Saturday, February 29, 2020

5 Tips for Successful Cricket Betting

Cricket is a complex game that can reward you significantly when betting on the sport. Consequently, at 1xBet we have come up with winning tips to enhance and simplify your cricket betting experience. You should follow as many of these tips as possible to become more accomplished. These 5 cricket betting tips will help you succeed.

 

  1. Be Careful of Draws

 

Soccer draws, and other low-scoring sports have a very high probability of such an outcome; however, it is a long shot by far when it comes to cricket. A test match does provide a reasonable chance of a draw; yet, shorter formats of the sport and one-day events do not.

 

You should not bet on a draw too often.

 

You may be tempted to bet on the draw if a test match or second innings seem to drag on forever

 

You should bet on the team with more momentum

 

Regarding test matches, keep well in mind that as the pitch deteriorates during the game, it becomes more difficult to bat accurately.

 

  1. Keep Abreast of Latest Developments and News

 

Keeping abreast of developments and informed with the latest news, you give yourself an advantage. Even if you tend to rely on tipsters for betting tips, it pays to keep up-to-date about the following:

 

  • Current players
  • Rules
  • Team news

 

Doing so is essential as betting odds change according to these criteria. Player ratings are continually changing with the teams playing and tournaments involved.

 

  1. Always Learn More

 

Like all sports betting, it is vital to increase your knowledge continuously.

 

  • Don’t get stick in a rut, if you want to succeed, keep learning
  • It may take years to make accurate predictions if you continue to increase your knowledge
  • You can only increase your betting bankroll after gaining experience and more confidence

 

  1. Think About Betting on Both Sides

 

Cricket is such an unpredictable sport that it makes sense to bet on both sides rather than of betting based on your personal preferences. It is recommended even more so for shorter versions of the sport. A team’s momentum can regularly sway the result of a cricket match, and you can never be sure about the final outcome of the game even if one side is far stronger than the other. Betting on both sides allies you to take advantage of superior odds for the weaker team. If they happen to win, your profits can increase significantly.

 

  1. Pay Attention When Buying Runs

 

When betting on over/under or other such markets, it tempting and easy to buy runs. That is generally the case when betting on a team you are familiar with and like. The superior odds of these markets can help you win big.

 

  • It is more popular to bet on ‘overs.’
  • These markets are compelled to be superior to help bookies balance their books
  • Betting on ‘under’ gives you better chances of getting excellent odds

 

When betting on the runs, make sure you consider other factors like the weather.

 

If you follow these useful tips when you bet on cricket, you increase your winnings. 1xBet provides all the best betting tips so you can win on cricket betting and in other sports as well.



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The Lillywhites

The Lillywhite family can be a confusing bunch. All told five of them play significant roles in the history of the way the game of cricket is played and/or the development of its literature. It isn’t always straightforward to work out who was who, some duplication of Christian names certainly not assisting.

The story begins with William, known as ‘The Nonpareil’. William’s main claim to fame is as one of the leading bowlers of the early part of the nineteenth century, primarily responsible for the establishment of round arm bowling. Born in 1792 William first played in a match now recognised as First Class at the age of 32, and from then until he was 61 he took more than a thousand wickets at a cost of just over ten runs each.

In 1844 William gave his name to Lillywhite’s Illustrated Handbook of Cricket. Available in three different versions it had 22 pages of text that set out the laws of the game and contained some instructional passages. The narrative content was common to all three versions. The difference was the choice of a single portrait of Lillywhite, four portraits of professional cricketers or, most expensively, a variation bound in cloth and containing portraits of four amateurs as well as the four professionals.

As one of the earliest books on the game Lillywhite’s Handbook is a collectors item today, albeit it is not as rare as some of its contemporary publications. A copy of one of the cheaper versions will set a purchaser back a little more than £1,000, and a complete hardback six times that amount, but for anyone of modest means who happens to be interested there is a McKenzie facsimile reprint from 1988 that is available for less than £20.

William had nine children who survived infancy, five sons and four daughters. Three of his sons, James (born 1825), John (born 1826) and Frederick (Born 1829) made their lives in cricket. John enjoyed a long and successful First Class career. James was also a cricketer albeit he only played 20 times at First Class level over 10 years. Frederick seems not to have shared the talent of his father and brothers, his only appearance on Cricketarchive being for 16 of Sussex against the All-England Eleven in 1851. His involvement in that game was limited as well – he batted at number fifteen and was bowled for nought, ironically enough by John Wisden.

Fred was 20 in 1849, the year he published The Young Cricketer’s Guide. The following year he went into business with his father and brothers John and James. Unsurprisingly they chose a sports store. The family firm then produced a similar publication to The Young Cricketer’s Guide under the title Lillywhite’s Guide to Cricketers. The book described itself as being edited by Frederick Lillywhite junior and was to appear each year until 1866, the year Fred died.

‘Fred’s Guide’ was not the first cricket annual, and would certainly not be the last, but it remained alone in the market until Wisden came along in 1864. When ‘Fred’s Guide’ began there was an instructional section, written by William, as well as a brief historical summary of the game, although that contained no new research. Most interesting moving forward were the rudimentary averages that appeared as well as a ‘Who’s Who’ containing details of around 150 current players.

‘Fred’s Guide’ also contained a section on ‘Celebrated Cricket Grounds’ and the laws. There were in addition, from 1851, some potted scores of schools matches but no full scorecards for some years. This may seem strange in view of full scores having appeared before in the likes of Britcher and Denison, but the explanation is straightforward. The Lillywhites also supplied printed scorecards of major matches and clearly had they included those scores in their guide the demand for their scorecards would have been adversely affected.

The family partnership was dissolved in around 1855, perhaps in part for reasons connected with William’s death in 1854. It was Fred who carried on with the publishing activities for three years in partnership with Wisden. Fred was to organise a tour of North America in 1859, and Wisden was one of the players. Fred took his printing press with him to the USA and Canada and wrote and published the very first tour book on his return. The trip cannot have been an entirely happy one however as, following their return, Fred and Wisden went their separate ways. 

Fred only had the market to himself until 1864 when, as all who are reading this will be aware, Wisden launched his little annual. Rather bulkier was another 1864 venture by Captain Bayly, although that one lasted just a year.

In 1865 another competitor to ‘Fred’s Guide’ arrived, and to Fred’s obvious displeasure the publisher was none other than his brother. The title was John Lillywhite’s Cricketers’ Companion for 1865, and it became better known as the ‘Green Lilly’. To rub salt in the wound the ‘Green Lilly’ was cheaper than ‘Fred’s Guide’, and 36 pages longer.

The extent of Fred’s displeasure with his two former partners and now rivals can be discerned from his remarks about them in the ‘Who’s Who’ section of his 1865 edition in which, being accomplished players, both featured and had done without criticism for some years. Amongst other barbed comments brother John is described as poaching for another idea, without licence, and of Wisden Fred wrote he was a “good ‘un” but now “does nothing” for his county.

In 1866 however Fred died at the early age of 37 and his guide did not appear again. For the following year of 1867, as Wisden reached its fourth edition, the ‘Green Lilly’ proclaimed, the copyright in ‘Fred’s Guide’ having been bought by John, that it incorporated Lillywhite’s Guide to Cricketers for 1867. Further on the continuity theme John ‘absorbed’ the reputation of the previous Guides by describing the 1867 ‘Green Lilly’ as the 23rd edition.

Meanwhile the third and eldest brother, James, was employed as cricket coach by Cheltenham college, and had been since 1855. To supplement his income James also opened a sports shop in the town, and in 1863 he went into partnership with George Frowd in order to open up in London. That partnership lasted for a decade until 1873 when James retreated back to Cheltenham, and Frowd carried on in capital with Lillywhite, Frowd.

In 1872 James went into competition with his brother and published the first edition of James Lillywhite’s Cricketers Annual. The book was very similar to John’s in content although rather sturdier in that it had red linen covers, hence being known as the ‘Red Lilly’ and, running to a reprint in that first year, it must have justified its existence. But who was behind the venture? As it remained with Lilllwhite, Frowd after the split it would seem possible that it was Frowd’s brainchild all along.

In 1874 the Lillywhite family was bereaved again with the death of John at the age of 47 and it is at this point that the main scope for confusion arises. Initially the firm of John Lillywhite simply continued and the ‘Green Lilly’ and the ‘Red Lilly’ appeared each year, but there was a change in 1879 when James Lillywhite joined the surviving firm who became John and James Lillywhite and Co, although the title of the ‘Green Lilly’ remained unchanged. This was not however James Lillywhite, formerly of the ‘Red Lilly’, but a cousin of John, James and Fred, and the England Captain in the first ever Test match.

The last of the original brotherhood, James, died in 1882 at the age of 57 although, as indicated, it seems he had not been involved with any cricket annual since 1872.

Just to confuse matters the name of the ‘Green Lilly’ did then change in 1884 at which point James Junior acquired the whole of John’s old firm and so the 1884 ‘Green Lilly’ was James Lillywhites’ Cricketers’ Companion, competing with the Red ‘James Lillywhite’s Cricketers’ Annual’, a book which, to add to the confusion, had no Lillywhite involved in its publication at all.

The last year in  which the ‘Green Lilly’ and the ‘Red Lilly’ both appeared was 1885. At the beginning of 1886 the two firms finally merged, and it was the ‘Red Lilly’ that was chosen as the annual to survive. It continued to appear each year until 1900 when, limping into the twentieth century, that edition was its last. In fact by now there was no Lillywhite involved once more. James Junior had left the firm several years previously and indeed by the late 1880s was expressing himself to be in some financial difficulty.

There was, inevitably, rivalry between Wisden and the various Lillywhite publications, all of which were competing for the same customers. An interesting example of the rivalry arises out of that first ever Test match back in March 1877. Although at the time the match was not recognised as the beginning of international cricket it was still an important fixture. Led however by a Lillywhite Wisden chose to ignore the whole tour, unlike the ‘Red Lilly’ and the ‘Green Lilly’ both of which covered the trip.

Looking back from the comfort of the 21st century in the early years of the three way rivalry the Lillies were in many ways more interesting books than Wisden and, following John Wisden’s death in 1884 without an heir it is perhaps surprising even that his almanack continued at all, let alone that it saw off the opposition within two decades. The reason, possibly, is that the man who did buy Wisden’s business from his estate, Henry Luff, chose not only to continue to publish Wisden but to broaden its scope to provide much more coverage of the rivalry with the Australians than its founder ever had, and indeed more than the Lillies did.

Since the demise of the ‘Red Lilly’ Wisden has never had a serious rival and although the almanack has had its travails over the years it has continued and the rarest editions now command substantial five figure sums at auction. ‘Fred’s Guide’ too features a couple of five figure books amongst its 24 editions (although it lasted only seventeen summers in some years more than one edition appeared). Some of the books are relatively common and for several prices drop to less than £500, but the first two and sixth editions are virtually unprocurable and there are no more than a handful of full sets in existence.

As for the ‘Green Lilly’ the first edition is exceptionally rare, a good copy being worth at least £1,000, although there is a modern facsimile of that one. None of the other editions however are anything like so difficult to find and decent copies of almost all can be had for under £100. As for the ‘Red Lilly’ the first edition from 1872 is likely to set a purchaser back more than £200, and none of the editions from the 1870s are easy to find, but most of the rest can be acquired for no more than around £30 and, oddly given that sales were presumably dwindling, the final editions do not seem to be any rarer.



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Saturday, February 22, 2020

An Early Look at the 2020 T20 World Cup

The seventh ICC T20 World Cup of 2020 will take place in Australia later this year. It will be the first time since 2016 that a T20 World Cup has been held and excitement is already building among fans and those looking to place an early bet on the competitions.

The games will begin on October 18 with the preliminary phase for teams who are trying to make it through to the Super 12. The main part of the competition is the Super 12 phase, which begins on October 24. Then we go into the knockout round, where eventually we will be left with just two teams. These will battle it out in the T20 World Cup final which will take place on November 15 at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.

Teams Playing in the First Round

The first round compromises of eight teams split into two groups of four. From each group, two teams will qualify and join the eight that have already qualified for the Super 12 stage.

Group A – Ireland, Oman, Papa New Guinea & Sri Lanka

Group B – Bangladesh, Namibia, Netherlands, Scotland

The Super 12 Stage

Again, we have two groups at this stage, but this time each group will consist of six teams in this round. These are made up of four teams who have already qualified plus two teams from the first round to give two groups of six and 12 teams still in with a chance of winning.

The hosts are in Group 1 and will be looking to go better than they did in 2014.

Group 1 – Australia, New Zealand, Pakistan, West Indies, Winner of Group A, Runner Up of Group B

Group 2 – Afghanistan, England, India, South Africa, Winner of Group B, Runner Up of Group A

The Knockout Stage

This is where the competition gets interesting. Four teams will make it through to the knockout stage for the semi finals. Here the group winners will take on the second placed teams from the opposite group, with the winner of those games going through to play in the final.

Who to Bet on?

T20 cricket is the most exciting format of the game and for that reason it is a hugely popular sport to bet on. If you place a bet on a team to win the T20 World Cup and they reach this stage, then you will n.o doubt be getting excited.

The big names are likely to dominate the betting, with teams such as England, Australia, New Zealand, India and of course hosts Australia all likely to be amongst the favourites to win the tournament. Check out this list of all the best betting sites if you are looking to get involved and place a bet on this tournament.

T20 World Cup 2020 Venues

A total of seven different venues will be used during the T20 World Cup. They are all in Australia, and will each host a minimum of four games, with Hobart hosting the most with eight games being played there.

The Melbourne Cricket Ground will host the final and this is expected to be a huge spectacle, with a capacity in the ground of just over 100,000. Tickets are likely to be snapped up regardless of who is playing, and should Australia make the final then demand will no doubt be huge.



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Sir Home Gordon Bart.

The In 1631 King Charles 1 created a Baronetcy of Embo, Sutherland for Sir John Gordon. At the time the purpose of the reward of a Baronetcy was, effectively, to raise funds. The title was a hereditary one which passed down through legitimate male heirs. The Baronet was entitled to be referred to as Sir, and for his name to be suffixed by Bart. Although not a peer of the realm and thus entitled to a seat in the House of Lords a Baronet is nonetheless above a knighthood in rank.

Sir Home Seton Gordon was the eleventh Baronet and his only son, who succeeded to the title on his father’s death in 1906, the twelfth and last. Sir Home Seton Charles Montague Gordon was married twice, but had no children and therefore when he died in 1956 the Baronetcy was extinguished. The twelfth Baronet had the distinction of, very possibly, having watched more First Class cricket than any other man who has ever lived and, as Sir Home Gordon, was a well known cricket writer and statistician for many years.

Home was born in 1871. His first experience of cricket was his attendance at Prince’s Ground to see the 1878 Australians play the Gentlemen of England, although it seems to have been a couple of years after that he began to take an interest in events on the field. In any event he was certainly at the Lord’s Test in 1884, and for the rest of his long life did not miss a Test at the headquarters of the game. In 1934 he spent a total of 110 days watching First Class cricket, and passed the century in other years as well.

Part of the reason why Home watched so much cricket was that he was not an accomplished performer at the game he loved so much. Despite his longevity (he was 84 when he died) his health as a child, which he described as shockingly delicate, prevented him playing the game to any sort of standard. As an adult however he did play occasionally and Irving Rosenwater, thanks to whom we know most of what we now do of Home, tracked down seven matches in which he turned out for MCC between 1906 and 1912. Home did not bowl at all and on the seven occasions on which he got to the crease he recorded three ducks, was not out without opening his account three times, and in his other innings reached the giddy heights of just two before being dismissed.

Although Home spent three years at Eton he did not go to University. One thing Rosenwater sheds no light on is the family finances. When Home’s father died in 1906 his entire estate, left presumably to his widow, amounted to the equivalent of no more than around £80,000 by 2020 standards. When, many years later, Home’s mother died she left, on the same basis, approximately £20,000. Eton cannot have been cheap so, I assume, either a family trust contained the wealth, or another family member was involved, Home’s mother certainly came from wealthy stock in Brighton. In which case why did Home not go to university? Over his own life he was to amass a relative fortune, leaving his widow the equivalent of around £3 million when he died in 1956. As the last of the line it may be that all the trust monies came his way eventually, but he was also a successful man in his own right, and certainly does not seem to have fallen short of university standard on intellectual grounds.

In any event on leaving Eton in 1888 Home joined Charles Alcock, the proprietor and editor of Cricket – A Weekly Record of the Game, where he appears to have had some sort of Victorian internship. Certainly he claimed never to have been paid. From there however Home did go into paid journalism on a freelance basis. His success was such that in what he described as his best year, 1905, he earned the equivalent of £95,000. It is probably prudent to add at this point that what Home was not was a reporter. Never a man to spend time in press boxes his role was not really to write match reports. Always immaculately turned out and with a trademark carnation in his button hole Home was almost always in the stands or in the pavilion or committee rooms, passing his time with the great and the good of whichever ground he was at.

Something else which should be mentioned is that despite his devotion to cricket Home was not merely a cricket writer. Early in his career he had taken up senior executive roles in the fledgeling electricity industry. Another post he held was, between 1915 and 1924, as a director of what would appear to be a company with interests in the rubber industry in Malaysia. Most significant for cricketing bibliophiles however was his involvement with the publishers William and Norgate. Home joined as a partner in 1909 and, between 1923 and his retirement in 1926, was the Chairman of the company.

For a man so widely published in newspapers and magazine it is perhaps surprising that the first cricket title to appear from Home was not published until 1919, by which time he was almost fifty. The book is a famous one and, a good friend of WG Grace, was one which Home announced his intention to write within days of WG’s death in 1915. More than one hundred interviews and many, many items of correspondence later the book appeared four years on. By then the Lords Harris and Hawke had been added as joint editors, but there is no doubt but that Home put in all the hard work.

The Memorial Biography of Dr WG Grace is a well known book and it is not difficult to find copies even a century on. As well as the standard edition there was also a limited edition of 150 copies, although even that is not expensive. It is an odd one too as, other than being very slightly larger, the top edge being gilt and the free front endpaper recording the limitation it is identical to the standard book.

In a powerful chapter at the start of the book Home explains that his mission statement in putting the book together was to answer the question that would be asked by future generations as to Why WG Grace remains the Greatest Cricketer that ever was or ever will be? His own thoughts on that subject are illuminating and remain so today, as does the testimony of the many other witnesses that Home drew together and which form the bulk of the book. Despite the many subsequent biographies, one or two of them excellent, that have appeared on Grace down the years the Memorial Biography, or at least Chapter III, remains an excellent starting point even today.

Much of Home’s time away from cricket grounds was spent on the collection of cricket statistics, and he published three books on that subject, all entitled Cricket Form at a Glance and covering the years 1878-1902, 1901-1923, and finally 1878-1937, the books being published in 1903, 1924 and 1938. They are rarely consulted today and although they proved popular in their time even then it was recognised that they were not as accurate as they might have been. Home also had some strange quirks, must notably his insistence on producing figures for the midway point of the English summer and calculating them to 30 June, even if that date (as it did more often than not) fell part way through a match. With the post war arrival of Roy Webber Home as a statistician ceased to be an important figure.

In 1921 a book of fiction appeared from Home, That Test Match. It must have sold pretty well as copies still crop up with some regularity but, aimed at a school boy audience and with many of the characters based on his peers at Eton I suspect that, as cricket literature goes, it is nothing special.

His elevation to the Chair of Williams and Norgate meant a spike in that publisher’s cricketing output in the mid 1920s. The first book to appear was an autobiography from Home’s great friend Lord Hawke. Whilst his Lordship must clearly have had some involvement in the writing of Recollections and Reminiscences it seems likely that the book was, virtually in its entirety, written by Home. It was generally well received but if he was in truth the author there was, in his reviewing the book for The Cricketer, a significant breach of writer’s etiquette on Home’s part.

As well as assisting Hawke into print Williams and Norgate also published Cricket Memories, the autobiography of the Middlesex amateur Edward Rutter. There was also an instructional book from Lt-Col W Shirley, How to Play Cricket, and a collection of essays from ‘Shrimp’ Leveson-Gower entitled Cricket Personalities. Another was Winchester College Cricket by EB Noel, and finally the Chairman himself edited Eton v Harrow at Lord’s, an attractive limited edition which comprised a total of 650 copies, 325 in the greenish blue Eton colours, and 325 in darker Harrow blue.

By 1939 Home was 68 and, on the eve of war, Background of Cricket was published. The book is a  look back at Home’s long involvement in the game and the cricketers he had seen. There are some autobiographical passages in the book although it is mainly Home’s take on the cricket he had watched and the men he had known. Home was, as he would be the first to admit, no Cardus, but the book is certainly entertaining if not always accurate.

Another feature of Home’s personality is a willingness to quote in full what he was told so much so that, in order to avoid the risk of being embarrassed in his columns, some cricketers were very careful about they said to Home. He could certainly be indiscreet, and caused some consternation amongst George Lohmann’s descendants in describing the famous Surrey bowler, who had died of tuberculosis in 1901 at the age of only 36, as splendidly formed and very handsome. Like so many consumptives he was not only hot tempered but temperamentally ardent. Before he went to South Africa he told me that no matter how good a day he might have had at the Oval his admiration for the fair sex was undiminished, which certainly helped to shorten his life.

There was to be one more book from the pen of Home Gordon after the war. Although he lived in London for a good deal of his adult life he always had a close connection with Sussex for whom he carried out many roles in his later years including, in 1948, the Presidency of the club. In 1950 he authored the Sussex volume in what was intended to be a complete series of modest county histories from Convoy Publications.

Sir Home Gordon Bart died at his home in Rottingean in Sussex, unexpectedly in 1956 at the age of 84. His last published work had appeared in The Cricketer only a few months before. At his own request there was no memorial service and no mourning. He had been married twice and, having been widowed in 1945 after almost fifty years of marriage, he was survived by his second wife. A good few years younger than her husband Lady Katherine Gordon lived on to see her tenth decade before, at 91, she died in 1983.



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Arthur, Frank and Harold

There were three Gilligan brothers, the younger two of whom, Arthur and Harold, were England captains. Elder brother Frank was also a fine cricketer, who might also have played at the highest level had he not chosen a teaching career. As a brethren the three were fortunate in that the business run by their father was a successful one and a pressing need to earn a living was not something that ever distracted Arthur, an Ashes captain and undoubtedly the best remembered of the three. 

Soon after the outbreak of the Great War Arthur, born in 1894, gained a commission in the Lancashire Fusiliers. He spent two years in France and fought at the Battle of Messines Ridge in 1917 before being brought back to Aldershot as a PT instructor. The war over he went up to Cambridge and his county career began. Initially he played a handful of matches for Surrey but in 1920, after a remarkable personal performance against them for Cambridge the previous summer, begun his long association with Sussex. He did enough to gain an invitation to tour South Africa under Frank Mann in 1922/23 where, with the ball at least, he enjoyed some success in the two Tests for which he was selected.

In the early days of his First Class career Arthur bowled at a pace that allowed wicketkeepers to, at least some of the time, stand up to him, but he undoubtedly became faster as he matured and was as quick as anyone in the country when the England selectors started to look seriously at him. As a batsman he was an entertainer, rarely playing defensively and often hitting straight. He scored a dozen centuries over his career getting at least one from each slot in the batting order from six down including, in that match for Cambridge against Sussex in 1919, a rapid 101 after coming in last. As befits a former PT instructor Arthur was also a fine fielder. Mobile and with a fine throw and safe pair of hands he was a noted mid off.

In 1923 Arthur took 163 wickets at 17.50. Wisden was gushing in its praise for a man of whom it stated his enthusiasm was unbounded and his energy tireless. His bowling feats for that summer required no further elaboration, but the Almanack added that his batting demonstrated that if he had not been about the best fast bowler in England he would have been good enough as a batsman alone for most sides. Praised too was Arthur’s captaincy, now in its second season; (Gilligan) almost invariably played bright cricket in the most sporting spirit. And in case there were any doubt, and in order to underline Arthur’s all round credentials, Wisden stated also that he held pride of place in the country as a super mid-off.

Having completed the double for what would prove to be the only time in his career in 1923 (although he didn’t miss it by much the following summer) Arthur found himself invited to lead England against the 1924 South Africans. His playing credentials by then fully justified that selection, which would have been done no harm by the fact that he would be available to lead the MCC in Australia the following winter.

The first Test of the South African series was therefore Arthur’s first as England captain and there was a remarkable personal performance. First of all he won the toss, chose to bat, and watched his side score 438. The South Africans then asked for a heavy roller which seemed to find some moisture to bring to the surface.  Opening the bowling in the South African first innings with his county teammate Maurice Tate the pair took just 12.3 overs to dismiss the South Africans for 30. Arthur took 6-7 and Tate 4-12. Unsurprisingly the visitors were beaten by an innings, although they made a much better fist of their second effort lasting well into the final day before being all out for 390. This time of course Arthur and Tate did not bowl through, but they did still take all nine wickets that fell to the bowlers, with Arthur’s share being 5-83 for a match haul of 11-90.

England won the second Test by an innings as well, although not so spectacularly. Arthur’s contributions were 3-70 and 2-54 in what, sadly, proved to be his last Test when fully fit. After the match he was selected to play for the Gentlemen against the Players at the Oval, less prestigious than the Lord’s fixture but a major date in the cricket calendar nonetheless. In the Gentlemen’s first innings, replying to 288, they were dismissed for 113. Arthur’s 34 was the second best score of the innings and in the course of it he was struck a painful blow below the heart. The best part of a century on whether the delivery concerned came from the Warwickshire pace bowler Harry Howell or the Worcestershire off spinner Dick Pearson is not entirely clear.

In any event Arthur was out soon afterwards and was clearly shaken by the blow. With the Gentlemen in trouble it did not however prevent him batting in the second innings when, in trademark aggressive style, he scored 112 despite coming in at number ten. The effect of his second innings exertions, certainly in Arthur’s own opinion, was more severe than the original injury and he was never the same player again. How much of the problem was physical (Arthur lived a full and active life until his death at 81) as opposed to psychological must be something for conjecture, but it seems unlikely that his incapacity was entirely physical as he was still playing golf off a respectable handicap at 80.

After his injury Arthur played in the third Test, and for the Gentlemen at Lord’s, but after just a single wicket he decided to take some time out of the game in order to recuperate and missed the fourth Test. He was back for the fifth, but again went wicketless. The writing was perhaps on the wall, but there were hopes he would find his form again in Australia and he certainly still had enough credit with the selectors to be appointed to lead England in the 1924/25 Ashes campaign.

Australia won the first two Ashes Tests that winter easily enough, Arthur bowling plenty of overs and taking a few wickets albeit clearly down on pace. In the third Test England might have won and in the end fell just twelve runs short of a victory target of 375. Arthur took some of the blame himself after being ninth out for 31 after an uncharacteristically watchful innings that lasted the greater part of two hours. What he seldom mentioned was that his side was also hampered by his own groin injury which prevented him bowling more than eight overs in the match, and that ‘Tich’ Freeman, his partner in that ninth wicket partnership, was also struggling with an injury.

The importance of Australia’s victory in the third Test was put in context when, having a slice of luck with the weather, England comfortably won the fourth. Whether the fifth Test would have turned out differently if it had been a decider rather than a dead rubber must be doubtful but in the event it turned into a comprehensive Australian victory. Arthur contributed little to either the win in the fourth Test or the defeat in the last.

A return of 64 runs at 9.14 and ten wickets at 51.90 simply wasn’t the mark of a man worth his place in a Test side and Arthur’s career at the highest level was over. It is an odd decline, and while the injury clearly affected his bowling it does seem odd that his brilliance in the field seems to have been undimmed. In his account of the 24/25 tour the former Australian captain Monty Noble observed in every match in which I saw him play his work was almost faultless. His anticipation was so keen that he could always be counted on to cover a lateral range of at least twenty yards …… he picked up cleanly when running at full speed, using either hand freely, and his returns were quick, accurate and invariably right over the stumps.

As a captain, on the field, Arthur showed his inexperience but, to quote Noble again, his improvement during the tour was astonishing. It would seem that advice was something Arthur would listen to, and his judgment of which bowler to use in a given situation and what fields to set were two particular areas that Noble highlighted as being where the change occurred.

And what of politics? Anyone delving into the history of the 1924/25 tour will read about the British Secret Service tipping off their Australian counterparts about the Fascist leanings that Arthur had and his reputation today is somewhat tarnished by his political views, although probably unfairly so.

It is worth dwelling briefly on the political climate in Britain in the 1920s, and indeed that in Australia. There had been general elections in Britain in each of 1922, 1923 and 1924. In the first of those the Conservatives had won a substantial victory, but Prime Minister Andrew Bonar Law resigned due to ill health. Bonar Law died of throat cancer later in 1923 and his successor, Stanley Baldwin, whose timing was clearly on a par with Theresa May’s, called a general election with a view to getting a personal mandate. His party won the most seats, but couldn’t form a government and Ramsey MacDonald put together a minority Labour administration.

Inevitably the minority government struggled and a third election followed in 1924. There were huge fears about the spread of Bolshevism amongst the Establishment so much so that the Conservatives decided to cheat and the infamous ‘Zinoviev Letter’ was published in the Daily Mail in order to discredit the Labour Party. Another former England captain, Stanley Jackson, played a role in that but for the purposes of this story it is sufficient to record that this time Baldwin’s Tories romped home.

During this period of upheaval the British Fascists were formed in the wake of the rise of Benito Mussolini in Italy. The party was fiercely Nationalist, Royalist and against Socialism but in reality it was a rump of the Conservative Party rather than the almost paramilitary organisation that emerged in its wake, the British Union of Fascists, Oswald Moseley’s blackshirts. In time Moseley’s party became stridently anti-semitic and was a proscribed organisation during the Second World War and as a result Arthur’s reputation has been tarred with the same brush, more than one writer asserting he was a member of Moseley’s party. In reality however the British Fascists ran out of steam in the late 1920s and folded altogether in 1934. There is no evidence I have found to suggest that Arthur was ever a member of any other political organisation.

Back in 1924 Arthur was however definitely a member of the British Fascists. Likewise a member of the group was the manager of the team, Yorkshireman Sir Frederick Toone. It seems that Australian politics were in a similar turbulent state to that in the mother country and fears of a rising tide of communism were present there as well. So perhaps the interest of the Secret Services in the activities of a couple of political lightweights like Toone and Arthur is more understandable and it does seem that after the tour there were the beginnings of some fascist organisations in the major Australian cities, not that any of them ever amounted to anything.

The real key to Arthur’s character comes from other comments made by Noble on the subject of Arthur the off field captain; His natural qualifications socially, his tactful speeches, and the soundness of his administration won more adherents to the Empire’s cause than the winning of a hundred Test matches could have done, before adding later, I do not think we have ever had captain of an English side who proved himself so eminently fitted to discharge the responsibilities of the high office he so ably occupied. These are hardly the words that would be used to describe a man seeking converts to an extreme political cause, and none of Arthur’s teammates who went into print, or who have been the subject of biographies, seem to have suggested there was ever any attempt to influence their views.

Some writers have referred to an article that Arthur wrote after the tour for the British Fascist journal making the point that cricket tours should be run on fascist lines. There is however little of real significance in the article, the main purpose of which seems to be to stress the surely uncontroversial issue of the importance of a strong team ethic in a touring party.

As well as an interest in mainstream politics there were brushes with cricketing politics at around this time for Arthur as well, and perhaps two essentially unrelated incidents involving the Lancashire seam bowler Ciss Parkin have been conflated over the years in order to suggest that Arthur was a more controversial figure than he actually was.

The first incident came in that Edgbaston Test against South Africa. At the time Parkin was the leading bowler in the country and riding high in the averages. Given the way the first South African innings unfolded there was nothing surprising about Parkin not getting a bowl. In the 144 over rearguard action second time round he was asked to bowl just 16 overs, and went wicketless. It was the lightest workload of any of England’s frontline bowlers – Gilligan himself bowled 28 and Tate 54. Parkin’s great strength as a bowler was what he could do on a wet, drying or damaged wicket, which was essentially anything he chose. Hard and true surfaces like the Edgbaston pitch had become by the time the South African second innings developed and Parkin’s comparative lack of pace meant he was nothing like so effective so Arthur’s decision, in the context of Parkin not taking wickets in those overs he was given, appears sensible.

In an autobiography published a decade later Parkin acknowledged that he was not troubled either by the lack of overs or, as he described it, being third change (Cricketarchive suggests that in that his memory was mistaken and that he was actually first change). In any event in 1924 Parkin supplemented his cricketing income with a newspaper column and, running out of time to prepare and submit an article, he asked a journalist he knew to do so on his behalf. What appeared under Parkin’s name was a direct attack on Arthur for not bowling him enough coupled with a declaration that such was the humiliation he felt that he would not play for England again.

Parkin’s account that he was completely ignorant of the content of the piece is not entirely convincing, but what is undoubtedly correct is that he immediately wrote a fulsome letter of explanation and apology to Arthur, and a response received from Arthur made it clear that both apology and explanation were accepted. Despite that it still comes as no surprise to learn that Parkin never did play for England again.

The second part of the incident came a few months later, by which time Arthur’s tour of Australia had begun. In a column which, this time, Parkin never disputed writing he made the point, not in itself particularly controversial, that he believed that if no sufficiently able amateur were available there was no reason why a professional like Jack Hobbs or Herbert Sutcliffe should not lead England. This, no doubt at least in part because of the earlier article, was taken as a criticism of Arthur and the observation led directly to the famous comment of Lord Hawke at the Yorkshire AGM that he prayed no professional would ever captain England. Another storm ensued, the left leaning Daily Mirror being particularly scathing on the subject of his Lordship’s remark.

In 1925 Arthur had a poor season. He struggled to get past five hundred runs and took only eight wickets and rarely bowled. Still troubled by his injury from the previous summer at one point in mid season, on medical advice, he took six weeks away from the game. At least he was well enough to return to some semblance of form for 1926 when he scored just over a thousand runs, with four centuries, and took 75 wickets at a modest cost. He also joined the England selection committee and was present at the controversial meeting when, after four Tests of the 1926 Ashes his successor, Nottinghamshire skipper Arthur Carr, was sacked and replaced with, after much discussion, Percy Chapman.

Cricket occupied Arthur in the winter of 1926/27 when he led a strong MCC side to India and what was then Ceylon. The tourists had a good playing record although Arthur himself contributed little, his batting record being modest and he rarely chose to bowl. Repeating the experience of his tour to Australia the following county summer with Sussex his form suffered and Arthur was much less effective than in 1926 although, in a further repetition of his past experiences a winter off then meant that he performed considerably better, particularly with the ball, in 1928. It was however the summer that proved to be his last of full time cricket. Nominally at least however he remained Sussex skipper in 1929, a season in which injury and a complete loss of form restricted him to just a dozen matches.

After such a disappointing season Arthur made the decision to retire from the captaincy, a position that he handed over to younger brother Harold. Arthur continued to play the occasional First Class match for another three summers. There were no heroic deeds left, although at Lord’s in 1931 in a Championship fixture under Duleepsinhji he did roll back the years with a quickfire unbeaten 75, but he couldn’t save Sussex from defeat.

Alfred Herbert Harold Gilligan was two years younger than Arthur and was also an all-rounder. Like his older brother he also led England in a Test series, although there the similarities end. Harold only ever scored one century, although he did exceed a thousand runs three times. One of those seasons was 1923 when he set a record that will certainly never be broken, when his season comprised as many as 70 First Class innings. His run total however was a modest 1,186, at an average of 17.70.

As a bowler Harold was a part time leg spinner. In a career that coincided almost precisely with Arthur’s and comprised as many as 321 matches he took only 115 wickets in total, almost all of them in the early summers of his career. The price he paid for those wickets was a not unreasonable 33.66, so it is perhaps surprising that he gave up that aspect of his game.

Harold’s Test experience came in 1929/30 when MCC sent touring sides simultaneously to New Zealand and West Indies. Harold was charged with taking the side to New Zealand where, with just Frank Woolley and Duleep whose names are at all familiar today, his side won the first Test and drew the other three. After leading Sussex in 1930 Harold retired from cricket and reappeared in the First Class arena just once, to lead Sussex in 1931 against his friends from New Zealand. In time his daughter Victoria would marry another England captain, Peter May.

Older brother Frank was also a quality cricketer who won a blue at Oxford and, at the same time as his brothers, enjoyed a successful First Class career with Essex. A wicketkeeper batsman he was a career schoolmaster and so was available only in the holidays. In fact at 23.62 his was the highest batting average of the three brothers, although he never played for England. Frank did appear six times for the Gentlemen, but only ever at Scarborough, and never at Lord’s or the Oval. He taught at Uppingham until 1935 at which point he took a headship in Wanganui and emigrated to New Zealand.

His playing career over Arthur remained involved in the family company. He had married in 1921 but was divorced eleven years later. He remarried in 1934. Neither marriage was blessed with children. From retirement onwards Arthur’s involvement in the game continued, first as a selector and then as a respected writer and journalist who went on a number of overseas tours. He was also one of the earliest radio commentators, forming a popular and entertaining partnership with Vic Richardson, grandfather of the Chappell brothers.

Much later there was also another brush with politics, but this time rather more significant. By 1968 Arthur was President of the MCC. The club’s secretary was SC ‘Billy’ Griffith and the treasurer ‘Gubby’ Allen. As a result of their positions these three became aware that the South African government would not accept an MCC side for the tour that was scheduled for 1968/69 that included Basil D’Oliveira. If they had disclosed what they knew to the selection committee the tour would have to have been called off immediately, MCC having already made it clear that they would accept no interference in the choice of their party.

Present at the fateful selection meeting where Basil D’Oliveira was omitted were all of Arthur, Griffith and Allen, although it seems unlikely that, as has been suggested by some, Arthur influenced that particular decision. In truth the decision to omit D’Oliveira was not objectively unreasonable and, in any event, had a steer been given much greater weight would have been attached to the views of the industrious Griffith and respected Allen than those of Arthur who was primarily a figurehead. In any event when, later, after Tom Cartwright’s injury D’Oliveira was called up, as Arthur of course knew it would be, the tour was promptly cancelled by the South African government.

In later life Arthur remained in Sussex and lived in the village of Pulborough where he died in 1976 at the age of 81. One who met him more than once is David Frith, not generally a man to pull any punches and Frith tells of a charming man whose company he much enjoyed, and certainly not one whose political views were in any way controversial.



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Saturday, February 15, 2020

The Hundred Tournament 2020- preview & ante-post betting

England welcome The Hundred Tournament in July 2020

Review:

This new tournament will be the first of its kind and follow the following format. The Hundred tournament will have each team facing just 100 balls, ensuring breakneck action, played by two teams each playing a single inning.

The Tournament will feature a men’s and women’s team so share the quality of cricket from the top players in the world.

So, the exact format will be each team having one hundred balls per innings. Then there will be a change of ends after ten balls and bowlers can deliver either five or ten consecutive balls. This is a totally new format and one both batman, bowlers, and officials will have to get used to.

Each bowler can deliver a maximum of twenty balls per game. This is another new addition which means each team will need to strategically look to get the most out of their best bowler by either bowling ten balls in a row or I believe preferably will be bowling four lots of five balls.

Each bowling side gets a strategic time-out of up to two and a half minutes. This can be strategically used to break up the momentum that a batting side may have. If you’re the bowling side, it can be wise to use this smartly.

A twenty-five ball power play start for each team is also in this form of Cricket and gives the batting side an advantage from the opening ball. If you’re the bowling side you will want to limit the score in this twenty-five ball period

Two fielders are allowed outside the initial thirty-yard circle during the powerplay of the first twenty-five balls of the innings so it really is crucial for the batting side to get off to a good start and score many boundaries.

Preview:

Now let’s look at the tournament layout and structure as this is going to be new for Cricket fans in the UK and globally. There will be eight city-based teams which comprise of Birmingham Pheonix, London Spirit, Manchester Originals, Northern Superchargers, Oval Invincibles, Southern Brave, Trent Rockets and Welsh Fire

Each team will play four matches at home and four matches away, so there will be a total of thirty-two games in the league.

After the league finishes, the play-offs will begin to decide the overall winner. The playoffs will include the top three teams after the league stage. The top team will progress directly to the final. The second and third teams will meet in a semi-final.

Like the current Twenty 20 format in the UK, the semi-final and final will be played at the same venue on the same day.

At this stage, one player from England’s central contract roster has been given a team to be in. The main players and their teams will be Joe Root representing Trent Rockets, Ben Stokes playing for Northern Superchargers, Jonny Bairstow with the Welsh Fire and Jofra Archer playing with Southern Brave.

In addition to these two local icons have been partnered with teams and a few key mentions are Eoin Morgan with London Spirit and Jason Roy with Oval Invincibles.

The Coaches for each Team have also been announced and a few notable names are Darren Lehmann of Australia taking charge of Northern Superchargers and Shane Warne will represent London Spirit, while Tom Moody will look to lead Oval Invincibles to the title.

Tips

At this stage, it’s very early to give a clear ante-post selection for which team will be victorious. However, with Ben Stokes selected for the Northern Superchargers and having such a good Coach as Darren Lehmann taking charge, then they would be a team to watch at this stage.

 Top Tip

7.0 (6/1) Northern Superchargers to win The Hundred Tournament



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Everything There is to Know About the 13th Season of the Indian Premier League Happening This 2020

The Indian Premier League or the IPL is now on its 13th year and it’s still one of the biggest cricket tournaments worldwide. The IPL started in 2008 after being established by the Board of Control for Cricket in India on September 13, 2007. It has an exclusive window in the ICC Future Tours Programme.

This tournament is one of the most-attended events in the world. It’s also a fact that this is the first sporting event that has been broadcasted live on YouTube. This is participated by over five teams, but for this year, there will be 8 participants in total.

The eight teams or participants are the following:

  • Chennai Super Kings
  • Delhi Capitals
  • Kings XI Punjab
  • Kolkata Knight Riders
  • Mumbai Indians
  • Rajasthan Royals
  • Royal Challengers Bangalore
  • Sunrisers Hyderabad

This year, the IPL will also be called as Vivo IPL as Vivo is one of its major sponsors. Other major sponsors for this year are Coca-Cola India, Amazon, PhonePe, Dream11, and Maruti Suzuki. Definitely, this year’s IPL promises to be bigger and better.

Many are already looking forward to seeing how the matches will go and how their favorite athletes will perform this year. As early as now, fans are already looking at the IPL 2020 odds in India to prepare for their bets this year.

Earlier this year, there have been talks about a few changes in the tournament including what time it will start. It has been proposed that the match should start earlier than 7 PM to make sure that the show won’t last until late night as this was what happened last year.

However, the president of BCCI Sourav Ganguly already announced after a meeting on January 27 that the night matches will still start at the same time, which is either at 7 or 7:30 PM. He said the reason behind this is that the matches this year will only have five doubleheader games instead of more than that.

Another reason why the five doubleheaders have been possible is that the tournament will happen for 51 days. Previous IPL tournaments only had to happen in 48 days and so this year, there is just really more time to accommodate all 62 matches.

Here’s Ganguly’s statement about this:

“There will be no change in the timing of IPL night games. It will start at 8 pm like earlier years. We will have only five doubleheaders (4 pm and 8 pm) this time. We have decided to reduce the number of doubleheaders. The concussion substitute and the no-ball rule are new additions for the season.”

In December 2019, the IPL 2020 auction has already happened. This is when the eight teams placed their bids to get the athletes they want to be part of their teams. Each team was allowed to spend 85 crores for this year. That’s 4 more crores compared to what was allowed during the previous auction.

During this particular auction, Pat Cummins appears to be the most expensive player. He was purchased by the Kolkata Knight Riders with a whopping 2.2 million US dollars. Meanwhile, Piyush Chawla became the most expensive Indian player with a contract of almost a million dollars. He was purchased by the Chennai Super Kings. A total of 62 players were sold during this auction.

The Vivo IPL 2020 is scheduled between March 20 to May 24, 2020. The first or the opening match will be between the Chennai Super Kings and the defending champions, Mumbai Indians. This will take place at the Wankhede Stadium in Mumbai, Maharashtra.

The official schedule is not yet released but some of the fixtures include matches between the Sunrisers Hyderabad vs Kolkata Knight Riders on March 29 and Mumbai Indians vs Delhi Capitals on the next day, March 30, 2020.

The Qualifier I will happen on May 14 which will be followed by the Eliminator on the next day, May 15. Qualifier II will happen on May 16 and the finals will take place on May 24, 2020. The finals will take place at the Wankhede Stadium in Mumbai.

The BCCI will also be hosting an All-Stars Game for a charitable cause. This will be participated by international players during the start of this season. There are still no details as to where it will happen but this is likely to happen at least 3 days before the opening of IPL 2020. The beneficiary of this charitable cause is also yet to be decided, according to Ganguly.



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Not The Spin – A Look at a Cricket Fanzine

I was born around 200 miles from Old Trafford, so I am not a Lancastrian by birth. Having arrived in this world however my parents, with no connection to the place other than my father having the opportunity to go and work on the Fylde coast when I was four years old, pulled up my southern roots and relocated there. My father was a Hampshire man, and a decent club cricketer who passed his passion for the game on to my brother and I. In time we both went to University in the south, and have remained resident in the minor county of our birth ever since but, because of where we spent our formative years, where cricket is concerned both of us have always regarded ourselves as Lancastrians.

Spending the summer months in exile has never proved a problem. It has always been possible to follow a county club from afar. For years I relied on newspapers for my news of the Red Rose. For the scores I, or rather successive employers, must have paid a great deal of money in the latter part of the last century to those companies who used to run a telephone update service. Then in time the information superhighway arrived, and it became and remains a straightforward exercise to keep a window open somewhere on my desktop in order to follow what is going on in county cricket. These days with a little ingenuity I can also, most of the time, listen to a BBC commentary.

By 2010, and despite always having been firmly of the view that it is the finest sporting competition there is I had got to a stage where I hadn’t seen a day’s Championship cricket for the best part of thirty years. I then spent a most enjoyable day at the Rose Bowl, so much so that I recorded my experience for posterity here. The following year, to my great delight, the 77 years of hurt ended and, something I had begun to fear I would not live to see, the Red Rose finally won an outright Championship for the first time since 1934.

At this stage in my life, despite having recently brought up my half century, I had never really thought much about the organisation of the Lancashire Club. I knew from reading about it that in the early 1960s the county had suffered badly from the way it was run, but my formative years as a cricket lover coincided with the glory days of the early 1970s a time when, led by the late, great Jack Bond*, Lancashire were the first county to really get to grips with the then new limited overs formats.

Later on it might have been different had I known anyone who was close to the club, but being so far away I didn’t know a single Lancashire member nor, my sibling apart, another Lancashire supporter. I didn’t hear anything that didn’t make the national press, so was blissfully ignorant of the existence of any issues that needed to be addressed. Reality dawned the year after the longed for title however. In April I was looking forward to a successful defence of the hard won pennant. By September, hugely disappointed to have been relegated, I was wondering what on earth had gone wrong.

Looking back I think I had heard that the county had a few ‘off field’ issues. I knew that the ground was a little ‘tired’ and was being redeveloped. I hadn’t however realised that during that glorious summer of 2011 the county had made a loss of approaching £4 million. Perhaps unsurprisingly there was, as a result, trouble at t’mill.

A members club is, I have always understood, ultimately owned and run by its members. At the turn of the century Lancashire had 13,000 of them. That is now down to less than 5,000 and even my arithmetic can work out how many former members that means there are, and it is inevitable with a drop like that that a goodly proportion of them, for one reason or another, will describe themselves as ‘dissatisfied’. In 2014 some of those formed the Lancashire Action Group**.

The relationship between supporters and the clubs they follow is a strong one. However hard the object of your affection kicks you the bond cannot be broken. When a love affair with a human being breaks down we need to, and almost always do, move on. That is not however possible with a cricket club, or a football team. Geographically I live about ten miles from Hampshire, with whom I have a family connection, but I could no more jump ship and start supporting Hampshire than fly. Success on the field for Lancashire County Cricket Club will always be what I want to see whatever concerns I may have about the management, and I am sure that is true for every member of the Lancashire Action Group.

So what can a disgruntled fan do? Complain is, of course, the answer. But how does he or she get their voice heard? That is where social media comes in handy and then, as support rolls in, publications like Not the Spin can begin. The name of what is, I believe, currently the only ‘fanzine’ type publication in English cricket, is a play on the name of the official Lancashire members magazine. I can only judge The Spin on the basis of a solitary copy I bought on eBay a while ago, but on the strength of that it certainly a much less interesting read than its unofficial rival.

So what are the complaints against the club? In some ways I like to think of myself as an outsider looking in and therefore unbiased, although I suppose as a subscriber to Not The Spin I have to concede I have at least a foot in the rebel camp. Anyway the issues the Action Group raise are many and varied and, as far as I can see without exception, reasonable. It might be that to some of the concerns, and I suppose it must be possible to each and every one, the club might have an answer. But they compound the problem by not engaging with the group.

A major source of unrest is the way the club’s members are treated, and the limited access they have to certain areas of the ground despite getting less value for their outlay than at just about any other county. Another question is why does the club seem to attach so little importance to the its history? A museum and a library come very low on the list of priorities, and the pennant from 2011 was so carelessly treated that at one point it was believed lost. Why, last summer, did Lancashire play a Championship fixture for the first time ever at Sedburgh School (in Cumbria) when grounds like Southport, Lytham and Blackpool are no longer visited?

The reason for the clashes must, I suppose, be tensions behind two conflicting priorities. Does Lancashire County Cricket Club exist to be a successful and profitable commercial enterprise with success on the field and happy members a bonus, or is it’s function merely the traditional one of producing a cricket team that wins the occasional trophy but always provides its members with an enjoyable cricketing experience? It ought to be possible to combine the two, but Lancashire seem unable to achieve that.

So, to return to Not The Spin the magazine, what does it contain and is it of any value other than being the mouthpiece of a bunch of malcontents? The answer to that one is that it is an excellent journal, and deserves a readership well beyond those most likely to subscribe to it. It is, naturally, something of a soapbox for the causes that brought about its creation. But there is much more in Not The Spin than county politics. There are historical articles on the Red Rose, its players and matches down the years, some coverage of current matches and also interviews and book reviews (albeit some of us would argue not enough of those!).

Naturally there is a good deal of criticism of those who run the club. Former player Paul Allott, now Director of cricket, picks up his share of stick but, if he looks hard enough, receives the odd bit of credit on those occasions where it is due.

Over the half a decade since it was formed the Action Group has made a good deal of progress. One day I hope it will achieve all its aims, and at that stage there will doubtless no longer be a need for it, although hopefully Not The Spin will go on.

*Stuart Brodkin’s tribute to Bond in Issue 6 of Not The Spin is, perhaps, its finest moment to date.

*More about the mission statement of the group can be found on its website, where the opportunity to purchase the first six editions of Not The Spin is also located, as well as the facility to subscribe to future issues.



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Saturday, February 8, 2020

A Look at Louis Duffus

Louis Duffus was born in 1904, one of five children, in Melbourne. His parents took their family to England before moving on to South Africa. It is not entirely clear what Duffus Senior did for a living, but he seems to have been self-employed and, as is not unusual in that situation, the family’s financial fortunes were subject to ‘fluctuation’.

Sport and writing seem to have been ever present in the household, Duffus’ autobiography sharing memories of his having to read poetry aloud in the house. In addition to playing sport as a youngster Duffus also seems to have been able to make some money even as a teenager by his writing.

The family was struck by tragedy more than once. At 18 it was Duffus who had to identify the body of his father who, whilst outside on business, died after drinking water from a standpipe that was later found to have contained cyanide. If that were not enough Duffus and his brothers were haemophiliac, and an elder brother died after a routine operation to remove his tonsils. A younger brother almost suffered a similar fate but, the problem by then recognised, eventually pulled through. Duffus himself suffered as well, always vulnerable when his skin was broken or bruised for any reason.

The condition must surely have restricted Duffus’ development as a sportsman. He was a good high jumper and represented Transvaal at Baseball as well being a good enough cricketer to be selected five times for the province between 1923 and 1935. On debut at 19 he was chosen to keep wicket for a powerful side that contained seven Test players against Orange Free State. He was not called upon to bat in the crushing innings victory that followed, but made a catch and a stumping. Twelve years later his last match was as an opening batsman. In his only visit to the crease he made 48 and shared a century partnership with Eric Rowan. Once more seven of his teammates were internationals.

Outside of his sporting and part time writing interests Duffus trained as an accountant and, whilst doing so, completed a Bachelor of Commerce degree. He had good jobs, first with the Rand Water Board and then the local power company but he had ambitions to travel and, in 1929, decided to take a big risk. He used what savings he had to travel to England a couple of weeks ahead of the 1929 South African side. He went as a freelance reporter, hoping to get some work in Fleet Street to go with a handful of commissions he had secured from The Star in Johannesburg, the Pretoria News and an East London paper, the Daily Despatch.

The trip to England was a success for Duffus. He knew the Transvaal players well and therefore enjoyed full and free access to the dressing room and as a result easily obtained more work from the Evening News, the Daily Mirror and the Daily Mail. In addition having met ‘Plum’ Warner during the trip he also secured a berth with The Cricketer as their South African correspondent that was to last for many years. On his way back to South Africa at the conclusion of the tour a radio message came through aboard ship offering him a full time post with The Star.

By the end of his journalistic career Duffus had attended as many as 102 Test matches. He had accompanied the South Africans on all their overseas tours since 1929 and followed visiting sides around South Africa. He also reported on many other sports, notably golf, tennis and Rugby Union and he was also a keen follower and supporter of women’s hockey. During the years of the Second World War he was a war correspondent and spent much of the war years in the Mediterranean theatre albeit, in his own words, well behind the front lines.

Before the war Duffus’ writing was confined to newspapers and magazines and, sports publishing in South Africa never being prolific, he did not write very many books. There was however a brief hiatus just after peace returned during with three books appeared from Duffus’ pen in quick succession.

The first book from Duffus was not a cricket book, nor indeed a sports book at all. Beyond the Laager was described on its cover as an inspiring record of gallantry of which South Africa may well be proud. No doubt shaped by his experience as a war correspondent the book contains stories of, largely, individual bravery and acts of heroism. In its author’s own words I believe it contains much of the best and most interesting writing I have produced. There is a cricketing connection in that one of the chapters tells the remarkable story of how the former Test opening bowler Bob Crisp earned his Military Cross and Distinguished Service Order.

The follow up was most definitely a cricket book. In years gone by Maurice Luckin had produced the first two volumes of a history of South African cricket, covering the years 1876-1915 and then 1915-1927. Duffus’ South African Cricket 1927-1947 ran to 625 pages. Much of the content consists of scorecards and statistical tables but there is still a good deal of narrative covering both the international and domestic game over the twenty year period. Duffus concludes what amounts to an introduction with the passage:-

The period under review thus ended with South African cricket poised at an uncertain stage of its history when it might either progress or decline. The forthcoming visits of English and Australian teams were destined to determine the course its future would pursue.

It is unfortunate that Duffus, who had seen each of his country’s Tests since 1929 and who was to watch all of those over the next twenty years as well, did not extend the series. As it was it took until 1996 for Brian Bassano to produce a fourth volume in the series, but that only took the story as far as 1960 and I am not aware of any plans to extend the history further despite the ambitious plans for the future contained in Bassano’s introduction.

Last of the three post war publications, but by no means least, is Cricketers of the Veld, published in London by Sampson Low. It is a delightful book and my copy is illuminated by a previous owner having slipped in to the dust jacket a contemporary review, which sums the book up as well as I can:-

For the author, as for many of the players, the English and Australian journeys were romantic pilgrimages as well as cricket tours, and this is the perspective for their telling. The tours are seen through the eyes of the tourists. There is no detailed analysis of matches. The memorable ones only are recalled in their fullness, a great innings, or a fine piece of bowling. These are set against the passing show of new places, new people, new dialects and new cricket grounds. It is discursive writing and necessarily sketchy, but it gives much of the South Africans’ approach to the game in contrast with those of Australia and England.

At this point I shall provide a couple of examples of the writing of a man whose Wisden obituary described his style as conscientious, generous and very fair, with a delightful manner and a nice turn of phrase. Both examples come from the famous match at Lord’s in 1935 when, successful in a Test in England for the first time the South Africans eventually held on to take the series. The first deals with Bruce Mitchell’s stunning unbeaten 164 (out of 278 for 7 declared) in the South African second innings despite the batsman suffering from the after effects of being struck over the eye:-

The sacred atmosphere of the home of cricket, the lavish appreciation of the discerning crowd and the fact that he was carrying the team to its first Test match victory in England, endowed the innings with a rich quality of genius.Once he drove successive boundaries through the covers off the bowling off Wyatt. Hammond turned to the Warwickshire amateur and with dry humour remarked, “Well, you can thank goodness he hasn’t got two eyes to play with”.

And the second from the denouement of the match as Xen Balaskas spun England to defeat:-

South Africa was winning with a grand rally in the last glorious crowded hour. The closing scenes are everlasting. The crowd sat in tense silence. The players strained forward in eagerness. Then, like a flash, Cameron stumped Mitchell and flung his arms around bails, ball and stumps – first in the frantic struggle for souvenirs. He was lucky enough to hold tight to a stump for himself and one for Siedle who was away in the outfield and who had commissioned Cameron at all costs to snatch him a relic of the historic match

After Cricketers of the Veld some eight years were to elapse before Duffus’ next book and, perhaps surprisingly, only tour account of one of the ten he went on. Springbok Glory told the story of the 1955 visit to England when the South Africans went 2-0 behind in a five Test series before pulling back to square things up at 2-2 going into the final Test at the Oval where, after making an excellent start, they succumbed to the joint efforts of Peter May, Jim Laker and Tony Lock all of whom, of course, playing on their home turf.

There were to be just two more books from Duffus (as well as a 52 page collection of his writings in The Star on the home victory over Australia in 1966/67) and those two were a privately published history of South Africa in tennis’ Davis Cup, and an excellent autobiography, Play Abandoned, which appeared 1968 and 1969 respectively the latter disclosing that, of all things, Duffus was an expert in the cultivation of Brussels sprouts!

Play Abandoned coincided with Duffus’ retirement and contains an interesting if somewhat unpalatable take on the ‘D’Oliveira Affair’. Ultimately Duffus’ attitude seems to be that sport should not be used by one nation to interfere in the politics of another rather than an inherent hostility on his part to the non-white population of South Africa, but the relevant chapter makes for uncomfortable reading nonetheless.

In 1970 Duffus was in the news again, travelling to Oxfordshire for hip surgery, a very risky procedure given his haemophilia, but the expertise of specialist surgeons saw him through and Duffus lived on in South Africa until 1984 when, a couple of months after his eightieth birthday, he died. Given that, to the best of my knowledge, no anthology of Duffus’ writings has ever been put together surely, the best part of forty years after his passing, one is long overdue?



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Monday, February 3, 2020

Indian Cricket Premier League – who will become champions?

The Indian Cricket Premier League, or IPL for short, is a showcase for the world’s greatest talent of the sport. 2019 marked the 12th season for this wildly popular league and it did not disappoint. Throughout the season there were surprises and some truly spectacular performances to remember. At the end of it all, in a climactic final that had fans on the edge of their seats, Mumbai Indians defeated Chennai Super Kings by a single run to become champions for the fourth time.

This incredible end was a testament to how close and competitive the IPL has become in recent years. It’s a league where finding the winner can bring you massive profits because, at 1xBet, one of the world’s leading sportsbooks, you’ll find incredible odds on all eight contenders:

– Rajasthan Royals

The Rajasthan Royals never really shone last season and languished near the bottom of the log, eventually finishing seventh. Relying heavily on an English contingent, the team seems to be lacking in depth. With no notable new additions to the team, they appear to be the underdogs of the competition.

– Royal Challengers Bangalore

In stone last in the 2019 IPL was Royal Challengers Bangalore. It was no doubt a severely disappointing season for fans of a side who on paper have the credentials to succeed. An ace up their sleeve this season could be South African batsman AB de Villiers, who when finding a groove is one of the world’s best. Still, they will need a few of the middle-order batsman to be more consistent in order to succeed.

– Kings XI Punjab

Boasting a star-studded international lineup there’s little doubt that this team has the potential to win the IPL. The team has the batting prowess to match any score, but a lack of Indian talent may be what impedes their title charge. Their bowling attack seems to not be of the highest calibre and could well be taken advantage of by top teams.

– Sunrisers Hyderabad

After a great fourth finish in 2019, many pundits will be predicting a bold showing this year. However, with the ruling out of Bangladeshi all-rounder Shakib Al Hasan, it may be a tough task. Still, his replacement Mitchell Marsh is a superb all-rounder who may be the fresh blood needed to elevate the team’s bid.

– Chennai Super Kings

Can this team recover from their heartbreaking loss in the 2019 final? It will be tough to bounce back from but they do have incredible depth in both the batting and bowling departments, together with a stellar record in the tournament. All indications point to the Chennai Super Kings at least making the playoffs once again.

– Kolkata Knight Riders

Kolkata signaled their intention to succeed with the expensive signing of Aussie fast bowler Pat Cummings. This is sure to add some fire to their bowling attack and to a lesser degree, their lower-order batting. The choice of many savvy pundits to win the 2020 IPL, this team will need their combination of experience and youth to click fully in order to challenge.

– Mumbai Indians

The defending champions are in a strong position to put up another bold showing this year. With a re-inforced bowling attack, there are now  very few chinks in the armour. Time will tell but the Mumbai Indians could well be lifting the trophy once again in 2020.

– Delhi Capitals

Ticking all the blocks and fully stocked in each facet of the game, Dehlu Capitals appear to be the frontrunners for the 2020 IPL trophy. With top-flight batsmen, superb all-rounders and a bowling attack to match any in the league, this team is expected to deliver.

The action starts soon so it’s almost time to make your choice – who is your pick to win the 2020 IPL? Well, you’ll find incredible odds on whoever you support at 1xBet – so visit today and back your team to lift the trophy!

 



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Saturday, February 1, 2020

The Cricket Quarterly

It may only have been around for eight years, half a century ago, but there is something about The Cricket Quarterly. The redoubtable Rowland Bowen departed this mortal coil in 1978 without any real recognition of his contribution to cricket literature, but that has all changed now. Those whose egos Bowen bruised have all long since departed this mortal coil and Bowen and CQ can be and are now judged entirely on their own, considerable merits.

Bowen founded CQ as a vehicle through which what he saw as important issues in relation to the game could be ventilated. Those who wrote for CQ were what can only be described as ‘proper’ historians. These were not writers who courted sales and recognition. Instead they were people who, like Bowen, sought the truth and were prepared to delve into archives and other dusty corners of history rather than simply regurgitate facts that had become accepted without question even though they had never been properly tested.

One writer who featured regularly in CQ was GB Buckley, a medical man who had been responsible for two important collections of old references to cricket in the 1930s. Fresh Light on Pre-Victorian Cricket and Fresh Light on 18th Century Cricket contain important source material for historians. Much other Buckley research was not published and although the man himself died the year before CQ was launched Bowen was able to use some of that material.

Concerned also with the cricket of the ancients was a much younger man, John Goulstone, another regular contributor. In 2020 Goulstone is still with us, and still producing some fascinating research without any motivation beyond the acquisition and distribution of historical knowledge. He is one of four contributors to CQ who, to my certain knowledge, are very much still with us.

One subject that CQ was always ready to cover was the game outside its major centres. The Americas, North and South, often figured but so too did the occasional European outpost and other far flung venues where cricket had a foothold. David Kelly, who has (just once so far!) contributed to CricketWeb was one of the youngest to write for CQ and his lengthy articles on cricket in East Africa and Gibraltar, and a briefer one concerning a tour of Portugal by Dorset Rangers still make good reading half a century on. Histories of the game in the Maldives and Nigeria are other examples from other writers.

CQ also tended to pay rather more attention to overseas cricket in the established Test playing nations than other periodicals issued in England. For example the long serving Australian book dealer Roger Page provided CQ with a number of articles on domestic cricket in Australian. Others turned up from various sources on the subject of other countries as well, including some of particular relevance to those interested in the game on the sub-continent.

A magazine that appears every three months cannot be truly topical, hence CQ did not follow the English season as such. There was of course much on aspects of English cricket, and indeed elsewhere in Great Britain and Ireland, a goodly number from the last of those four contributors who are still with us. Peter Wynne-Thomas is currently the archivist and librarian at Trent Bridge, and was a founding member of the Association of Cricket Statisticians. It is therefore only to be expected that his contributions tended to be on the subject of Nottinghamshire cricket, or matters with a statistical aspect – for example on a number of occasions he contributed an article dealing with the previous English summer’s opening partnerships.

Although there was much more to CQ than its book reviews, in terms of content those remain its best remembered feature. The vast majority were penned by Bowen himself, although it took him a while to get into his stride. The very first edition contained a detailed review of a book entitled The Encyclopaedia of Cricket by Maurice Golesworthy. Bowen was deeply unimpressed by a book that, running to a mere 224 pages, never really had a chance of impressing anyone who started it with anything more than a basic knowledge of the game.

For once Bowen did not use his own name for his review of Golesworthy’s effort, styling the review as by Bibliophos, but whilst being critical of just about every aspect of the book Bowen did at least maintain his objectivity and took the trouble to carefully expose the book’s many flaws. It is perhaps worth noting however that whatever Mr Golesworthy (a journalist whose only cricket book this was) and his publisher did not know they knew their market as the book, unusually for a cricket book, eventually ran to six editions.

As well as the lengthy review of Golesworthy that first edition also contained other reviews, with not a hint of what was to come, Bowen praising all six books he covered and being particularly gushing on the subject of Keith Dunstan’s story of the Melbourne Cricket Club, The Paddock That Grew, which he described as one of the finest cricket books to have appeared for many years.

It was in Volume 2 that Bowen really got into his stride. He decided to review all five publications on the 1963 West Indies tour of England in one go and, to put it mildly, was not impressed. Leaving aside a pictorial souvenir which Bowen distinguishes from the four actual books and which he was actually very kind about, the comments are acerbic.

Ian Wooldridge’s Cricket, Lovely Cricket is described as one of the brashest and most vulgar books on the game it has been the misfortune of this reviewer ever to read. John Clarke’s Cricket With a Swing is categorised as being quite pedestrian and (he) does not succeed in making anything come alive, least of all the second Test at Lord’s. That second Test was the famous one in which Colin Cowdrey came out for the final over with an arm in plaster to enable England to draw a match from which they had almost managed to snatch what would have been an excellent victory.

The Lord’s match was sufficiently dramatic to persuade Alan Ross, one of the great cricket writers, to write a book solely on it. Bowen was not impressed however, writing that the book was; frankly, no sort of money’s worth and, of its author, that his mannered writing is beginning to bore. That left JS Barker and Summer Spectacular, to which Bowen grants the accolade of being the best of a not very good bunch of books, before adding but in saying that we want to make it quite clear that we are not saying very much.

Bowen was, generally, not keen on cricketing autobiographies. His complete review of Charlie Griffith’s Chucked Around reads; There is not the slightest reason why any reader of the CQ should show any interest in this book, nor why we should in anyway recommend it to them. Anyone with the smallest imagination can guess its contents, or could have written it: Indeed, we would suggest that imagination would not really be needed. Several of the photographs seem to be irrelevant. Griffith’s teammate, Rohan Kanhai, got a couple of sentences more, but his book was summarised as a complete waste of money.

Value for money was a recurring theme for Bowen, particularly once he started having to buy books because publishers stopped sending him review copies. A book consisting of nine pen portraits of famous players and edited by Reg Hayter was subject to the following withering assault; this book is quite outrageously priced and we can see no reason at all why anyone in possession of his senses would want to purchase it.

Generally Bowen was possessed of an elephantine memory, and decided to review, very briefly, the second edition of Golesworthy, who he noted continues to parade his ignorance. He might however have forgotten when, in his very first issue he described RS ‘Dick’ Whitington’s account of the 1961/62 New Zealand tour of South Africa, John Reid’s Kiwis, as sparklingly written.

By the time Whitington’s account of the 1963/64 visit of the South Africans to Australia, Bradman, Benaud and Goddard’s Cinderellas appeared Bowen had decided the author manifestly cannot write English and may not even, on the evidence of this book know what good English is. He didn’t forget that one though as, a few years later Whitington’s book on the 1968/69 West Indies tour of Australia was described as probably the worst book that Whitington has been concerned with and a year later, in the context of a biography of Tiger O’Reilly he commented that the author continues to exhibit his ignorance of how to write a book, as distinct from a gossip column.   

Although the designated review section at the back of each issue of CQ dealt with current books Bowen, in this respect not unlike CricketWeb, was happy to also publish reviews of older books as separate features. In addition he published other bibliographical pieces looking at tour books, the various Lillywhite publications, and Denison as well as an interesting piece on the complex world of early Australian annuals. Wisden too featured and whilst, like the rest of us, Bowen greatly valued the Almanack he certainly didn’t regard it as a sacred cow, and amidst the generally positive comments editor and publisher picked up their share of criticism from time to time, none of it unreasonable.

As already indicated CQ appeared in card covers four times a year. At the end of the year Bowen would produce a title page with a foreword by a guest writer* and a detailed index so that subscribers could have those bound together with their four copies. The last issue contained an editorial announcement that it was to be the final appearance. There is however a ‘continuity error’ later on, and one that suggests that Bowen had tried very hard for some time with whatever difficulties he had in an effort to keep CQ going.

Towards the end of that final edition, under the title Britcher, there is a brief notice relating to that most unobtainable of cricketing artefacts, reporting the intention of John Batten to carry out a census of the copies in existence. Despite his earlier announcement Bowen promised the results of that census in a later edition. It would be many years before David Rayvern Allen would finalise the Batten task. Bowen’s expressed opinion as to the number of copies that would be located would prove to be a prescient one.

In an editorial introduction to the last edition Bowen suggested that there may not be a foreword to accompany the title page. In the event there was was a short piece by Bowen himself entitled The Last Word. There is more than a hint of bitterness to a rather rambling note. Primarily what this goes to illustrate is how many ‘establishment’ writers were upset by Bowen’s dismantling, by dint of his researches, the myths that had been repeated down the generations about the origins of the game. He described it as Hambledomania.

Whilst he and CQ may not have been as appreciated as they deserved to be in Bowen’s lifetime fifty and more years on from CQ’s first appearance twenty first century readers can appreciate it for what it was, a collection of eclectic, groundbreaking and well written articles on a bewildering range of cricketing subjects. In 2020 there is inevitably an ‘of its time’ feel about CQ’s appearance but much of the writing within it is as fresh and entertaining now as it was when first published.

Having recommended CQ in the strongest possible terms how easy is it to obtain copies in an age when it is generally difficult to give away copies of old cricket magazines, let alone sell them? Sadly for potential buyers CQ is the exception that proves the rule. A full set, bound with title pages and indexes is not going to leave a dealer’s hands for much less than £500, but sets do crop up at auction from time to time and occasionally copies that are not yet bound turn up, in which case a decent set might be obtained for nearer £300, but if bidding at auction do beware the buyer’s premium!

*Those who provided forewords to Volumes 1-6 were CLR James, CP Snow, Neville Cardus, Compton McKenzie, Ralph Barker and Leslie Gutteridge. In Volume 7 Bowen himself provides a discursive foreword, and one which strongly suggests that even then he was wrestling with the dilemma of whether to keep going



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