell and Andy Caddick, who both made their Test debut in that summer’s Ashes series. It was the one piece of writing about contemporary players that appeared.

An early offering, in 1991, was a monograph by former Gloucestershire wicketkeeper Andy Wilson on the subject of the teammate who despised Walter Hammond, Charles Barnett. Later, in 1996, Wilson added a short essay entitled Gloucestershire Wicketkeepers. The previous year former Gloucester player, and author of a history of the county, Grahame Parker, had added to Walsh’s list 8 pages on The Graveneys.

The last of the “local” books, and at 19 pages the longest of them, West Country Umpires, appeared in 1996. Like all save the Gimblett poem and All Over in a Day it appeared in a case bound limited edition of 50 and was co-written by Peter Eeles and Sam Cook. The latter sadly died before the book appeared, so it is signed by just one of the authors.

In 1997 the only unsigned book appeared, a reprinted piece by Arlott on the subject of Wilf Wooller, effectively by way of an obituary of the man who for so long had been Glamorgan cricket personified. Of the remaining two in the set the last to appear, in 1998, was another reprinted pen portrait, this time by Tony Lewis of Trevor Bailey. The best of the lot had come in 1996, and was the irrepressible Frank Keating at the very top of his game, on the subject of a true national treasure, Denis Compton, who was to depart this mortal coil the following year.

Through the 1990s and early 2000s there was a long hiatus in my collecting habit, so I didn’t hear about any of the Walsh publications when they were new, thus I had to pick them off one by one from dealers and at auction. I never stopped to wonder why the steady flow of titles had stopped in 1998 and just assumed that Walsh had retired, or that his cricket watching by then took place on the Elysian Fields.

So it came as a bit of shock to me to see a book appear on eBay in 2014 that looked at first glance to have the mark of Richard Walsh on it. A closer inspection revealed that it was indeed a Walsh. My initial reaction was that I had somehow missed one along the way, but much to my surprise it transpired that this was in fact the first new book from the House of Walsh in 16 years. My order followed without delay.

Roy Booth – Last of the Centurions is the title. Who was Booth is the first question. The answer to that one is that like Jack Davey and Sam Cook he was one of the game’s unsung heroes. Hailing from Yorkshire Booth spent a few seasons with the county of his birth as a wicketkeeper in the early 1950s. He failed to grasp the job as first choice for himself after an extended opportunity in 1954 and then served as understudy to Don Brennan and, latterly, to Jimmy Binks. Eventually he signed for Worcestershire and spent the rest of his career with that county, in 1960 becoming just the seventh ‘keeper to snare 100 victims for a season, a feat he repeated in 1964 when Worcester won the first of back to back Championships.

Over just a dozen pages Walsh provides a succinct summary of the career of Booth, then 87 years of age, as well as introducing some of his subject’s own memories of a happy life in the game. Booth was a week shy of his ninety second birthday when he died in 2018. The book appeared in a numbered limited edition of fifty, all signed by author and subject.

And what of Richard Walsh? I am delighted to be able to report that the man himself is alive and well, still living in Somerset and he remains a practising journalist of the freelance variety. His musings can be found on twitter by following @Richardscoop1. He tells me has no current plans to publish anything more, but certainly doesn’t rule out doing so in the future. I for one sincerely hope that he does.



from Cricket Web http://bit.ly/2POV9kF