Friday, January 31, 2020

IPL 2020 Season Preview: Can anyone defeat the Mumbai Indians?

The 2020 IPL season is almost upon us and the eight franchises will once again be battling it out to win the prestigious crown. The Mumbai Indians are the reigning champions, having secured their fourth title last season by beating the Chennai Super Kings in a thrilling final by one run.

The Indians will be aiming to become the first side since the Super Kings in 2011 to retain the crown, although they will face stiff competition.

Chennai will be desperate to battle for the title to bounce back from their agonising defeat, while Delhi Capitals, Sunrisers Hyderabad and Royal Challengers Bangalore have also retooled their outfits and will provide intense competition.

We’ll now look at the leading contenders for the IPL 2020 season and the standout players that will be striving to make an impact at this year’s tournament.

Mumbai Indians

The Indians were grateful to a fantastic final over from Lasith Malinga, who held his nerve after being dispatched for runs aplenty in his previous spells with the ball. The Sri Lankan was outstanding when his team needed him the most to guide them over the line.

 

Malinga will once again be a crucial part of Rohit Sharma’s side in their bid to win the IPL for a historic fifth time. There have not been many changes to their squad for the upcoming campaign. Australia batsman Chris Lynn has been added along with his compatriot Nathan Coulter-Nile to shore up the batting and bowling ranks respectively.

Trent Boult was traded into the squad from the Capitals, although there will be concerns over the New Zealander’s recent injury problems. The main positive for Mumbai is that they’ve kept the core of their team intact. Sharma, Jasprit Bumrah and Hardik Pandya all remain and will be the foundation of their charge along with overseas talent Kieron Pollard and Quinton de Kock. They will be a formidable outfit to contend with once again and it will take some effort to knock them off top spot.

Chennai Super Kings

Shane Watson almost dragged the Super Kings over the line with a super innings of 80, but his run out in the final over ended their hopes of successive titles. Stephen Fleming’s men will return the majority of their squad that made the surge all the way to the final. They’re in a strong position to go one better this time around, strengthening their line-up, especially in the bowling ranks.

Sam Curran and Josh Hazlewood will add their deadly accuracy to the team, providing Mahendra Singh Dhoni with control from his seamers. Lungi Ngidi will provide the express pace, while the Super Kings have an embarrassment of riches in the spin department as Ravindra Jadeja, Mitchell Santner, Imran Tahir, Harbhajan Singh and Piyush Chawla will be jostling for places in the team.

Outside of Watson and Dhoni, their batting ranks could be a concern. Faf du Plessis, Suresh Raina, Ambati Rayudu and Murali Vijay were not overly convincing last season and will have to raise the levels of their respective games to allow Chennai to win the crown this term. There is a lot of experience in the team, although there is a lack of youthful exuberance outside of Curran.

Other Contenders

Sunrisers made the savvy move to hire Trevor Bayliss as their coach for the 2020 season. Bayliss finished a four-year spell in charge of England and now returns to the IPL where he won two titles as head coach of the Kolkata Knight Riders in 2012 and 2014.

Hyderabad could have a dominant batting line-up, featuring David Warner, Jonny Bairstow and Kane Williamson. Outside of their two spinners from Afghanistan, Rashid Khan and Mohammad Nabi, there are no outstanding bowlers. If a surge were to come it will be through the strength of their batting and coaching with the addition of Bayliss.

   

Delhi Capitals were impressive last season and only the experience of Super Kings in the playoffs halted their charge. The Capitals have made significant moves in the off-season to improve their squad – notably adding Jason Roy and Shimron Hetmyer at the top of their batting order. Roy is one of the best openers in the white-ball game, while Hetmyer is developing into a very talented player in all formats for the West Indies.

Ajinkya Rahane adds depth to the middle order, while Marcus Stoinis and Chris Woakes are two savvy additions. The spin of Ravichandran Ashwin will provide the perfect complement to the pace of the IPL’s second-highest wicket-taker from 2019 – Kagiso Rabada. The Capitals are extremely well placed with their squad on paper to make a charge for the crown, and their odds will certainly be worth monitoring with Asiabet.org’s top bookmakers for the Indian Premier League.

Royal Challengers Bangalore are a threat with the presence of Virat Kohli in their side. No batsman has scored more runs in the tournament than the India skipper and he will lead RCB’s effort to win the title for the first time. However, he will need support from his team-mates to improve the fortunes of the franchise, who finished bottom of the table in 2019.

Aaron Finch, Chris Morris, Kane Richardson and Dale Steyn were added to bolster the squad. It will take special performances from the elite players in the team to carry them towards the playoffs as there is not a lot of depth available for new head coach Simon Katich and captain Kohli to work with.

Outlook

It appears as though it will be a case of the usual contenders battling it out for the title in the 13th edition of the IPL crown. Outside of the Super Kings and the defending champion Mumbai Indians, the Capitals appear the strongest side ready to charge towards the crown.

They appear to have the perfect balance between their batting and bowling ranks, with quality and depth readily available for head coach Ricky Ponting. Experience could count against them and it will take a strong effort to knock off the two sides that competed for the title last season. However, Delhi are certainly ones to watch and have decent value in the betting odds for the 2020 season.



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Tuesday, January 28, 2020

Upcoming ICC World Test Championship Matches

After a decade of trying and a few false starts, the ICC’s World Test Championship is finally underway and 2020 marks the halfway point of the competition. Its aim is to create a single top flight tournament for international test cricket, which can give fans a way to better follow the sport.

The tournament integrates some of the most prestigious test cricket series in the world. This includes The Ashes between England and Australia, the Freedom Trophy between India and South Africa, and the Trans-Tasman Trophy between Australia and New Zealand.

The final will take place at the prestigious Lord’s Cricket Ground in London, England, from 10th-14th June 2021. The format means that although the majority of the 3-year championship operates in a league format, the ICC can create the spectacle of a grand final where the winner is decided.

According to major oddsmakers, England are currently clear favourites to win this test series. This is likely to attract fans who are looking to engage in online betting over the five days. The World Test Championship has proved popular among fans with one major site reporting £17 million bet on a single match in 2019.

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Upcoming Games

With 18 months of the World Test Championship left to run, there are still plenty of exciting tests to be played. In the coming months, cricket heavyweights like India, Pakistan, New Zealand and England will all be competing.

Pakistan vs Bangladesh – February & April 2020

Taking place across February and April, the Bangladeshi tour of Pakistan will begin on 7th February at the Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium. This is one of the most fiercely competitive matches in test cricket due to the history of the two countries.

However, Pakistan has been dominant over the last two decades. Bangladesh has not beaten them in the last 20 years. Therefore, few would bet against the home side for this tour.

The second test will take place between 5th and 9th April, at the National Stadium in Karachi. This will begin just two days after a One Day International match between the two nations.

New Zealand vs India – February & March 2020

India loves cricket; it’s national competition the Indian Premier League is the most attended cricket competition in the world, and 6th most attended sporting competition overall. It’s no surprise then that the Indian national team is one of the strongest in the world.

In 65 years of test cricket between these two sides, India has come out on top more than twice as many times as New Zealand. The Kiwis have only ever beaten India in a test series on home turf, so they might stand a chance this year.

The two sides will play five T20I games in January and February, followed by three ODIs in early February. The first test will run from 21st-25th February at Basin Reserve Cricket Ground in Wellington, followed by the second from 29th February to 4th March at Hagley Oval in Christchurch.

Sri Lanka vs England – March 2020

England will be touring Sri Lanka throughout March 2020. They will start with two tour matches, the first running between 7th-9th and the second between 12th-15th. Following this, they’ll play two tests.

The first test between 19th-23rd March will be held at Galle International Stadium, while the second will take place on 27th-31st March at the Sinhalese Sports Club Ground, Colombo.

The two sides have been playing test series since the early 1980s. During this time England have won 8 series, while Sri Lanka have won 5. Both teams have been able to win tests at home and when touring, so there’s no clear advantage for Sri Lanka. England have also performed much better overall during the World Test Championship, so are looking favourable heading into these tests.

2020 is set to be an exciting year for cricket, with plenty of action packed test series to take place as part of the ICC World Test Championship. While India currently leads the competition, with a 100% win record, there is still plenty of time for other nations to catch up. With Australia and England close behind, things could look very differently at the end of the year.



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Saturday, January 25, 2020

Greatest Indian Cricket Players of All time

Since 1xBet offers the widest betting offer on cricket it’s only natural that we’re interested in the history and achievements of this great sport. And what better way to celebrate cricket as a sport than taking a closer look at some of its most emblematic players of all time that India offered to the world? It’s already well-known that India doesn’t consider cricket as a sport, it’s a national love affair and everyone will have a say in how the list of top cricket players should look like. Check out this list and you are free to share your feedback in the comments section.

Sachin Tendulkar

Often referred to as the god of cricket, there’s no other player that deserves the first position more than Sachin Tendulkar. He is recognised as the best player of all time and not just in India, but all other countries where cricket is popular. He’s the first player to get 100 international centuries and also the first one to get a double hundred. He helped his teams win countless matches and one memorable match is the 2011 Cricket World Cup final. Holding records for most runs in Tests and ODI matches, the little master started playing high-level cricket since he was 16. Though he retired in 2013 when he also received India’s highest civil award, he still remains very close to the sport.

Sunil Gavaskar

Sunil has his place in the history of cricket as well. He is often viewed as the best opening batsman in the sport and he dominated the cricket world for the best part of the 80s and 70s. Recognized by the greatest legends of the sport as a phenomenon, Sunil managed to get 774 runs on his debut. And if you’re not sure what that means, it’s enough to know that most batsmen need up to 10 matches to get such a score. He did it in one single match, his first one!

Kapil Dev

When talking about bowlers, Indians have certain players they automatically think about. Kapil Dev is definitely one of them as he’s one of the few bowlers that could ever hope for a place in the cricket best players list. He captained the Indian team that brought the first World Cup title back in 1983 and that alone reserved him a place in history. His record has figures like over 5,000 runs and 400 wickets and that’s no wonder considering his ability to perfectly mix ferociousness and class for excellent cricket matches.

M.S Dhoni

After the first World Cup title went towards India, there was a drought of trophies and resounding successes. It all ended when Captain Cool stepped on the field and helped India to win not one but two World Cup trophies. Captain of the team that won the T20 World Cup in 2007 and then again in 2011 when he won the man of the match award in the final of the tournament, Dhoni is without any doubt one of the best contemporary cricket players. And, just like any other superstar players, he has his signature “Helicopter Shot” that the fans won’t forget anytime soon.

Virat Kohli

When Dhoni stepped down from his captain role, the option that made the most sense was Vira Kohli. With an awesome start of a career, Virat was selected to represent India in all three formats of the sport. Ever since, he is breaking record after record and there are a lot of voices that already started to compare him with the legendary Sachin Tendulkar. Considering that he still has a lot of kick in him, Kohli might just be the next god in Indian cricket and he’s extremely loved by all Indians.

You can always count on 1xBet to deliver the widest selection of cricket matches with high odds and various betting possibilities to choose from. If you’re into cricket, you will always have a good partner in 1xBet.



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Salute to a Centenarian

Yesterday the list of First Class cricketers who have celebrated their hundredth birthday numbered 23. Today that exclusive club has a new member, and its second (after DB Deodhar) from India, Vasant Raiji. There were a total of nine First Class appearances for Raiji spread over eleven years. He was a batsman who in his fourteen visits to the crease twice passed fifty, both those half centuries coming in the same match when he was opening the batting for Baroda against Maharashtra in the Ranji Trophy. He scored 68 and 53 in a comfortable 354 run victory.

Outside the game Raiji earned his living, and doubtless it was a reasonable one, as a chartered accountant, but cricket was his passion and over the years he wrote a number of books on the game and, as far as I am aware, is the only notable cricket writer to live to the age of one hundred.

It was 1963, and thus at the age of 43, that Raiji’s first book appeared, self published from his home address. Ranji: The Legend and the Man was slim hardback on the subject of the man who was, certainly up to that point, the most famous of Indian born cricketers. It is a sobering thought that as late as 2020 there is a man, Raiji, who was alive when the man who was one of the shining lights of the Golden Age made his last appearance as a First Class cricketer, at Hastings in August 1920.

Raiji’s book, the first since 1902 to celebrate Ranjitsinhji the cricketer rather than the man, was undoubtedly hagiographical in nature. Raiji openly acknowledged his reliance on the work of earlier writers, notably Cardus, of whom he expressed regret that he had not penned his hero’s biography. As for the reason for writing the book in his preface Raiji wrote; I feel it is the duty of an Indian who has been a keen follower of the game to now collect all the authentic and interesting facts about the greatest cricketer India ever produced.

Shortly after Ranji: The Legend and the Man appeared Raiji was involved in a much more ambitious project on the subject of a batsman he did, as an eight year old, see score 84 and 38 for the Hindus against the Parsees in the 1928/29 Bombay Quadrangular Tournament. It was one of only two First Class matches Duleep ever played in India. Later on despite Duleep being several years older than Raiji the two became friends.

By Indian standards of the day Duleep: The Man and his Game was a luxurious publication. There was no single author but a group of four editors who comprised Raiji, statistician Anandji Dossa, filmmaker and photographer Vithalbhai Jhaveri and former Indian batsman Vijay Merchant. The book is a hardback printed on high quality paper and is now a collectors item. It consists of a biographical section attributed to the editors, of whom one suspects Raiji was the main writer. The bulk of the book then consists of a series of more than forty essays by just about all of the great and the good of cricket writing. It then concludes with a number of writings by Duleep himself on a variety of subjects.

Raiji clearly worshipped the stylists, as his third book in a year was Victor Trumper: The Beau Ideal of a Cricketer. This is very similar in size and appearance to the Ranjitsinhji book although it is of a rather different genre. Whilst Ranji: The Legend and the Man comprised Raiji’s own writings, albeit using extensive quotes from others, the Trumper is an anthology, with contributions from the likes of Arthur Mailey, CB Fry, FS Ashley-Cooper and Cardus.

Despite those three books in little more than a year it was to be almost a decade before Raiji’s name appeared on bookstands again and when it did it was once more in connection with Ranjitsinhji as, in 1972, he edited Ranji: A Centenary Album. It is an unusual book, ring bound and in landscape orientation it was clearly, as with Duleep: The Man and his Game, intended to be a special publication and the gold covered front board that houses the book adds lustre to the finished product as do the myriad of photographs and the regular insertions, on a different grade of paper, of examples of poetry on the subject of the Jam Sahib. The book contains writings from Grace, Fry, Cardus and Duleep as well as extracts from Ranji’s own writings.

By now the die had been cast by Raiji for the sort of publication that he, as a man who earned a living outside of cricket writing, wanted to produce and his next book was another tribute. Again a slim volume, better described as a booklet, LP Jai: Memories of a Great Batsman, appeared at the end of 1975. Jai scored a famous century against a strong Australian touring side in 1935, although he had disappointed in his only Test (against England in 1933/34) and was to do so again when he toured England in 1936 and was unable to break into the Test side. Another great stylist Jai was a batsman that Raiji loved to watch, and he also played with him Jai’s final First Class match. Around half of the 56 page booklet is taken up with Raiji’s tribute to a man he describes as My Cricket Hero, and the rest in the main by appreciations from Merchant, DR Joshi (who worked with Jai in the banking sector) and journalist ‘Bobby’ Talyarkhan.

In 1984 Raiji chose a different tack for his next book, although once again an unashamedly nostalgic one. The title, The Romance of Ranji Trophy: 50 Golden Years, is self-explanatory and Raiji, eight of whose nine First Class appearances were in India’s best loved domestic tournament, produced a fascinating 65 page booklet. The subject might have called for a lengthy narrative, but that isn’t the Raiji way and his 28 short chapters, liberally sprinkled with photographs, scorecards and statistics is essentially a miscellany, visiting all of the Trophy’s most interesting men and moments.

The title page of the Ranji Trophy booklet contains a short quote from John Nyren’s 1833 classic The Cricketers of my Time which, with hindsight, was clearly intended as a hint to the direction in which Raiji’s writing ambitions were moving. Two years later, coinciding with the centenary of the first Parsee tour to England in 1886 he published India’s Hambledon Men, a look back to the ancient history of the game in India. The 156 pages contained a history that John Arlott described as thoroughly and carefully collected and arranged.

The next anniversary marked by a Raiji publication was the following year when CCI & The Brabourne Stadium 1937-1987 appeared, published by the Cricket Club of India Ltd and co-written by Raiji and his old friend Dossa, both of whom of whom had been at the stadium back in ‘37 to watch it’s inaugural fixture when the CCI hosted the strong MCC team that was touring India under the captaincy of Lionel Tennyson. The nicely produced hardback again eschews the lengthy narrative format so often used in histories and whilst the essays are rather fewer and fuller than those in the Ranji Trophy booklet the style is not dissimilar.

There was just one ‘biography’ to appear from the pen of Raiji and that appeared in 1989, CK Nayudu: The Shahenshah of Indian Cricket, although the man himself was keen to describe the book as an appreciation as opposed to a biography. Nayudu was the most exciting Indian cricketer of his generation and cemented his reputation in 1926/27 when, playing against an MCC side whose attack included George Geary, Maurice Tate and Ewart Astill he scored a dazzling 153 and set a record for the number of sixes (eleven) in a First Class innings that was not to be broken for many years.

Sadly for the six year old Raiji his parents did not take him to the ground with them on the day of Nayudu’s famous innings, but at least he had the pleasure of hearing their first hand accounts and, in the future, to be present when Nayudu played many of his major innings. Raiji also had the privilege of playing against Nayudu thirteen years later when he made his own First Class debut. He wrote in his preface to the 101 page hardback; As a schoolboy I ate, drank, breathed and dreamt cricket. But not even in my wildest dreams did I ever imagine that one day I would be playing cricket with the greatest cricketer India has ever produced. So it would be fair to say that the book was not intended to be an objective account.

It seemed, for some years, that at 69 Raiji had decided to hang up his pen for good, but then in 2000 Story of the Bombay Tournament: From Presidency to Pentangulars 1892-1946 appeared, co-written with Mohandas Menon a further edition of which, in a de luxe and larger format, appeared six years later. In the meantime in 2005 Raiji was persuaded to edit a slim centenary tribute to Duleep.

Finally, in 2010 somebody, I believe Sachin Bajaj (co-author of the excellent Fortune Turners), had the good sense to put together an anthology of Raiji’s work and Cricket Memories: Men and Matches of Bygone Days appeared. Some of the material came from the earlier books, but most came from magazine and journal articles. Those that were culled from the pages of the likes of Wisden Cricket Monthly, Cricket Quarterly* and the Journal of the Cricket Society can be sourced, but some from more ephemeral publications are much rarer. All are typical of their writer. He does not waste words, but tells some wonderful stories. All of his books are recommended but, as an introduction, Cricket Memories is perhaps the place to start.

*An excellent Indian magazine that ran for 15 issues in the late 1970s and was edited by Anandji Dossa and not Rowland Bowen’s similarly named journal from the 1960s



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Saturday, January 18, 2020

The Latest Updates on the Australia Tour of India 2020

The current Australia Tour of India has been making headlines in the cricket industry. The Australian Cricket team had always been a tough contender in cricket as they had been ranked to be the world’s number 2.

These two tough teams had always been clashing on the field ever since 1947. This time, in 2020, India gets to host the ODI series against Australia once more.

Their first ODI match happened last March 14 at the Wankhede Stadium in Mumbai, India. In this match, the Indian Cricket Team had suffered from a 10-wicket loss against the Australian team.

With a score of 258-255 runs and 12.2 overs to spare, India had indeed lost to their match against Australia.

This loss of the Indian Cricket Team now serves as the team’s 4th consecutive ODI match loss against Australia on Indian soil. Tracing back India vs. Australia match records, it can be discovered that this is the second time that India has suffered 4 consecutive losses to Australia on their own land. The first one happened from 2003 to 2006 where the Tri-series and the Champions Trophy were held in India.

Going back, the highlights of the latest India vs. Australia match made records in comparison to their other matches.

Some of the match highlights that set some records are the following:

  • The 258 runs made by Warner and Finch now serves as the first-ever 250+ partnership in an ODI format against India. They had beaten the record of George Bailey and Steve Smith of 242 runs in 2016.

The said run also served as the 2nd highest chase by a team without losing any wicket in an ODI format. The first one, a record of 279 runs by South Africa in a game against Bangladesh in 2017, remains undefeated.

  • The 10-wicket loss of India also set a record by being the 5th 10-wicket loss of the team and the 2nd 10-wicket loss to have taken place in the Indian soil. The last 10-wicket loss of Indian cricket team on their own land happened way back in 2005 in an ODI match against South Africa.
  • The 10-wicket victory of Australia, on the other hand, serves as the 5th time that Australia had won an ODI by taking down 10 wickets. The 4th one happened in the 2007 World Cup where the team fought against Bangladesh.
  • In this match, David Warner was able to complete 5000 runs in ODI cricket in 115 innings, making him the 4th fastest player to reach the milestone.
  • Both Aaron Finch and David Warner scored centuries. This served as Warner’s 18th century in an ODI format. Meanwhile, Finch’s century served as the 16th century of his career and the 5th one during his captaincy.
  • Indian captain Virat Kohli had once again been called out after Australian cricketer Adam Zampa took a wicket. This is the 4th time that Kohli had been dismissed by Zampa.

Aside from the aforementioned highlights that made some record, other events that occurred in the game are the following:

  • Indian wicketkeeper Rishabh Pant suffered from a concussion after his helmet was hit by a ball that was delivered by Australian player Pat Cummins. Pant was no longer able to play for the second innings and had been replaced by KL Rahul. In addition to that, the 22-year-old player had been ruled out for the 2nd ODI match while his participation in the 3rd ODI is yet to be announced.
  • Indian captain Virat Kohli bats at the No.4 spot to make way for KL Rahul. This is the first time that the team had made use of a Sharma-Dhawan-Rahul combination.

There were so many happenings on the first ODI match between the Australian and Indian team.

The Australian cricket fans are delighted with the result. The game came clearly in favour of the Australian team that time and the taste of victory had been sweet for Australia. The team is currently exerting their best efforts to sustain their victorious streak against the Men in Blue.

On the other hand, Indian fans may have been badly disappointed with the outcome of the game that took place in Mumbai. However, it is with the undying love for cricket that lets hope glimmer in the eyes of the sports fans. In an interview conducted after the game, the Men in Blue told their fans to not worry about this one game. For sure, the Indian team is also preparing to bounce back after this defeat against Australia.

The Australia Tour of India started last January 14 and will end on the 19th. Be tuned in to the latest updates about their ODI matches because things will surely get more interesting.



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The Major – A Biographical Sketch of Rowland Bowen

There have been plenty of cricket magazines that have, for varying lengths of time, graced the newsagents and bookstalls of the UK, and a not inconsiderable number in other countries where the game has a hold. Uniquely amongst them The Cricketer has survived for almost a century, but the majority last only a few years. Finest of them all has been The Cricket Quarterly that was published on 32 occasions between 1963 and 1970. I fully intend to write a post on the subject of CQ, but I have come to the conclusion that that is not something that can be written in isolation, and that before that can appear I have to introduce the proprietor of the Quarterly, Major Rowland Bowen.

For such an interesting character there is not too much source material on Bowen. The Australian writer, resident in London for many years, Murray Hedgcock, is in the process of writing a memoir, but then he has been so engaged for many years. Let us hope that one day his book does put in an appearance, but if not Hedgcock did at least contribute a fascinating essay on Bowen to the splendid Between Wickets 3. That apart the renowned Nottinghamshire archivist and historian Peter Wynne-Thomas wrote an essay on Bowen for Cricket Lore back in 1995, and then journalist Russell Jackson wrote a long piece for The Guardian in 2017.

In the circumstances I do, for the content of this piece, have to admit to relying heavily on Messrs Hedgcock, Wynne-Thomas and Jackson. That much conceded in an effort to put up some some sort of defence to charges of plagiarism I have managed to secure a few snippets of my own from those individuals I know who had at least some dealings with Bowen.

Our man was born Hampstead in 1916. His father was a solicitor and in time there were two more children. Attending Westminster School Bowen seems not to have been a cricketer of any note and he did not follow his father into the law. After leaving school it seems that Bowen initially took up a role in commerce, but after deciding business was not for him he joined the Indian Army. In time he was promoted to Major and in 1958 returned to England. He was then placed by the War Office with the Joint Intelligence Bureau.

What was this organisation? Apparently it was designed to collect and collate economic, topographic, and operational intelligence. In time it had an expanding role and broader impact on international intelligence during the Cold War and was significant in acquiring intelligence about Soviet military and economic weaknesses. Bowen was an inveterate correspondent, generally on matters related to cricket but occasionally straying beyond the game. The suggestion has been made that he may have been some sort of spy. Hedgcock has seen more of the correspondence and knows more about Bowen than anyone else alive but doesn’t believe his life with the Joint Intelligence Bureau was particularly glamorous. He does not however dismiss the notion completely.

Whatever the detail of Bowen’s job was the little we know of it clearly marks Bowen, whatever other qualities he did and did not possess, as being a clever man and a diligent researcher with an eye for detail. Add to that a distrust of anything he could not verify with his own eyes and a distinctly prickly temperament and you have a man who, as soon as he decided to delve properly into cricket history was going to ruffle almost all of the feathers in the, up until then, largely cosy and congenial nest of cricket historians.

Following his return to the UK Bowen lived in Eastbourne with his divorced mother. He was an MCC member and, within the world of cricket tragics, first made a name for himself in 1958. A furore arose as a result of a television quiz show when a contestant was ruled incorrect when he asserted that Sussex had won the County Championship in 1875. The contestant relied on the views of Roy Webber, a man who at that time had a lofty reputation as a cricket statistician. The producers of the show had relied on the contents of Wisden, and the Almanack’s then editor, Norman Preston, enlisted Bowen’s help.

It was not difficult for Bowen to demolish Webber’s theory, although his efforts were something of a double edged sword for Preston as whilst Wisden was vindicated on the Sussex point Bowen nonetheless found a good deal wrong with the long established Wisden list. The full story of the fall out from this episode appears in the Wynne-Thomas article in Cricket Lore, but for my purposes it is sufficient to say that the end result of the row that ensued was that Bowen burned so many bridges that, in order to get his views on cricket history into print, he had no choice but to do what he did with CQ and launch his own Journal. The sub-title of CQ said all that needed to be said about his mission statement – A Journal devoted to the Noble Game of Cricket.

Wynne-Thomas knew Bowen pretty well although, like many others, Bowen eventually chose to discard the friendship. What that knowledge does mean though is that Wynne-Thomas is able to make it clear that Bowen had other interests besides cricket, and that his views on those were aired in the letters columns of the national press, particularly the Daily Telegraph, on a regular basis. Wynne-Thomas also reports a vituperative correspondence with a soft drinks company regarding the existence or otherwise of a flavour of fruit squash that the company claimed to manufacture but which Bowen could not obtain, and a long-running dispute with the station master at Eastbourne over the need or otherwise for a particular London bound train to sit outside the platform for five minutes before pulling in.

It is against that background that the most bizarre Bowen anecdote arises, and one on which Jackson concentrated on in his Guardian piece. The incident occurred in September of 1968 and involved Bowen, in perfectly good physical health and being sound of limb, attempting to amputate his own right leg without assistance. He came sufficiently close to achieving his goal to require the professional intervention he eventually summoned to have to finish the job he had begun. Jackson identifies a condition now known as Body Integrity Dysmorphia – the entry in Wikipedia is, to say the least, food for thought.

Clearly Bowen was, essentially, a loner but he was certainly not a man unable to love, as a bizarre insert posted out to subscribers with one of the final issues of CQ is testament. That a master should choose to write an emotional tribute to a lost canine companion is not of itself particularly unusual. But the intimate details of Bowen’s relationship with his devoted West Highland White Terrier, Rob, certainly represent what my children would proclaim in mock horror to be too much information! Quite how the then 13 year old Rob reacted to his master’s self-mutilation is not something that, as far as I am aware, Bowen ever commented on.

There was only ever one full length book that appeared from Bowen, Cricket: A History of Its Growth and Development throughout the World, published by Eyre and Spottiswoode in 1970. It is a remarkable book, as relevant half a century on as it was on publication. The book did and continues to attract much praise, the only real criticism of it coming in a review in The Cricketer from Irving Rosenwater,

Rosenwater and Bowen were men who in some ways were very similar, in particular in their both having serious issues with their views being disagreed with and they fell out spectacularly in the early 1960s over their differing opinions on the subject of the renowned historian of the early twentieth century, Frederick Ashley-Cooper. Rosenwater clearly read Bowen’s book thoroughly as he was able to single out 18 errors and a handful of typos. At one point Rosenwater writes one of the dangers of this book is that statements are made which are simply not true, but made with such forthright authoritativeness as to make them seem facts. He writes of Bowen creating new myths on ones he has dismantled and, just before listing his 18 errors, reminds his reader of Bowen’s statement in his introduction that he is intolerant of incompetence.

I have not checked Rosenwater’s list of errors and will rely on his lending his name to it as sufficient evidence of it being correct but, in truth they are not the sort of mistakes that cause a reader to question the overall content of Bowen’s book. In any event despite his comments and personal animus against Bowen Rosenwater does make a number of positive comments about the book, and still manages to conclude it is worth reading and singling out the 124 pages of appendices for particular praise. In reality Rosenwater in his review, perhaps unwittingly but possibly deliberately, makes as cogent a case for the importance of Bowen’s book than many of the more gushing tributes to it that have appeared.

Back in the real world Bowen’s self mutilation had brought about the decision by the Ministry of Defence to dispense with his services. As a result he sold up in Eastbourne (he had been living alone since his mother’s death in 1962) and moved to Mullion in Cornwall, taking CQ with him. According to Jackson the circumstances of his leaving his job were such as to deprive him of a pension and, its specialised content meaning that the CQ had never been a bestseller, one is left with the suspicion that only the buffer of a not inconsiderable salary had enabled Bowen to keep it going as long as he had. In any event he continued the magazine only until 1970 when, after some discussions with Wynne-Thomas over the possibility of his taking it over, Bowen’s ultimate preference was simply to close it. Whether he really wanted to do that or not the decision left the eight volumes of CQ as a lasting monument to Bowen’s success at accomplishing what he set out to achieve.

Having closed CQ and having no further need for it (and very possibly needing the cash) Bowen set about disposing of one of the best cricket libraries in private hands. Eventually he sold it to a Jamaican lawyer, James Richards. The current whereabouts of Richards and accordingly the library is unknown. Bowen had got many of the books from Leslie Gutteridge of Epworth Books, the only specialist dealer around during the 1950s. By the 1970s Gutteridge’s mantle had fallen on to EK Brown, coincidentally also located in Cornwall. Brown was offered the collection but felt unable to buy it. Bowen’s library had been a working one rather than that of a bibliophile and over the years he had simply not shown his books much in the way of tlc. Back in 1962 when a youthful Roger Page, visiting Bowen at home on a trip to England, had noted in his journal of the visit that the Bowen library was phenomenal, 40 years in the making.

After CQ was no more Bowen made his last move, a little way eastwards, to Buckfastleigh in Devon. There, to the astonishment of those who knew him, the 58 year old lifelong bachelor married. Sadly it did not prove to be an enduring union as Bowen died four years later in 1978, but by all accounts whilst it lasted the marriage was a happy one. For a man who caused so many ripples in the world of the study of cricket history Bowen’s passing was barely marked anywhere. He has not however been forgotten. A set of CQ is a sought after collectors’ item with a price tag to match and Cricket: A History of Its Growth and Development throughout the World is acknowledged as an essential research tool. It may be somewhat belated, but Bowen’s legacy is now recognised.

But I did mention that I had some new Bowen stories, so will mention those before I close. The first is from a South African who came to England in the 1950s. Bowen was a man before his time in terms of the depth of his disgust at the apartheid laws in South Africa and he was a vociferous supporter of the Stop The Seventy Tour campaign. My South African acquaintance knew Bowen only through correspondence about cricket, and was delighted to be able to arrange to meet Bowen at his Devon home. Shortly before the appointed time however Bowen learnt the nationality of his correspondent and that was that. He cancelled the meeting without further enquiry or ado.

My second story is of a man who, as a schoolboy living in Surrey in the 1960s, wrote to Bowen and in doing so was able to negotiate a special student rate for CQ. In one of the early issues he received he noticed a reference by Bowen to the use of the term ‘the Ashes’ only coming into vogue after Warner’s visit in 1903/04. George Giffen’s 1898 autobiography had contained two chapters entitled Fights for the Ashes. In light of the Bowen reputation it was with some trepidation that the Surrey sixth former raised the issue with Bowen. In the circumstances Bowen could not really argue, but it is still to his credit that he took the trouble to write to the youngster acknowledging his mistake*

And finally, two people I can quote. The first is David Kelly, now of Cranbrook in Kent but, in the 1960s, a cricket enthusiast who travelled widely and contributed occasionally to CQ on the subject of the game’s far flung outposts; I signed up to subscribe to the CQ following Bowen’s advertisement in The Cricketer during 1962 and then started corresponding with him, initially when I sent him a very basic draft of what turned into my piece on early East African cricket, once I had seen the first couple of issues in 1963.

I met him just the once, around 1965 or ’66. I was then in my early 20s so I hadn’t really met anyone like Bowen before. But I have to say I don’t recall too much about the occasion.  Bowen was then working at the Ministry of Defence and we met at the reception there before walking to the nearby National Liberal Club for lunch.

I do remember a conversation about cricket in North America and we wondered, bizarrely, whether any cowboys from the so-called Wild West would ever have happened across a game of cricket somewhere on probably the western edge of the development working west from the eastern seaboard.  This would have been some time after his booklet on North America in International Cricket appeared, followed by relevant updates and further information published in CQ.

We did talk of course about the work I had done for him, principally on East African cricket. And I remember chatting about the CQ itself and some of the material that he had included. My impressions of him are however pretty sketchy, I am afraid.  He was a fairly robust man and certainly had a bearing, borne out from his military days, I am sure.  But he was pleasant and interesting, and my thoughts after the meeting were entirely positive

Bowen and I fell out in 1967 but, as you will know, he fell out with everyone sooner or later!  This concerned my sending him a short article on the Dorset Rangers tour of Portugal in 1967 which he included in CQ. At about the same time The Cricketer included a piece on the same trip and Bowen accused me of sending the report to The Cricketer as well.  I indignantly told him (starting the letter with “Dear Bowen”!) that (a) I hadn’t done so and (b), if he cared to note that The Cricketer included just the matches against Lisbon, excluding the Oporto leg, he might deduce that that report emanated from Portugal. I did eventually receive something approaching an apology.

Subsequently we sort of got back on an even keel, although that was mainly due to my moving to St Lucia and Bowen wanting to find out about Roulez-la-bas (see pages 72-73 of his History, which led to his including me in his Acknowledgements in the magnum opus)

And in closing I will return to Roger Page, and his 1962 journal in which he recorded his first impression of Bowen as; a plumpish, middle-aged man with an easy manner. We talked for the rest of the day – or rather I listened and learned adding that his dogmatism was overwhelming.

Roger also recorded Bowen’s views on some fellow historians, none surprising, and recorded as:-

He bitterly decries Roy Webber.

He has no time for Irving Rosenwater.

He claimed that Ashley-Cooper was not honest enough to reveal mistakes.

But it wasn’t all carping, Roger observing (bear in mind this was 1962) that; he spent much time analysing his research into the social background of cricketers, stating that whereas in 1914 First Class professionals received a salary three times that of an unskilled labourer, both jobs would be on a similar scale today.

And Roger is also able to assist us with some of Bowen’s opinions on other matters, and he was certainly a man of firm views some of the more striking of which were:-

England should not join the Common Market: English people would never shed their national identity. And economic prosperity for the country would not follow”

the higher one travels up the social scale the higher the intelligence, and

He would abolish all motor-powered vehicles.

Perhaps inevitably Roger did eventually manage to upset Bowen, although it did take a number of years. The flashpoint came as a result of Bowen inviting Roger, when he next visited the UK in 1969, to read through a pre-publication draft of Cricket: A History of Its Growth and Development throughout the World. A month later Roger caught up with Bowen again and Roger’s views on the draft were sought. He made a comment that was intended as constructive, only to be met by a clearly much irritated Bowen roaring at him; that’s what my publisher said, and you’re both wrong!

And that, dear reader, was the man who gave us The Cricket Quarterly.

*When Cricket: A History of Its Growth and Development throughout the World one of the ‘mistakes’ this was one of the points Rosenwater highlighted and he quoted several pre 1903/04 references, but not this one.



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Saturday, January 11, 2020

Easy To Understand Guide To Cricket Betting

With this quick and easy guide, anyone who is completely new to cricket betting will understand how to take those first steps towards finding value bets. Betting on cricket is very much like betting on other sports. You should have a basic grasp of the rules of the game and the form of the teams if you expect to find decent opportunities.

Here’s how to get started.

Cricket Betting Markets

There are a few different popular forms of international cricket which will be the most popular betting markets available on major sites. They are Test cricket, One Day with 50-overs per team, and T20 events.

Test cricket is played over five days, and so a lot can happen in terms of form and changes to conditions. T20 is a much faster format played over a single session. In this case, hitting for six is often more important than defensive and strategic play. Betting strategies should change accordingly as you gain experience of these differences.

The main betting market is Match Outcome. This is simply betting on which team will win. It is the simplest bet to make and in some ways the most predictable, leading to slimmer payouts with less risk. There are many other cricket betting markets, such as leading runscorer, top bowler, total score over/under, and even best partnership.

How To Bet

To place a bet on a cricket market, it’s possible to use a bookmaker’s shop or a reputable online betting site. You can compare online bookmakers using Oddschecker to see who is offering the best odds and bonuses at any given time. This is a useful way to find the perfect site.

Anyone placing a bet will have to sign up to their chosen site. This usually involves opening an account and downloading the app or software. Then you can sign up using basic personal details. Always make sure the site is secure and legitimate before making real money deposits.

After that, find the cricket market that you are looking for and it’s then possible to place a bet.

Cricket Betting Tips

The number one tip when betting on cricket, apart from finding a reputable place to make the bet, is to always do your research to find the right bets. Learn about team form and look into stats around the players and opposition teams.

Monitor weather conditions and grounds for subtleties that could affect the result. Will it be overcast or will the sun be shining directly in the batting team’s eyes on the first day of the Test match? Does the pitch lend itself to the bowler or make for easy batting? These are factors that more experienced betters will start to think about.

In the long run, the idea is to find value bets – odds that you believe are in your favour. That is, the bookmaker has set a particular chance for an outcome, and your research suggests something else.

Most of all though, always bet responsibly and with money that you can afford to lose. Cricket betting should be fun and enhance your enjoyment of the game.



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England’s World Cup Heroes Honoured

It has been a topsy-turvy year for England cricket. Although the team was unable to regain the Ashes on home soil, the sport was put firmly on the radar of casuals once again after their dramatic World Cup success at Lord’s, the most iconic cricket arena in the history of the sport. Few people could forget the ‘Super Over’ victory over New Zealand, winning by the finest of margins in a pulsating encounter. Subsequently, several of the one-day squad have been recognised for their efforts by the Queen.

All-rounder, Ben Stokes, who single-handedly kept the team in the tournament several times – including the final – has been awarded an OBE. It marks an incredible turnaround for the Durham-born star, whose career looked to be hanging by a thread just a few years ago following an altercation in Bristol. Nevertheless, Stokes’ all-action displays with bat and ball saw him given the highest accolade, with his ultra-consistent figures in both forms of the game capturing the imagination of the next generation of cricket fans and players.

Among the other England cricket players to be honoured in the New Year Honours list, is England’s 50-over captain, Eoin Morgan, wicketkeeper Jos Buttler, and the team’s highest runs-scorer at the 2019 World Cup, Joe Root. Morgan received a CBE for his efforts while the latter two received MBEs respectively. Former England head coach, Trevor Bayliss was also given an OBE for his work in transforming the nation’s one-day side in the last four years.

Stokes beats Lewis Hamilton to Sports Personality of the Year honour too

Ben Stokes also received another huge accolade from the UK’s sporting public. He also bagged the BBC Sports Personality of the Year 2019 award in December, cementing his place as one of the nation’s favourite sporting heroes of the moment. The 28-year-old has also gained a huge amount of respect from his peers following his decision to continue playing with the Test squad to South Africa despite the news of his father’s ill-health. Stokes’ father was admitted to a Johannesburg hospital before Christmas with a serious illness but talkSPORT has since confirmed he has been removed from intensive care, with his condition said to be stabilising.

benstokes

Bad start to South Africa tour for England

It was a bitterly disappointing first test at Centurion for all concerned in the England camp. The home side eventually ran out comfortable winners by 107 runs, with a lot of fingers being pointed at test skipper, Joe Root for his decision to put the Proteas in to bat first after winning the toss. The pitch certainly looked like it would deteriorate as the match wore on, so most pundits were left somewhat bemused by Root’s choice to bowl first. South Africa posted a respectable 284 in their first innings, while England’s meagre 181 left them up against it from there on in.

South Africa applied themselves very well in their second innings, on an increasingly unpredictable batting surface, to leave England chasing a record total of 376 to win. Although this would have been the highest ever fourth innings score at Centurion, the team looked like they were making inroads during the end of the third day. They closed play on 121/1, needing just over 250 runs with nine wickets still in hand.

However, the second new ball proved to be England’s undoing, with some more unpredictable and uncharacteristic shot selections eventually resulting in South Africa’s comfortable victory on day four. This unpredictability, coupled with the fact that no-one really knows England’s best XI at present, means it’s little surprise that leading bookies such as Betway have South Africa priced as favourites to close out the four-test series as overall winners. The England team weren’t helped in the first test by a virus that spread its way through much of the team before and during the match. Several players had to be quarantined for their own good, although this appears to have been in vain, with The Cricketer reporting that Dom Sibley is the latest casualty ahead of the New Year’s Day second test in Cape Town.

josbutler

 

There were one or two green shots that will give the most optimistic England fans hope for the remainder of the series, not least Rory Burns’ stubborn and belligerent 84 runs from 154 deliveries. A reliable opener is something England have lacked since Alastair Cook’s retirement, but Burns has now shown against both Australia and South Africa that he has the temperament to play long innings. The real concern is that we may not see a fully fit England squad until the third test when the damage may already be done.



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Ralph Barker

Ralph Barker was born in 1917. His first job was in journalism as he joined the staff of the Sporting Life at age 17, although he did not stay there, and moved into banking, he continued to write and before the war some of his sketches were performed at the renowned Windmill Theatre in London.

In 1941 Barker joined the RAF. He became a wireless operator and air gunner and, after initially being based in Scotland, was posted to Malta where, as a crew member on Beaufort bombers, he was engaged in the hazardous task of bombing enemy shipping. Fortunate to survive an incident in which his pilot and navigator were killed Barker was eventually transferred back to Britain and left the RAF in 1946.

After being demobbed Barker returned to banking but remained only two years before rejoining the RAF as a public relations officer. He continued in that position until 1961 when he retired to pursue a full-time writing career. He had already by then published two books on the subject of flying, the RAF and war in the air and over the rest of his life would author a total of fifteen books on various aspects of aviation. He also wrote the story of a climbing disaster, two books about passenger vessels sunk by German U-Boats in World War Two as well as biographies of Frederick Spencer Chapman and Bill Lancaster. The former was an Army Officer who made a name for himself in the war against Japan as a result of his success behind enemy lines in Malaya. Lancaster was a pioneer aviator, once charged with and found not guilty of the murder of a love rival.

Cricket was always an interest of Barker’s and whilst he never aspired to First Class level he was a good cricketer and played all through his service days for RAF teams and also captained the West Surrey club. His first book on cricket, and his fifth altogether, appeared in 1964. The book’s title was Ten Great Innings, and it must have caused some trepidation for the author when he learnt that it was to be reviewed by the acerbic Rowland Bowen in the Cricket Quarterly. If he was concerned he need not have worried, the Major was impressed;

We understand that this is the author’s first book on cricket, although he has written several others on widely different topics. We hope it may be the first of many for the author shows clearly he has the stuff of cricket in him, and he can write. Cardus, in a trenchant foreword (in which he castigates much modern cricket writing) commends Barker both for his style and for his ability to keep his eye on the ball. We can only concur in this judgement.

The innings selected are all undoubtedly deserving of the description ‘great’, and all are wonderful stories of famous matches. The book begins with Jack Hobbs’ famous innings that set England on course to reclaiming the Ashes in 1926. Other famous Ashes innings featured are Stan McCabe’s withering attack on the ‘Bodyline’ of Harold Larwood and Bill Voce at the SCG in 1932/33, Denis Compton’s not dissimilar solo effort against Ray Lindwall and Keith Miller in 1948 and Cyril Washbrook’s remarkable comeback in 1956. Len Hutton’s 364 in 1938 also features.

A lesser known Test innings recorded is that of Russell Endean for South Africa against Australia at the MCG in 1952, and there is a chapter on Bill Edrich’s effort in ‘the timeless Test’ at Kingsmead in 1939. At a lesser level Middlesex are involved in two matches. The first of their appearances is the one man show that Learie Constantine put on at Lord’s in 1928, and the second when the county were on the wrong end of a big Don Bradman hundred in 1934. My personal pick however will always be Barker’s account of Harold Gimblett’s famous debut century for Somerset against Essex at Frome in 1935. More than thirty years after I first read it that remains high amongst my favourite pieces of cricket writing.

Three years later, in 1967, Barker’s second cricket book was in many ways a companion volume, Ten Great Bowlers. Bowen was even more impressed with this one which he described as; one of the contenders for the best book of year. It is something that every cricket enthusiast, indeed every cricketer, should have, for all will find it interesting and absorbing, whilst cricketers cannot fail to profit from it. The book is excellently written and there is much original research in it, and Ralph Barker must henceforth rank as one of the best writers cricket that we have.

The approach of Ten Great Bowlers is slightly different to its predecessor in that it is more concerned with biographical sketches than accounts of individual matches. The stand out chapters for me are those on the American Bart King, and on Sydney Barnes. Also featured are Maurice Tate, George Lohmann, Hedley Verity and the Surrey pair of Tom Richardson and Bill Lockwood. Three Australians also feature; Clarrie Grimmett, ‘Tiger’ O’Reilly and Fred Spofforth. The original research to which Bowen made reference is in relation to Richardson who, contrary to popular belief at the time, Barker established did not take his own life.

Clearly by now much valued by Bowen at the end of 1967 the maverick editor played Barker a great compliment by inviting him to provide a foreword for volume five of his Cricket Quarterly. Barker’s choice of subject matter says a great deal about him. The setting he selected was the second day of a County Championship match between Middlesex and Yorkshire at Lord’s in 1966. It is perhaps, for the sake of younger readers, worth pointing out that exciting cricket was rarely seen at that time and, in an effort to combat that, a rule had been introduced for some matches in which the sides’ first innings were limited to 65 overs. This was one such contest.

On the first day Middlesex scored 191 all out in their allocation, and at the close Yorkshire were 70-2 after 32 overs. In the end on the second morning they were all out for 175 so a lead of 15 for Middlesex. The serious business of the game now began as the hosts, with the best part of two days to go, needed to set Yorkshire a target. In two sessions Middlesex compiled a painstaking 130-5.

Barker describes the match as among the most absorbing I have seen. He wrote in glowing terms of the off breaks of Ray Illingworth and the manner in which he kept the Middlesex batsman in a straitjacket. At the same time he commented on the dissatisfaction shown by many of the spectators present and in doing so made his point, highlighting the age-old dichotomy in cricket between the cerebral and attritional struggle when the bowling is of the highest calibre that is valued so highly by the diehard, and the demand for instant entertainment put forward by many others.

In 1969 Test Cricket: England v Australia appeared. An expensive book, more than four times the price of a standard hardback, it is probably Barker’s least noteworthy contribution to the literature of the game. For the book Barker produced an account of each Test in around 500 words. Irving Rosenwater, nominally co-author, in fact dealt solely with the statistics, which comprised in excess of 100 tables.

As we know Bowen certainly admired Barker’s work, but at the same time he and Rosenwater had long since fallen out. It is no surprise therefore that Bowen did not like the pair’s book, although he did at least give it a review that spread over three pages. He was deeply critical of the price and he gave Rosenwater’s statistics a lukewarm reception. Bowen also felt Barker’s contributions lacked detail, but he certainly sugar coated that one; Barker is a good writer and his talents are wasted in this kind of affair ……… if most of them (the matches) had been given at least 2,000 words each……we believe Barker could have produced a very fine volume indeed.

At the time Test Cricket: England v Australia was published Rosenwater was on the staff of The Cricketer, so the one place for a truly impartial review to appear was in Wisden, courtesy of John Arlott. It would be fair to say that Arlott was much more enthusiastic than Bowen but the book seems not to have sold well. For all his antipathy towards Rosenwater Bowen, it seems likely, was spot on with his observations on the book’s price tag.

It would be another seven years before Barker wrote another cricket book and this time it was again in the nature of a collected biography, albeit the men concerned were all from the same family. The Cricketing Family Edrich took a long look at the careers of Bill and John and gave shorter accounts of the ives of Bill’s three less illustrious brothers, Geoffrey, Eric and Brian. Once again Rosenwater provided some excellent statistics. Subsequently there has been one more biography of Bill (by Alan Hill) but, perhaps surprisingly, no full biography of John has never appeared. The family story is an excellent one and, as always, is well told by Barker.

Innings of a Lifetime was Barker’s next book and, as it turned out, his penultimate one. It appeared in 1982 so after Bowen’s death and long after the demise of the Cricket Quarterly. It was a return to the same formula that served Barker so well in Ten Great Innings, albeit with a slightly different emphasis. On this occasion Barker chose to tell the stories of fine knocks in careers rather less celebrated than those of the men who had featured in his earlier book.

The book begins with the century scored by a 21 year old Colin Cowdrey at the MCG on the last day of 1954, before moving on to Peter Burge’s innings at Headingley in 1964. The Ashes feature again with Bob Barber’s only Test century, scored at the SCG in 1965/66. Bristling with aggression Barber’s was the sort of knock that would not be seen again from an opening batsmen for many years.

There are more overseas players this time round. One double chapter was devoted to Garry Sobers and David Holford, whose batting heroics took the second test in 1966 away from England. Graeme Pollock’s famous 125 at Trent Bridge in 1965 features too, as does Asif Iqbal’s spirited 146 from number nine at the Oval in 1967. It was an innings which may have done no more than delay an English victory, but it certainly won the Pakistani a legion of admirers. New Zealander Glenn Turner gets a place for the innings that led his country to victory over Australia in Christchurch in 1974

It is back to two Englishmen to close the book with chapters devoted to Dennis Amiss’ double century against Michael Holding, Andy Roberts and Wayne Daniel in 1976 and, a year later, that wonderful innings from Derek Randall that, for a time, looked like it might give England victory in the centenary Test after their desultory first innings of 95. The reviewer in The Cricketer came out with a rather nice line about Innings of a Lifetime that applies to all of Barker’s work when he observed that the best of the accounts are almost like mini novels in their dramatic intensity.

Finally, seven years later in 1989, at which point Barker was 72, he produced his final cricket book. Purple Patches is another variation on the theme examining 11 men who at one time or another managed to display exceptional runs of form.

The Englishmen here begin with Mickey Stewart, who held 77 catches in 1957. Next is David Steele, whose showing of a broad bat to Dennis Lillee and Jeff Thomson made all England supporters happy in 1975. Frank Tyson gets a place for his remarkable contribution to the 1954/55 Ashes victory and Jim Laker for his prolific wicket taking effort that followed in the 1956 return. The final Englishman is Yorkshire slow left-arm bowler Arthur Booth who, in 1946 and 43 years of age, showed his county what might have been had it not been for the presence of Hedley Verity through the 1930s.

Five of those featured in Purple Patches are Australians. The first is Bill Ponsford and his remarkable early career scoring record. He is followed by Bill Alley’s Indian summer with Somerset in 1961 when he became the last man to score 3,000 runs in an English season. That pair are joined by Bob Massie, whose prodigious swing bowling in the 1972 Ashes encounter mesmerised all who saw it, and the run of form that saw a 21 year old David Hookes given a Test debut in the centenary Test. Finally, and a slightly tongue in cheek one, is the achievement of left arm fast medium bowler Bill Johnston who, in 1953, went through a tour of England with a batting average of 102. The final man featured is the South African wicketkeeper Denis ‘Sporty’ Lindsay, who scored more than 606 runs in seven innings against the 1966/67 Australians.

Although there were no more contributions to cricket literature from Barker his last book, an aviation one, appeared as late as 2005. Ralph Barker must have been made of strong stuff as he reached the grand old age of 93 before departing this mortal coil in May 2011.



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Saturday, January 4, 2020

Graeme Smith to Cricket South Africa’s rescue

In a stunning and most unexpected turnaround, Graeme Smith has agreed to become the acting Director of Cricket in South Africa. This news comes hot on the heels of Smith’s refusal to take up the position citing concerns that he would not have the freedom to implement the required changes the organization needed so badly. There have, however, been a flurry of suspensions and resignations from the South African cricket board over the last week which could well have changed Smith’s mind. 

Smith has signed a three-month contract that will run to the start of the 2020 IPL and it’s not clear what will happen when this rolling contract comes to an end, or why it is only 90 days. One could speculate but the rule of thumb over the last 24 months when it comes to the hierarchy of South African cricket is to try and not second guess them as they often do the bizarre and unexpected. 

Having said that, the likeliest assumption is that Smith asked for three months instead of being told he would be given that amount of time. Smith has called the shots throughout Cricket South Africa’s courting of him and it’s unlikely that he would have given in now. Even if it is only three months there is still time for Smith to leave his mark given that England and Australia will both be coming to South African shores. The general assumption would be that if the Proteas were to win both of those series then there would be a deafening clamor for Smith to get the role on a full-time basis and take the team into the 2020 T20 World Cup.

That is another tough ask as right now online cricket betting has the Proteas as 5th favorites to win the T20 World Cup so it’s easy to see how big a challenge Smith has ahead of him. This is the proverbial baptism of fire for Smith which no doubt has its positives and negatives. The positives are that if Smith gets off to a winning start then the winds of change would have blown in the rainbow nation with the Proteas looking a world force once more. The negatives – which you probably have guessed – are that if Smith fails, this once-proud cricketing nation will be left dangling on the precipice of decline.

Indeed, the mountain ahead is high and the weather forecast very bleak but Smith is the shining light that can give South Africa safe passage over. If anyone can do it, the youngest captain the rainbow nation ever had can.

The messages of goodwill Smith will receive as he starts this journey will come from not just in South Africa but far and wide as the world knows how important a strong Proteas side is to the relevance of international cricket.

Some might say that tackling adversity is a natural part of any South African’s DNA and in a year where they have won the Rugby World Cup and been crowned Miss Universe, there is genuine hope that Graeme Craig Smith can add to the feel-good story and get this right.



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