Thursday, October 31, 2019

The Ultimate Guide to Betting on Cricket

Online betting has seen a significant rise in popularity in the last several years. Modern online bookmakers offer almost every type of popular sport, including cricket. While cricket is not as popular as football, tennis, or basketball, it’s still very much present in the sports betting world.

If you’re new to betting and you’re interested in cricket games, you’ve come to the right place. In this article, we will tell you how to find the best cricket sportsbooks, how odds work, and what kind of wagers you can make. Here we go!

How and Where to Bet on Cricket?

Although the Cricket World Cup finished this summer, there are still plenty of cricket competitions to wager on. To find these competitions, just go to any renowned bookmaker website and locate cricket on the list of available markets. There are plenty of websites where you can bet on cricket, but only a selected few will have what you’re looking for in terms of odds, fixtures, and betting options.

Of course, first you will need to register on the betting site of your choice and deposit money in order to make bets. Once you got all that sorted out, explore the market and see which games are available for wagering. Make your predictions and fill out the betting slip.

The Odds for Cricket Games

The odds for cricket games are not that different from those for other spots, but if you find a good bookmaker, you can take advantage of some favourable odds that will give great value to your wagers.

Finding good odds for cricket is not easy but you can do it if you use the right tools, like the one on  . To maximise your profits and minimise your risks, you should also look at some bookmaker bonuses for new customers.

The Most Popular Cricket Bets

Betting on cricket is much more than just picking a winning team. Of course, you can bet on that as well, but other betting options are much more interesting.

A cricket game can last long, but you have the option to win a bet even before the first ball is thrown by betting on the coin toss. Also, you can bet on the top batsman or top bowler for each team.

One of the most interesting cricket bets involves guessing the method of the first wicket, or whether the first wicket will be bowled, caught, run out, leg before wicket, stumped, or more.

Other available cricket bets include 50 or 100 to be scored in a game, the number of total runs in the first over, most sixes, the man of the match, and others.

General Tips for Betting on Cricket

Whether your cricket bets are going to be successful or not largely depends on luck, but also on your knowledge of the game. Try wagering on leagues and competitions you follow and know the teams you’re betting on.

Check out the matchup history between the teams that are playing against each other, or the historical performance of players and their current form. The more information you have, the better the chances of you winning your bets.

If you need some assistance, go over to our Predictions page where you can learn about our insight on current cricket competitions. Good luck!

Let me know if this needs changing, since you said there is no anchor yet for this link.



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Saturday, October 26, 2019

Pakistan’s First Cricket Scribe

Qamaruddin Butt was the first chronicler of Pakistan cricket. Between 1954 and 1971 he published, largely through his own efforts, ten books recording the majority of the Test series that his young country undertook over that period. His reputation now seems to be confined to the conversations only of hardened book collectors, something which is a great shame because Butt knew his cricket, and he had a quirky and individual writing style. He deserves to be remembered.

I would like to have been able to include in this post some material about Butt’s life outside cricket, and the basic details will follow, but in truth I have not been able to find out very much about him. He is featured in Kim Baloch’s fine Encyclopaedia of Pakistan Cricket that was published in 2004, but that apart other than an occasional mention in other books and magazines my only source material has been those ten books themselves.

What seems clear about Butt is that he was born in Amritsar in 1914. Described by Baloch as lean, that is certainly the impression created by the photographs that appear in his books. Butt was a First Class cricketer who Baloch described as a dogged right hand batsman and right arm leg break bowler, which I suspect must be right, although in one of his books the man himself writes that, in 1939 at least, he was a pace bowler. The majority of his seven First Class appearances were for Southern Punjab. All bar one were before World War Two with a final appearance, this time against Southern Punjab, for Delhi, in January 1947.

Butt’s career record is modest but respectable. He averaged 20.45 with the bat with a high score of 59, and his seven wickets cost exactly thirty runs each. Between 1954 and 1973 he also stood as an umpire in 53 First Class matches. That tally included one Test, in 1964 against New Zealand, still the only Test to have been played on the Pindi ground in Rawalpindi.

Outside the game Butt was employed by the Ministry of Interior between 1947 and 1962, based in Karachi. After that he seems to have been able to concentrate on cricket writing and, perhaps, some coaching as well. Certainly nothing I have read indicates that he ever took any other employment.

The first book from Butt was published in 1954, Pakistan on Cricket Map. It was one of four published in Pakistan on the subject of the country’s first trip to England. Three of the books were put together in Pakistan from press and other reports and only one, by Test skipper AH Kardar, by an author who was actually in England for the series. Kardar had been the only man to write a book on Pakistan’s only other series, its inaugural one in India of a couple of years previously. One wonders whether all of the three Pakistan based writers would have bothered had it not been for the visitors stunning England by taking the final test at the Oval to square the rubber.

The publisher of the book is stated to be Butt himself, but the Ministry of Interior is also referenced so there may have been an element of government sponsorship, particularly as an Advisory Board consisting of eleven names is also mentioned. Five of them are photographed at the beginning of the book and described as indefatigable and resourceful, and identified also as members of the Cricket Control Board and the Karachi Cricket Association.

Butt also credits a financial advisor, and it is to be assumed therefore that the assistance Butt references as being received from Burma-Shell Oil and Storage company must have been largely of a financial nature. That company also have an advertisement in the book as do two other sponsors, a Karachi based jeweller and a bicycle shop from the city.

The preface to Pakistan on Cricket Map begins with a good example of Butt’s somewhat unconventional writing style and an illustration of how the book was put together; If the cricketers of the dear dead days beyond recall were to be brought back to life, they will indeed be stunned to know something incredible, that it is now possible to listen to a ball to ball commentary. He goes on to refer to having already written extensively on cricket in form or another. Sadly I have found no previous writings, but assume that in archives in Pakistan at least some examples will remain and, hopefully, they will one day be gathered together.

There is an interesting letter reproduced before the match reports from Jack Hobbs. It is dated 6 August 1954, thus demonstrating that Butt’s book at least was planned prior to that unexpected victory at the Oval, and whilst we do not see the letter from Butt which prompted it in his reply Hobbs makes the observation, of the Pakistan side, we have seen enough to realise the team is quite capable of beating England in Pakistan – presumably The Master was one of the many taken by surprise a couple of weeks later.

The book itself comprises a report on each match that the Pakistanis played. Most are fairly short, but all have the scorecard added. For the first three Tests there are longer reports (seven or eight pages) and, for the Oval, there is understandably a much lengthier description. Liberal use is made of quotations from English newspapers. The book concludes with the tour statistics followed by an essay of a page or so on each of the Pakistan players. There are a number of photographs and the book as a whole is a thoroughly worthwhile effort.

Butt no doubt learned a great deal from the efforts he went to with Pakistan on Cricket Map and I assume that sales must have been encouraging as his next book, Cricket Without Challenge, certainly seems to have had much more planning. There is a commercial publisher, Maliksons of Sialkot and Lahore, and this time there are as many as 44 advertisers.

As he followed the Indian tourists around Pakistan Butt must, presumably, have had some sort of sabbatical from his employment. In his preface he says; The daily reports appearing in the press had only an ephemeral value unless one cared to preserve the cuttings for sake of reference. It is the books written on such tours that perpetuate the achievements of cricketers and leave their names to posterity – hence my attempt.

On the whole the Indians had a successful trip. Of nine matches outside the Tests they won five and drew four, but all five Tests were drawn. Wisden was deeply critical of the negative safety first manner in which the matches were played by both sides. Butt himself, in typical forthright fashion, uses the word farce does not spare his own side. It is therefore somewhat ironic that Pakistan skipper Kardar wrote a foreword for Butt in which he blamed the Indians for the negativity and asserted that his own side largely attempted to play aggressive cricket.

Other than the very important difference this time of Butt being an eye witness to the cricket, rather than an ear witness, the format is broadly similar to his previous book. The only significant differences are the appearance of three essays at the end of the book by other writers and, no doubt with a view to securing sales across the border, some space devoted to the Indian players.

It seems likely that Cricket Without Challenge did not sell particularly well as by the time of his next book, Pakistan Cricket on the March, Butt was back to publishing privately and again making reference to the Ministry of the Interior and using the same printer who had produced his first book.  There were more advertisers than first time round, but nowhere near as many as Maliksons managed to attract.

This time the book covered three series, the visit of New Zealand’s Test side in 1955/56, that of an England “A” team that followed it and, finally, and the source no doubt of the greatest delight for the Pakistan supporters, the visit of Australia for a one-off test in October 1956. This was a match which the Pakistanis won comfortably, the visitors never getting to grips with a matting wicket on which Fazal Mahmood and Khan Mohammad skittled them twice.

In the New Year of 1958 Butt accompanied the Pakistan side that played five tests in the Caribbean so, presumably, he must have obtained another three month leave of absence from the Ministry of the Interior. On his return he published Cricket Wonders. This is a slightly different sort of book in that it is a more modest paperback (the previous books had all appeared in hard covers). Again privately published Butt used the same printers in Karachi and again the Ministry of the Interior is credited, albeit not quite in the same way as previously. There are a number of advertisers, on this occasion appearing at intervals throughout the book rather than merely at the beginning or the end, The book is a straightforward and comprehensive account of a series which the Pakistanis lost and which saw the last test appearances of Kardar, who once again contributed a foreword.

Less than twelve months later there was a return series of three matches, and although Pakistan won the series 2-1 Butt was not impressed, concluding that the Pakistan team showed nothing but batting crawl. This proved beyond a shadow of doubt that the tourists were a better combination.

The book itself is very similar in format to Cricket Wonders the only significant digression being that it closes with a lengthy appreciation of Collie Smith. Butt had watched Smith in the three Tests and was clearly upset to learn a few months later that he had been tragically killed in a road accident in England.

It is the mark of a different age that Butt’s next book, Cricket Cat and Mouse, appeared more than a year after the short three Test series between Pakistan and Australia that it tells the story of. It is another slim paperback and records Australia’s three nil victory. Butt describes the home bowling as feeble although he saw promise for the future in an improved performance in the final test, which he clearly rated in a very different category to the cricket he had witnessed from Pakistan in the first two matches.

In part the reason for the delay in the book was the need for Butt, clearly now a full-time journalist whenever Pakistan were playing Test cricket, to go to India to follow Pakistan’s 1960/61 series there. As in 1954/55 each of the five tests were drawn and indeed every one of the tour matches ended the same way. Understandably in the circumstances Butt entitled his book Playing for a Draw.

In his introduction Butt expressed the view that both sides were blissfully content to see the matches limp to a draw. It is no use apportioning blame. Later he wrote it made one’s blood boil to find that in the series under review, the sides were still chary of defeat. Another paperback the book was certainly his bulkiest yet, running to almost 300 pages. It was, once more, self published.

It was October of 1962 before Playing for a Draw was published. That is the year in which Baloch tells me Butt left the employ of the Ministry of the Interior. It is also after England played three tests in Pakistan in 1961/62 and it is perhaps surprising that nothing appeared from Butt to cover that meeting, and Butt clearly did not travel to England in 1962 when Pakistan were heavily defeated. After that no it would be almost three years before Pakistan hosted and then visited both Australia and New Zealand during the 1964/65 season playing eight Tests altogether. Whilst Butt may have written for the press on some or all of the matches concerned he certainly did not venture into the book market in respect of any of those contests.

That is not to say that Butt did not make an appearance in bookstores at all because he did, Cricket Reborn appearing towards the end of 1964 and covering a series of three matches played the previous November between Pakistan and what was styled as a Commonwealth XI led by England opening batsman Peter Richardson.

The Commonwealth side was a strong one containing men of the calibre of Rohan Kanhai, Tom Graveney, Seymour Nurse, Basil Butcher and Basil D’Oliveira. In the event the bowling of each side was insufficiently strong and all three representative matches were drawn. Perhaps Butt was not in the best of health but if that was the case he was sufficiently inspired by what he saw  to produce a modest 93 page book which followed the format of its predecessors. Interestingly there is a page in the book listing his previous publications all of which it is said continue to be available other than Pakistan on Cricket Map and Cricket Wonders.

If Butt had been unwell he was fully restored to health by 1967 when he had the distinction of becoming the first journalist from Pakistan to be sent to accompany a touring party to England. Not only was he employed by no fewer than four Pakistani publications his services were also retained by Wisden and Playfair Cricket Monthly and on two occasions was asked to broadcast for the BBC. It is hardly surprisingly therefore that what was to remain his bulkiest book, The Oval Memories, was written on the subject of this visit. The title is a reference to the third test when, after a series of disappointments and looking down the barrel of a heavy defeat, Asif Iqbal and Intikhab Alam came together when all looked over and added 190 for the ninth wicket in the Pakistan second innings. It was not enough to avoid defeat but the sparkling effort did much to restore pride amongst the tourists and their followers. In his account of the second Test, when the luckless Pakistanis were caught on a wicket damaged by rainwater leaking under the covers, Butt came up with one of my favourite ever lines when he described the Pakistan first innings as firing like a dirty carburettor on a frosty morning.

Pakistan were not, after their 1967 visit to England, due play any more Tests before October 1969 when they were due to host New Zealand for a three Test series. In the event following the D’Oliveira Affair and the cancellation of England’s 1968/69 tour of South Africa a three Test series was hurriedly arranged for February. At the time the political situation in Pakistan was, to say the least, tense, and after two draws the series ended in chaos during the third day of the final Test as riots brought about the immediate end of the tour. The fact that against that background the visit of the New Zealanders just over six months later went ahead at all is remarkable, but there was no real trouble and the visitors took that series 1-0.

Sporting Wickets appeared in May of 1970 and proved to be Butt’s last book. It contained accounts of both series as well as a tribute to the retiring Hanif Mohammad. In my view it is certainly Butt’s best book, although having always taken a great interest in the 68/69 tour I may be biased.

Not unnaturally Sporting Wickets once more carried an advertisement for Butt’s previous books and by now Cricket Cat and Mouse and Pakistan Cricket on the March had also sold out. Quite how long stocks of the others lasted I do not know but in the twenty first century Butt’s books are highly regarded and any one of his books will set a purchaser back the greater part of £100 and a fine copy of one of the hardbacks, with its original dust jacket, rather more than that.

Sadly there were no more books from Qamaruddin Butt after Sporting Wickets. On 8 June 1974, at just sixty years of age tragedy struck when he was cycling home from a cricket match and a heart attack claimed him. He is a much underrated writer and all bar two of his books represent the only substantial accounts we have of the tours with which they are concerned. In Wisden John Arlott always noticed his books, and was unfailingly courteous and complimentary about them, although it is fair to say that in that august volume Arlott was seldom unduly effusive or critical about any author. The greater impression of Butt’s writing could be expected to come from the pen of Rowland Bowen in his Cricket Quarterly. For reasons doubtless now lost Bowen only ever got around to reviewing Playing for a Draw. It is clear from that review that Bowen was familiar with Butt’s earlier work but, save for complaining about the passage of time between the end of the series and the appearance of the book, says little about it. He spends most of his review bemoaning the lack of an annual publication regarding the game in Pakistan. As he firmly expressed the opinion that Butt was the man who should take the responsibility for the publication of such a book whilst I would not for one moment claim to have any great understanding of the machinations of Bowen’s mind, I hope that Butt took that as the compliment I suspect it was, in Bowen’s eccentric way, intended to be. 



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Saturday, October 19, 2019

Ayres Cricket Companion

There is, as we all know, a cricket annual that has appeared every single year since 1864 so, for the 156th time in 2019. Wisden has certainly had a rocky patch or two along the road, but that longevity in itself demonstrates that cricket can sustain a substantial annual publication that reviews the world game.

Over the years Wisden has had a bit of competition. Back in Victorian times there were the two Lillywhite publications, but they merged in 1885 and the survivor, the ‘Red’ Lilly, whilst it survived to see in the twentieth century did not appear after 1900. For a while from 1979 the Pelham Cricket Year, which became the Benson and Hedges Cricket Year and then the Cheltenham and Gloucester Cricket Year provided another interesting annual publication, albeit one of a rather different type. That one did not get past thirty editions and appeared, without a sponsor, for the last time in 2008.

Cricket Year was a large format, heavily illustrated publication. Over the years a few smaller publications have done well, and indeed the Playfair annual still appears with Wisden each spring and has been with us now since 1948. For these purposes I disregard more local publications on the basis they have a different market. The counties and other clubs issue yearbooks and have done so now for many years.

England opening batsmen Herbert Sutcliffe and Cyril Washbrook lent their names to annuals after the War, in 1947 and 1950 respectively, but neither made a second appearance. There were many other short-lived annuals before them, and one or two that enjoyed a decent innings before fading. Only one of them however holds much interest for collectors today.

Edward Ayres began his business in 1810 in Clerkenwell and for many years toys, games and furniture were his firm’s main business. Succeeding generations saw opportunities in the burgeoning sports equipment market and in 1895 FH Ayres Limited was incorporated. At that stage the business, still with its manufacturing base in London, employed more than 600 people.

The reasoning behind John Wisden’s venture into publishing in 1864 had been, primarily, to advertise his sports outfitting business and Ayres Cricket Companion, no doubt with a similar motivation, was launched in 1902. That first edition is exceptionally rare and indeed almost unprocurable, a copy that appeared at a Knight’s auction last year being the first I have ever seen for sale. The hammer price was £2,300.

It is as well that, realistically, that 1902 edition is unimportant in bibliographical terms. It was a tiny (around 11cm by 6cm) paper wrappered pamphlet that contains nothing more than a brief biographical note with a photograph of the Essex cricketer Charles McGahey, a few instructional pages and the laws of the game within its 42 pages. It was quite unlike any of the succeeding editions.

In 1903 the Companion doubled its pagination and increased in size to 16cm by 11cm. It would retain that page size up to and including its 1931 edition, by which time it had grown into a sturdy book of 300 pages. For the 1932 edition there was a rebranding, and the book became Ayres’ Public Schools Cricket Companion and put on another centimetre in height and width as well as a further 38 pages in girth. Sadly however that was to be the last Ayres and, after 31 consecutive editions the Ayres went the same way as the Lillywhites.

Why did the Companion fail? It is difficult to find out any details now but it seems likely that one way or another the Great Depression was responsible. By now Ayres were not the power they had been in the sporting goods business either, and although the firm survived the Second World War soon afterwards the company was taken over by Slazenger and the name Ayres, in a sporting context disappeared, so much so that it meant absolutely nothing to me when I was growing up in the 1960s and 1970s. That the name resonates at all today is thanks to its finally much valued cricket annual and, it would seem, the desirability in the antique toy market of FH Ayres’ rocking horses!

Ayres’ advantage over its competition was its content. One alternative publication of which I have a few copies is the long running Athletics News Annual, which began as long ago as 1888 and carried on until just after the Second World War when the Playfair saw it off. The Athletic News Annual is smaller than the Ayres and sufficiently slim to make it, despite its paper covers, relatively robust and hard wearing. On the other hand there is virtually no narrative content, and the substance of the book is almost entirely statistics, the laws of the game and fixture lists.

The 1903 Ayres, although it had the basic appearance it was to retain until 1931, was still not quite into its stride. Its strength as a chronicle of the game in the Public Schools was not yet apparent, but whilst there were the basic statistics of the 1902 season inside there were also good accounts of all the summer’s major fixtures (including the five Test Ashes series in which Victor Trumper cemented his reputation) and a look back at the previous summer. The editor, WR Weir, also included a photograph and pen portrait of JR Mason, and a particularly good look at the history of the game in an article entitled A Peep In To The Past.

By 1905 the die was cast as a lengthy essay appeared in Ayres dealing with the history of the game at Winchester College. From then on the Companion contained such an article on an annual basis. These essays were always well illustrated, and whilst primarily concerned with the cricket of the featured school were certainly not limited to that. Generally they were written by Weir, but on occasion also by JN Pentelow.

Over the years a number of articles appeared in Ayres from the pen of FS Ashley-Cooper, undoubtedly the foremost historian of the day. Pentelow too contributed on a frequent basis and indeed was to edit the Companion from 1928 until his death in 1931. As befits an annual that set out its stall to attract a schoolboy audience there were also technical articles from the likes of Australian Test batsman Charles Macartney, South African Herby Taylor and the former England captain Stanley Jackson.

Another interesting name that crops up in the list of contributors to Ayres, particularly those with a leaning towards the Red Rose, is northern writer George Brooking, whose work turns up all too rarely in book form. Lord Harris and the statistician and bibliophile AD Taylor also wrote features for Ayres. In addition to those substantial pieces of writing, for those who like that sort of thing, there are regular items of cricketing poetry from Charles Plairre, whose byline was either CP, or ‘The Picknicker’.

Following Pentelow’s death the editorship passed  to John Slee. His is not a name that will be familiar to many but, as former Sports Editor of Reuters he was clearly not without a pedigree in sports writing. Slee made changes, increasing still further the coverage of school’s cricket and reducing that of the First Class game. His introduction clearly evinced the intention that the Companion would continue, but it seems likely that his changes failed to convince sufficient schoolboy cricketers that the Companion was worth, in such difficult economic times, the 66.67% increase in the cover price that the changes had brought.

No one has ever put together an anthology of the articles in Ayres, so for the present day collector there is much to be learned within its pages. The books do not crop up with great frequency, but there are generally copies available and, as I write this post, one UK dealer has a run, missing only 1903, 1904 and 1932, available for £750.The first two are rarer, but not so difficult to track down that a full set (ie 1903-1932 inclusive) would not still leave a purchaser with change from £1,000. An added advantage is that, unlike Wisden for the same period, the books are robustly produced and generally in good condition and, pleasingly, can therefore be read free from the fear that they will fall apart in your hands, something that anyone whoever reads their pre-WW2 Wisdens will confirm  is always a bonus. An additional advantage is that if space is at a premium a full run of Ayres’ will take up around the same amount of space as no more than seven modern Wisdens.



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Thursday, October 17, 2019

The Greatest Southpaw?

Andrew Pollock kept wicket for Orange Free State occasionally in the late 1930s, but made little impact on the First Class game. He left that to his two sons, Peter and Graeme, who were integral parts of the fine South African side that had come together just as all official sporting links with the rest of the world were taken away. Peter was a hostile fast medium bowler whose own son, Shaun, went on to eclipse him. In turn Graeme had two sons, Andrew and Anthony. Andrew was an all-rounder and Anthony a batsman, both of whom have respectable records at First Class level, but neither came close to emulating their famous father.

Unsurprisingly Graeme, christened ‘Little Dog’ in light of his brother’s nickname of ‘Pooch’, was a prodigious talent as a schoolboy and owed much to the coaching of two former county cricketers. The first was the old Sussex batsman George Cox, who advised him; to hell with the coaching manual, just go out there and do what comes naturally. When Cox left his post he was replaced by a former Hampshire player, Tom Dean, who again tended to leave his pupil’s natural talents to find their own expression, although he did teach him the art of leg spin. When Pollock’s career finally came to an end in 1987 Dean was asked about his first impressions of Pollock and replied; I didn’t recognise genius because I had never seen it before, but when I saw Graeme bat I thought ‘surely this is it’.

Not yet 17 Pollock made his First Class debut for Eastern Province against Border in December 1960. It is tempting to wonder what his reaction would have been, on being dismissed for 54, had he been told that when, more than 26 years later, he walked off the field for the last time in a First Class match that that would be his career average as well. In his other four matches that season there were three more half centuries and, in the final match, a first century and the youngster was named by the South African Cricket Annual as one of its five cricketers of the year.

The season over the Pollock family holidayed in England, and stayed with Cox for part of the time. Following his old coach’s introduction Pollock played three matches for the Sussex second eleven with, in light of what was to come, surprisingly modest results. A left handed batsman, some shrewd judges maintain Pollock would go to become the best ever. Perhaps strangely in those circumstances Pollock is essentially right handed, batting being the only significant activity in which he is left hand dominant.

After returning from England the 1961/62 summer was not quite so good, but in 1962/63 there was an innings of 137 against Western Province of which 106 came in boundaries. Pollock then came within two runs of twin centuries against Transvaal, before becoming the youngest South African to record a double century when he posted an unbeaten 209 against a Cavaliers XI that boasted five Australian Test bowlers, including Graham McKenzie and Richie Benaud. The selectors decided not to risk him in the Tests against New Zealand that season and perhaps regretted that decision as John Reid’s men unexpectedly shared the series 2-2. With 3-0 reverses in their most recent encounters with both England and Australia the selectors did however pick Pollock for the tour to Australia of 1963/64 despite his still being a teenager.

It was a grim start in Australia for Pollock as he was dismissed twice by McKenzie for 0 and 1 in the tour opener, but he showed his character and centuries against a Combined XI and New South Wales made sure he was in the side for the drawn first Test. In a match remembered for the no-balling of Ian Meckiff Pollock made just 25, and followed that with 16 and 2 in the second Test.

The third Test was at the Sydney Cricket Ground. After losing the toss the South Africans dismissed Australia for 260 shortly before the close of the first day. When Pollock came to the wicket next morning his side were 58-2. He proceeded to play an innings that ‘Dick’ Whitington described as immortal, using the word because I believe it will remain so even among the great innings played in Test matches in Sydney. He went on to compare Pollock to a gunslinger from a spaghetti western before adding young Graeme struck nineteen fours and one mighty six from a cradle of disaster and many of those strokes will remain in the memory of those who watched them. With the help of Pollock’s 122 the South Africans got to 302. Only captain Trevor Goddard (with 80), and Colin Bland (51) offered any support. Another 42 in the second innings helped make sure of the draw.

Despite the brilliance of that century at Sydney it is not a well known innings, partly because it was soon overshadowed by Pollock’s contribution to South Africa’s series levelling victory in the next Test. Once again the toss was lost, but the South Africans would not have been too disappointed at keeping their hosts to 345. They made a steady start in reply, but then two quick wickets meant Pollock came in at 70-2, much the same position as at Sydney. Rather than the regular loss of partners that followed then however Pollock and Eddie Barlow proceeded to add 341 before Pollock was dismissed for 175. It took him barely two hours to get to his century. When he did so Sir Donald Bradman was purring in the pavilion, and the old curmudgeon ‘Tiger’ O’Reilly rose to his feet in the press box to applaud the young South African. A ten wicket victory followed, so Pollock was not required to bat again.

In the drawn fifth Test Pollock managed just 17 before, in the field, breaking his finger. He did not bat again and missed the first two Tests in New Zealand before rounding off his tour and, in the only Test he ever played against the weakest Test opposition available to him he scored a modest 30 and 23.

South Africa’s next opponents were England, who visited the Cape in 1964/65 for what was to prove the last time in thirty years. It was a series where England had a bit of luck with conditions in the first Test with the wicket, unusually, being of assistance to the spin attack of Fred Titmus and David Allen which was by far their strongest suit. England won that match and the remaining four were all drawn. It is said that the series was a disappointing one for Pollock, and that he struggled against England’s two off spinners. If he did he still managed to average 57.37 and make a century and four half centuries and, had Goddard not declared in the final Test in an effort to set England a reasonable target, Pollock’s unbeaten 77 at a run a ball would no doubt have been turned into a second century for the match.

Excluding that one off Test against New Zealand Pollock’s ‘worst’ series, statistically, was the three match return series with England in the summer of 1965 that followed England’s visit. It would be the last time the two countries would meet prior to South Africa’s banishment from international support and Pollock averaged a mere 48.50. The series did however contain what is remembered as one of his great innings.

The first Test of the series was a fine game of cricket. South Africa batted first and scored 280, Pollock top scoring with 56. He made just five in the second innings as South Africa left England a target of 191 in just under four hours. Wickets fell however and England had to shut up shop and ended up 46 runs short with three wickets, one of them an injured John Edrich, in hand. In the closing stages, no doubt to try and tempt the Englishman, Pollock’s loopy leg breaks were brought into the attack. Always more interested in turning the ball than maintaining accuracy it is testament to the mindset of the home side that all four of Pollock’s overs were maidens, and he also took the wicket of David Brown.

The second Test at Trent Bridge was won by South Africa and was very much a joint effort by Pollock and brother Peter, who took five wickets in each England innings. On the first morning Goddard won the toss and chose to bat, a decision he would soon come to regret as, in overcast conditions, medium pacer Tom Cartwright found enough movement to take three early wickets and South Africa took lunch uncomfortably placed on 76-4. With uncharacteristic restraint Pollock had taken an hour and a quarter to get to 34.

The fifth wicket fell almost straight after lunch and Pollock was joined by his captain, Peter Van Der Merwe, the last specialist batsman. There was a change of tempo from Pollock and, in seventy minutes, he moved his score on to 125. When he was out at 178-6 he had scored 91 of the 102 runs added since lunch and those in the press seats ran out of superlatives. In the commentary box England legend Denis Compton said; I have seen them all, Don Bradman, Stan McCabe, Walter Hammond ………. but I don’t believe I have ever seen a better innings. The abiding impression was of a team of decent batsman all struggling to score runs on a slow wicket, with the exception of Pollock, who made the game look very, very simple.

Thanks to Pollock South Africa got to 269, enough for a first innings lead of 29. Second time round Pollock added a useful 59. A target of 318 was beyond England who lost by 124 runs, hastened on their way by Pollock trapping England captain Mike Smith lbw, the last of his four Test wickets. Amidst universal acclaim perhaps the most telling comment is one from John Woodcock; not since Bradman’s day could anyone recall having seen an England attack treated in such cavalier style.

A fine series ended at the Oval with England 79 runs short of a victory target of 399 with six wickets to fall when rain robbed the players and enthralled crowd of the last seventy minutes. For once Pollock had taken a back seat, his contributions being 12 and 34.

Perhaps the trip to England left Pollock a little jaded, but he certainly wasn’t as effective in 1965/66. If there were concerns about his future form as a result those were however well and truly laid to rest the following summer when, with the Australians arriving for a full five Test series, Pollock’s best form returned. In the first Test, a South African victory, he scored 90 in the second innings, the only occasion in Tests in which he fell in the nineties.

In the second Test Australia responded to defeat by piling up an innings of 542. When South Africa slipped to 85-5, and with Pollock struggling with a groin strain all seemed over. In the event the home side did lose, but not before Pollock had scored 209 to equal his previous highest score and become, at 22, South Africa’s youngest double centurion. He added 112 with Van Der Merwe, and 85 with his brother before being ninth out at 343.

Despite the setback South Africa took the series by winning two and drawing the other of the remaining three Tests. In the final Test on his home ground at Port Elizabeth, one of the victories, Pollock celebrated his 23rd birthday by scoring his sixth Test century. Sadly there was only one more to come. For some time he looked like he may get the opportunity two years later when, initially, MCC seemed to have kept the 1968/69 tour in the schedule by omitting Basil D’Oliveira from their party. Shortly afterwards however D’Oliveira was called into the squad as a replacement, and the tour was called off.

In 1969/70 Australia returned to South Africa. They had been on a long tour of India immediately beforehand so were not as fresh as they might have been, but Australians do not lie down easily. Despite that the stunned visitors were well and truly hammered, losing each of the four Tests with the margins getting bigger and bigger; 170 runs, an innings and 129, 307 runs and 323 runs. Pollock failed in his final Test but prior to that he had recorded four half centuries and, in the second Test, the highest ever score by a South African, when he scored 274 at Durban, beating Jackie McGlew’s 255. At one point he and Barry Richards shared an exhilarating century partnership to leave South African cricket supporters with an indelible memory of what might have been.

As for Pollock he believed, for a brief period, that in fact he had played in 28 Tests rather than just the 23 that appear in the record books now. This is because he was a member of the Rest of the World squad that was assembled in England in 1970 to play a series of five ‘Test Matches’ against England in place of the South Africans. Once the series was over and the coffers replenished the Test status was, to the chagrin of some, taken away. Pollock was strangely quiet, making a significant contribution only in the final match at the Oval when he scored 114. A similar series arranged to replace the 1971/72 South African visit to Australia never did have Test status, although again Pollock was present, playing in three of the five games and, similarly to the series in England, doing nothing much until the final match, when he recorded a century.

With the start of the country’s sporting isolation some South Africans chose to ply their trade in England, most notably Richards and Mike Procter, but they were joined by others as the 1970s wore on and isolation began to bite. Pollock had plenty of offers, but chose not to accept any. He did not consider the financial rewards to be sufficiently attractive, and a life of six days a week cricket did not appeal to him. He has said many times that if he had played county cricket he would have expected his career to have ended considerably sooner than it did. 

A broken hand ruined Pollock’s season in 1972/73 and he never got going the following year. Back to his best in 1974/75 however he averaged over seventy, a standard he maintained for a number of years. In 1976/77 he became the first South African to be awarded a benefit game and, shortly afterwards, signed a contract to join Kerry Packer’s World Series Cricket. In the event he wasn’t called upon to appear, Packer deciding, in the face of objections from his Pakistani and West Indian players, not to risk their wrath by playing him or Denys Hobson who, as amateurs, were unacceptable whereas, despite it seemingly being a distinction without a difference, county professionals like Richards, Procter and Clive Rice were not objected to.

It was to be 1981/82 before Pollock was able to test himself against overseas players again. This was the year of the first rebel tour and an England side led by Graham Gooch. In the three ‘Tests’ Pollock contributed an unbeaten 64 to a victory in the first, but not much in the other two. The following year South Africa and Pollock, by now 38, had two very different challenges. The first was a weak Sri Lankan side who were heavily beaten. Pollock was called on to bat just once in each of the two ‘Tests’, and scored 79 and 197. 

The second set of visitors in 1982/83 were a different proposition however, as a West Indian side under Lawrence Rowe arrived. The first eleven of the dominant force in Test cricket could not be persuaded to join the tour, but the pace attack was still impressive; Sylvester Clarke, Ezra Moseley and Franklyn Stephenson. In the first of the two ‘Tests’ Pollock led the way with exactly 100. As a result the West Indies had to follow on, but recovered well and an unbeaten 43 was needed from Pollock to get South Africa over the line. He had top scored in both innings and did so again with 73 in the first innings of the second match, but even Pollock was unable to resist a magnificent spell of bowling from Clarke in the second innings as the West Indians squared the series. The West Indians returned the following season, this time for a four match series that they won 2-1. Pollock’s contributions were 62, 102, 41 and 46, before closing with a relative failure, 0 and 42.

Pollock turned 42 during the 1985/86 season, but he had no intention of retiring. Between November and February a team of Australian rebels was due to visit the Cape with Kim Hughes as leader. Fifteen years on from his last encounter with the Australians the little dog was now a silver fox but he was desperate to play and did so, and extended his career to cover the following season as well when the Australians were due to return. The first tour comprised three ‘Tests’ and the second four and South Africa won both series 1-0.

The first meeting between Pollock and the Australians came in a one day match, not a format he had grown up with, for Transvaal. He was struggling with a hamstring injury, but played nonetheless and came in late in the Transvaal innings to score an unbeaten 59 in 46 deliveries to set up a victory. Pollock spent the rest of both tours tormenting an Australian attack that contained the likes of Rodney Hogg, Carl Rackemann and Terry Alderman. Despite the presence in the South African side of players like Ken McEwan, Jimmy Cook, Clive Rice and Peter Kirsten Pollock was still, come the end of the second summer, sat on top of the South African averages on exactly 56.00. Had niggling injuries not kept him out of two of the matches he would doubtless have had the highest aggregate as well.

At least Pollock was fit for a farewell in the fourth and last ‘Test’ of the second tour, played on a hard true pitch at Port Elizabeth. The Australians won the toss and got to 455-9 before Hughes declared. The South African reply stuttered at 64-2 bringing Pollock to the crease. His very first delivery from Hogg caught the edge of the bat and landed just in front of the wicketkeeper before running away for four. From that potential anti-climax he scored a sublime century and went on to 144 before he was dismissed. He moved from 103 to 144 in just eleven scoring shots, a single and ten fours.

The whole innings was televised throughout South Africa and the press lauded the final big innings of a genuinely popular cricketer. He was interviewed afterwards and asked the usual questions, and observed; I can see the justice of our isolation now, though it was hard at the time. The changes will have to be political now because cricket itself has done a great deal. At that point in time although the end of apartheid was just a few years in the future no one could yet see it happening and in a parliamentary debate Minister of Finance Barent du Plessis responded that Pollock should be remembered as a great cricketer, but he should not be involved in debates on constitutional developments.

After leaving the game as a player Pollock continued his involvement in cricket in administrative, selectorial and coaching roles. In recent years he has not enjoyed the best of health and, like all of his generation, has certainly not been treated in the way that a former sporting hero should by the South African Board but, at 75, he remains a hero to all who remember him in his pomp, and to plenty more who know of him only via the history books and the few clips of his batting that can be found on the internet.



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Monday, October 14, 2019

Betting Bonus reviewed by Sporty trader

Cricket is a game that has its origins in Europe. As the British extended its suzerainty over territories around the world, cricket also began to be played in the English colonies. Today, cricket is an international game played in 16 countries around the world. Cricket is commonly referred to as a “gentleman’s game,” although at the beginning before cricket became popular, this game was mainly played by women and children from the home country.

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A game that unites

Cricket is more than just a game. It’s a great force. When Indian and Pakistani players shake hands or hit their backs during or just after a cricket match, these actions are able to make the toughest extremists and extremists cry. When different nations began playing cricket with South Africa after the public proclamation of this repudiation of despicable apartheid, a legalized practice of racial discrimination and ostracism exercised by white South Africans against Blacks of South Africa, the nation was a red-letter day in the history of cricket that has upset everyone.

Cricket is the most popular game that arouses great enthusiasm among fans. This can be seen by the craze that is created when a cricket tournament or a cricket match is about to begin. People go crazy trying to plan things in advance so they can be free when the game starts and nothing can stop them from enjoying the game and enjoying the emotions of the game, the cricketers, and the numbers of supporters sitting almost everywhere in the world. Cricket fans want to know the overall performance of their idols and the performance stats of their favorite teams. Maintaining cricket statistics is not an easy task. To maintain cricket statistics, the statistics of each player or cricketer are recorded during a match and aggregated during a career.

With the advent, cricket has acquired new dimensions. A single team is a melting pot of cultures and mores with Indian, Australian, Pakistani, Sri Lankan, English, South African and West Indian players as well as players from other countries. Players who have always played against each other and who are considered archivists and opponents play together for the same team. As barriers of language, race, and culture disappear with the camaraderie between new teammates, cricket acquires an interesting new face every day that passes.

The advantage of looking for cricket statistics from these sources is that it is possible to store these records of cricket statistics as long as they wish. They can cut newspaper cricket statistics; download statistics from online sites. Basically, these sources help maintain records. Just like the game itself, cricket statistics also have an important role to play and can only be understood by cricket fans.

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Betting Bonus reviewed by Sporty trader are simply show on a sporting event. You bet that your team, your horse, your dog, or your pilot will win. If they win, you too! If they lose, you lose the amount of your bet. Cricket takes place all over the world, although in the United States, this type of betting is not as well accepted.

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Once you have chosen the place where you will be doing your cricket betting, you must decide how you will place your bet. You can bet in different ways on the amount you have chosen, but the first talk about the spread and the impact it may have on the amount you bet.

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Spread is a point advantage in betting, which is usually given to the team that is usually supposed to lose a particular sporting event. If you decide to bet on the team that must win, it will need to earn more than the number of gaps and cover the gap before you consider that you have chosen correctly. If you choose the team that is supposed to lose, this team will have to lose less than the number of gaps for your choice to be considered correct. If by chance, the team wins by the number of points chosen as the gap, the game is called a push.

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The Internet has grown over the last decade. From sports betting to buying a car, the internet has made our lives extremely comfortable. The Internet has been an excellent tool for sports bettors. The wealth of readily available information has helped sports bettors make more informed decisions. You were limited to what you heard on the street.

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The Internet offers you a choice of well-established online casinos and cricket betting portals with great features and great bonuses. Since they have lower overhead costs than traditional gaming, online gaming destinations can be very liberal with regard to sign-up bonuses and ongoing promotions. Online sports betting destinations are online 24 hours a day, with one click.

It’s still the same old cricket, but it definitely went beyond cricket. This game has undergone a major facelift in recent decades.



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Saturday, October 12, 2019

‘Johnnie’ Moyes

Alban George Moyes was born in 1893. He seems not to have cared very much for his given name and, at his own request, was always known as ‘Johnny’. At 19 he went to Adelaide University to study medicine. A keen cricketer he was a fine batsman and occasional leg break bowler who averaged more than 40 with the bat for South Australia in the 1912/13 season. Such was the impression he created that he was selected as member of the Australian side that was due to visit South Africa in 1914 only for the trip to be called off after war broke out.

Moyes chose to join the 48th Battalion of the Australian Imperial Force. By 1917 he was fighting on the Western Front and had achieved the rank of Captain. That April he was part of an advance on German positions that came under heavy enemy fire. Moyes was wounded during the manoeuvre. He received some treatment but insisted on returning to the front as soon as he was able to do so. For his gallantry he was awarded the Military Cross and promoted to Major. The cost of his bravery was a lifetime of pain and discomfort from physical injuries that never completely healed.

After the war Moyes did not resume his medical career and became a journalist. He played just two First Class matches after the War which meant his playing career ended after an appearance for Victoria against the 1920/21 MCC tourists. All told he played 18 First Class matches and scored 883 runs at 29.43. There was a solitary century, on debut against Western Australia, and six fifties. His leg breaks brought him five wickets at 53.60.

Between the wars Moyes worked for a variety of newspapers both in general news and sport. When the Second World War broke out he enlisted in the AIF again and commanded the Seventh Australian Garrison. After the war he went back to writing and also, in 1950, took to broadcasting for the ABC, something he did for the rest of his life. Little of Moyes the commentator is available, although he can be heard whenever footage of the denouement of the first tied Test is played. Jack Pollard described him as bright and informative, a cheery character respected by players and listeners.

Prior to World War Two there had not been very many Australian cricket books. A number of tour books had appeared, and a handful of autobiographies, but there had been little in the way of books of appreciation and no biographies at all. In the late 1940s however Ray Robinson, Jack Fingleton and Moyes all started publishing books. Moyes’ first contribution came in 1948 and was the first Australian biography. The subject, unsurprisingly, was Bradman. Published before the 1948 Invincibles tour began the book is notable as being the one biography of Bradman where his average is above the elusive one hundred mark, although there can be no doubt that 102.98 does not have the same resonance as 99.94.

Other than playing grade cricket one of the ways in which Moyes remained in touch with the game, whilst working in Sydney, was as a New South Wales selector. It was in that capacity that he was responsible for giving Bradman his First Class debut. His book on the legendary batsman was well received, although its dwelling for only three pages on the record breaking 1930 series that first made Bradman the household name he became seems odd.

Two years later A Century of Cricketers appeared from the British publisher Harrap. The book consisted of one hundred short pen portraits of the best cricketers to have played the came. The book itself is reminiscent of what were then two recent books from ‘Crusoe’ Robertson-Glasgow; Cricket Prints and More Cricket Prints. The book contains a foreword from Bradman, suitably effusive, and an equally interesting afterword from John Arlott, who comments:-

Australian writing on cricket, like the conversations of Australian followers of the game, is more technically sound than ours. We in England have often accepted, for its pleasant or evocative style, writing on the game produced by litterateurs who barely know an off break from a leg break. Australian readers will have no such books: regarding cricket as the precise skill that it is, they demand comparable precision of their writers.

In addition to his technical strengths Moyes was also a fine wordsmith. I have always been drawn to the writings about Victor Trumper by those who had the good fortune to see him play. Moyes closed his essay on Trumper with the words; when news of Victor Trumper’s death was published time for me stood still. He lived for only 38 years, but he left behind him a reputation as a cricketer and a man that will endure as long as cricket is played. In that Moyes has certainly proved to be correct.

In 1951 Moyes agreed to provide another book for Harrap, The Fight For The Ashes 1950/51. He published a similar book in 1954/55 and wrote a book on every Australian home series from then on, covering the visits of West Indies in 1951/52, South Africa in 1952/53, England in 1958/59 and 1962/63 as well as the visit of Frank Worrell’s West Indians for that famous series of the first tied Test in 1960/61.

In 1953 and 1954 Moyes, courtesy of Harrap again, wrote Australian Bowlers and Australian Batsmen. They weren’t quite collections of pen portraits in the way that A Century of Cricketers had been, but were of a similar ilk, looking at some length at many of the most successful Australian cricketers. All this however was just Moyes warming up for what was to prove his finest work; Australian Cricket: A History, published by Angus and Robertson in 1959.

Writing in the 1960 edition of Wisden John Arlott set the scene by confirming that the book made good the long-standing, and hitherto most serious, deficiency in the chronicles of cricket. He went on to lavish praise on what he described as a cricket event. The book comprised 631 pages with 48 pages of illustrations. Also impressed was Gerard Martineau who reviewed the title for The Cricketer, who commented; much information will be found in this comprehensive work which smaller volumes cannot compass, and Mr Moyes, skilfully marshalling a vast store of material after patient research, fills a considerable gap in the game’s history in a challenging fashion worthy of an inspiring theme.

Having written the first biography of an Australian cricketer fourteen years previously Moyes also wrote the second, published fourteen years later in 1962. The subject again was the current Australian captain who was by then coming to the end of his career. Benaud appeared a couple of years before its subject retired.

The last Ashes series for both Moyes and Benaud was that of 1962/63. Moyes commentated on the first three Tests. On 18th January 1963 he was at the first day of the Sheffield Shield fixture between New South Wales and South Australia at the SCG. He did his usual close of play broadcast for the local radio station and then returned home and suffered a fatal heart attack.

Fellow journalist Tom Goodman used the work Moyes had already prepared on the 1962/63 series to produce the book that Moyes had planned, With the MCC in  Australia 1962/63. Prior to his death Moyes had been working on a further historical book, this time more in the nature of personal review rather than a strict history, and The Changing Face of Cricket appeared later in 1963. In his foreword to the book Bradman wrote; Johnny was unique and irreplaceable. We should be grateful for the many and varied works he left behind to carry his enduring name.



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Saturday, October 5, 2019

Cricket’s Greatest Collector?

Until very recently I had not really contemplated looking at past or indeed present collectors within this blog but, that deficiency having been pointed out to me by a fellow CricketWeb staff member (albeit one currently on a very long sabbatical) on reflection it seems like an entirely appropriate step to take.

The question is where do you start? There have been a few well-known collectors over the years, and are currently, not least our own Archie Mac, but there is a tendency amongst modern bibliophiles to be secretive, and it is not always easy to find out very much about them.

So for present purposes I will confine myself to a man from the past, Joseph Wolfe Goldman who, for reasons I will go on to explain, will in perpetuity be remembered as the man with the finest collection of cricket books ever to be in private hands.

As the name suggests Goldman was Jewish. In the 1850s his ancestors were Russian, but his family came to England and Goldman’s father, Isadore, qualified as a solicitor. Joe was born in 1895 and, when he was 18, he became articled to his father eventually qualifying himself.

The family firm, in which in due course Joe’s son Arthur would also become a partner, was called Isadore Goldman and Co. The practice still exists today with offices in London, as it has always had, and today also in Norwich and Portsmouth. There is a brief mention on the firm’s website of its heritage, although there is no reference to cricket nor do there appear to be any members of the Goldman family practising with the firm today.

Isadore himself seems primarily to have been a family lawyer, perhaps unusual in Victorian times. It is a mantle that Joe took over although his main practice area seems to have been insolvency work and, perhaps arising out of that, he also dealt with some significant criminal cases. Son Arthur was a decent cricketer, although not good enough to have played at First Class level. Professionally I believe he was a banking specialist.

A great cricket enthusiast Joe was, apparently, a spectator at WG Grace’s final First Class appearance. A keen player, albeit one with no great ability his playing career ended during the Great War when, an officer in the machine gun corps, he was wounded at Passchendaele. Although perfectly capable of resuming his legal career Joe would never again be mobile enough to play competitive sport and it was that inability that motivated him to take the passionate interest that he retained for the rest of his days in cricket books and cricketana.

Given that Goldman had a successful career he had the financial muscle to match his enthusiasm and quickly amassed a fine collection at a time when there were few other serious collectors around, or at least none who were buying as prodigiously as he was. Initially he lived in a substantial house in Golders Green in North West London before, after World War II, moving to an even larger property in Egham in leafy Surrey. It was just as well he had plenty of room as as well as concentrating on acquiring as many of the great rarities of early cricket literature as he could Goldman also made sure his collection kept up to date with all new releases, and to that end he had a standing arrangement with a major London book store.

Books were however just a small part of the Goldman collection which also contained around 500 prints and lithographs, 4,000 or so signatures and 2,000 cigarette cards. There were also scorecards, plaques, belts, buttons, a fine collection of rare old linen handkerchiefs, bronzes and ceramics as well as anything else related to the game which took Goldman’s fancy.

Like, no doubt, most other collectors Goldman also fancied the idea of getting his own name in print and, with the means to do so, privately published two books of his own. The first, in 1937, was a bibliography of cricket. Predating the first edition of Padwick by some 40 years it was a much more substantial volume than anything that had previously been attempted and appeared in a signed limited edition of 125 copies. Two decades later, in 1958, he published Cricketers and the Law, in celebration of the two areas of human endeavour that dominated his life. The book comprised brief biographical listings of all solicitors, barristers and judges who had played the game to a reasonable standard. It is a beautifully produced book and appeared in a limited edition of 350 copies, but is not difficult to track down today and is certainly not expensive, a copy recently struggling to break £30 on eBay. The bibliography on the other hand, despite having been superseded as a work of reference by Padwick, will nonetheless set a purchaser back, if he can find a copy, more than ten times that.

In 1965, aged 72, Goldman made the decision to sell his collection. Initially he tried to find a buyer for the whole lot, at an asking price of £20,000 (the equivalent sum today would be £380,000). No one came forward and the following year Goldman decided to put the collection up for auction and, at a time when specialist cricket auctions were extremely rare, Hodgson & Co of Chancery Lane in London were retained to sell the Collection and the sale of the first part, the rarest of the books, was fixed for 24 November 1966.

So what was in this collection? The short answer is almost everything. There was an Epps, a book of scores from 1799 of which only a handful of copies survive. There is a copy of Florio’s Italian to English dictionary, notable because it contains the first ever reference to the game of cricket. It was published back in 1598. Another rare book of scores is Bentley. Goldman had a copy of course, and his was signed by Fuller Pilch.

Goldman owned a full set of Wisden, although that was not included in this sale. There were however full sets of Lillywhite’s Guides, Denison and Lillywhite’s Cricket Companion (the ‘Green Lilly’), but the real gem is the 11 volumes of Britcher’s Scores. There were 15 editions of Britcher altogether, published between 1791 and 1805. There are only around 50 copies known to exist in total and certainly in 1966 no one had a full set. That situation has now changed and a full run of Britcher reposes in the MCC library at Lord’s. That will forever remain unique as there are two editions of which there is but a single copy and it seems deeply improbable that any private collector could ever hope to match the 11 copies that Goldman possessed.

The sale in central London was well attended, although not by Goldman himself. He chose to sell rather than having to, so that surprises me in some ways, although not in others. In quoting prices realised I will refer to 2019 equivalent values, and those will be of the hammer price. In the 1960s there was no buyer’s premium charged. In the twenty first century a premium of around twenty per cent (plus vat on that) is usually levied by an auctioneer on the hammer price.

The Epps went for £950 to Leslie Gutteridge of Epworth Books, the only specialist cricket dealer at the time. The only Epps I know of that has been sold in recent years went in 2005 at the Eagar auction for a 2019 equivalent of £135,000, so good business by Gutteridge. For the Britchers Gutteridge paid £6,700 – a few years ago just one appeared in a John McKenzie catalogue at £75,000. There were four on offer at the Eagar sale, and they realised an eye watering total of £393,000.

Another Gutteridge purchase was the six Denisons for around £700. All six were sold at the Curry sale in 2006 for a 2019 equivalent of £33,000. Denison’s rather commoner selection of pen portraits, The Sketches of the Players cost Epworth a mere £140 at the Goldman sale, and based on the Curry sale valuation would be worth £2,300 now. Back to the more impressive numbers the 22 Lillywhite’s Guides cost Gutteridge £3,700. An assortment of buyers paid as much as £23,000 at the Curry sale for just nine editions.

The Green Lillies at the Goldman sale went for £400, not this time to Gutteridge. Based on the set sold at the Curry sale they are now worth £4,600 although had that set not had all its wrappers removed it may well have gone for rather more. Again, as with almost all of the ‘old’ books the rise in value had been very substantial. Nothing seems to buck that trend, although that copy of Bentley, signed by Pilch, is a curious one. It was sold for £550 at the Goldman sale. Published first in 1823 a huge gain might have been expected, but based on the price that the self same book was sold for in the Eagar sale its value has little more than doubled, to just £1,200.

Some lots did not do so well and, then as now, it was the more common items that fared badly, albeit ‘common’ is something of a misnomer in this context. Goldman’s copy of Sir Jeremiah Coleman’s sumptuous limited edition The Noble Game of Cricket, went for £700, about what a decent copy would cost today. The pair of classic Edwardian Beldam and Fry volumes on Great Batsmen and Great Bowlers went for £110, somewhat less than they would go for today, but not spectacularly so. I was surprised to see a copy of the 1915 Memorial Biography of WG Grace in the catalogue, the more so because it fetched £50, rather more than it would cost today.

By the end of the sale the 301 lots realised a total of, in 2019 terms, just over £70,000. Although his Wisdens were not included, nor the overwhelming majority of the non-book items, Goldman must still have been disappointed with the amount realised giving the price he was asking for whole collection. In fact the ‘take’ proved to be even worse than that as, not disclosed at the time, a third of the lots were ‘bought in’ as they did not reach their reserve. Those items represented around a quarter of that £70,000 figure.

Whatever became of the balance of the collection subsequent sales never took place. Clearly everything was disposed of in due course, and six years before his death a brief news item appeared in The Cricketer implying the Goldman collection had by then been disposed of. He sold some items on a piecemeal basis to younger collectors, David Frith for one having benefitted from that, and perhaps in the end a dealer took the remaining items off Goldman’s hands – certainly it is the case that for 21st century collectors items bearing the bookplate of JW Goldman still turn up from time to time. The man himself lived on until 1978 when, at the age of 85, he died in a nursing home in Sunbury on Thames, a few miles away from his long time home in Egham.



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