Sunday, August 30, 2020

Cricket Betting- What you need to Know

Similar to football, or basketball for that matter, cricket betting requires some understanding of the game in order to make any sort of profit. For novices and professional punters alike, the game of cricket provides plenty of winning options. Though basketball may not have as wide a range of betting choices, cricket and football have a lot of similarities. The options are endless, from winning teams or top batsmen, to inning runs and outright winners. In order to perfect your art on how to bet on cricket, we have compiled a list of the most common options for cricket punters. The list covers what you are allowed to do, in terms of bet placement. Keeping in mind that betting is risk-taking, we also cover what to expect in case your bet doesn’t go as planned. There are instances whereby one option may be more suitable than the other, depending on a team’s ranking for example. In-play or live betting is also available on some sites. These give you the option of placing a wager while watching the game. Makes for an exhilarating experience.

All in all, you will need to do ample research on teams, and understand cricket betting terminology to cash out big. Let’s examine these betting options

<h3>Match Betting</h3>

This is perhaps the simplest to understand, and of course simplest to put money on. There are only three outcomes with this kind of wager- A win, a loss, or a draw. This is the most popular form of Gambling to date.

<h3>Match Completion</h3>

Will a match go through to completion? Will it see its duration or does the weather pose a threat? If you are inclined towards a game ending pre-completion, you could place a wager for the match not being completed during a particular day. Seems easy enough, right? Well, as easy as it may seem, the odds will be considerably lower if it seems likely the game won’t end that day. You may have to place a much higher amount of money, to make a substantial profit.

<h3>Teams to Draw</h3>

If you believe the teams will in fact tie at the end of the competition, then placing a bet on these options is available to you. In any case, and unlike the odds in soccer, a tie will have a considerably lower odd than that of one team winning over another. Once the final score reveals a tie, you will in fact win the wager. This bet, which will take advantage of a lower odd, would also require a higher amount placed in order to make substantial profit.

<h3>Innings Runs</h3>

Using the over/under types of betting, this option will allow you to predict if runs will exceed or be lower than a certain number. Once you visit sportsbooks, you will read through a predicted number of runs for a particular team, or game. If you select over, and the runs exceed the predicted amount, then you win that bet. Alternatively, if you come up short, you make no money.

<h3>Bowler of the Game</h3>

During a given match, and pursuant to what was mentioned above, a player may out match his peers and dominate the game. It is profitable for you to know players well. When research is duly conducted, especially for the novice, it can help you place a bet on who may perform optimally in a game. For instance, if you believe a certain player will MAKE the most wickets during a game, be sure to put some money on him. These bets are very specific and any potential wins have a huge payout.

<h3>Ace Batsman</h3>

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Similar to the top bowler, this type of bet placement will see you reap a healthier cash out. Because it is harder to predict who will in fact score more points, in terms of batting averages, it pays out a considerable amount of money. If you gamble on an underdog team or player, the odds will be higher (less likely), that he will win. This is the perfect cricket betting option if you have eyed a player for a while and have some insight into his batting averages

<h3>Top Batsman Team</h3>

Complementing the ace batsman option is the top team option. If you are not so sure who will come out top in their batting and scoring stats, you could guess which team will. This might be easier for you to predict once you know which team has a better skillset. The chances of you winning money on this one may be much higher than picking an individual, and hoping to cash out big with his skills.

<h3>Bowler Match Bets</h3>

Similar to the top bowler option, but in this case the focus is on either of two players. What this bet entails is a winner for a particular match or even the series, in terms of hitting wickets. This is slightly easier to bet on because their skills set determines who you select as the winner. It puts two players head to head and one’s skills over another. There is a need to have considerable knowledge regarding the two picks you are considering placing money on.

<h3>Batsman Match Wagers</h3>

Again, you will have the slightly easier option, unlike the top batsman one above, to choose between two. Once you believe one player stands a better chance of winning, place your money on them and wait for the results. This bet will be based on who makes the most runs, as a batsman. That being the case, it is in your best interest to get to know the players and their batting averages beforehand. You can score while they score too.

<h3>Perceived Winning Team</h3>

This is a bet placed on what YOU believe will be the winning team- out rightly. It simply requires that you have a team in mind that you believe has a better chance of winning. Sport books and punters alike can help you gauge which team to root for. Though professional punters should be used, you can research on recent changes like say, a new player or a loss of a player in the opposing team. This can help greatly when picking the best odds, especially before odds begin to change.

<h3>Series Champions</h3>

Similar to football games, cricket also hosts a few championships. In these, you can pinpoint which team is likely to take the trophy in a particular series. Because this is not a one-off attempt at winning a day game, you may need to visit a few sites to get insight on top performers. It is paramount that you read on statistics to have an upper hand on your wager, otherwise your bet could go horribly wrong.

<h3>Over or Under</h3>

This alternative to betting is quite simple. Once websites have posted what they believe will be the top scores, it is up to you to match that, or select over/under. This implies that you believe the total or ending score will be over what they predicted, or will fall under. Depending on your luck or the prevailing circumstances, you could make out with a big payout. This all depends on what other professionals had predicted.

<h3>Final Score for the Series</h3>

This is one of the best options for advanced gamblers. It may also be a lucrative alternative for one who has performed due diligence. If you have performed research on the series, and the pertinent teams, betting on who wins a series is undoubtedly the way to go. As punters place their winners, you will have a chance to predict what the overall score of the series will be. This is quite often one of the toughest bets to predict correctly. The outcome may lead to a handsome payout.

<h3>Heads or Tails</h3>

 If you’ve never placed one of these bets, it will surprise you to note it has nothing to do with who wins. This is a quick win or lose for you and it’s based on who wins the coin toss, at the beginning of a game. It is entirely left up to chance, no batting skills or team competencies involved. Once the coin is flipped and your team wins (or loses) the toss, you either have your money, or you don’t.

<h3>Odd or Even Runs</h3>

cricket3

Like a soccer bet with the same options, you can predict whether the final score, in runs will be an odd or even number. For those with wheels already turning in their heads, the number zero in this case is considered an even number. It is as straightforward as can be, no research required except maybe an understanding of how much you will receive if your bet goes through.

As you can see, cricket betting is not entirely a complicated endeavor. It does, however, require you to put in some effort or lose out on big winnings. There are plenty of websites offering you odds that you need, but these odds you to make informed decisions.  



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The Stories of England’s Captains, Part 3 of 4

In 1951/52 England sent an understrength side to India. With their leading players left at home the team were led by two men with no previous Test experience, and indeed who were to both gain their only caps on the trip. The skipper was the Lancashire batsman Nigel Howard, and the vice-captain the Derbyshire batsman and occasionally effective orthodox left arm spinner Donald Carr. There is no book devoted to Howard, but there is a biography of Carr in the ACS Lives in Cricket seriesDonald Carr: Derbyshire’s Corinthian by the experienced writer John Shawcroft.

For the return series in India the selectors finally broke with tradition and appointed a professional captain for a home Test, Len Hutton. Over the next three years Hutton led England in 23 Tests, winning eleven of them including Ashes series home and away. The life of the great Yorkshireman is well chronicled. He wrote three autobiographies. Cricket is my Life appeared in 1949 andand that and Just My Story in 1956 are relatively pedestrian but his 1984 effort, Fifty Years in Cricket, is an excellent read. There are biographies too, by AA Thomson in 1963, David Lemmon in 1980, Gerald Howat in 1988 and Donald Trelford in 1992, although none are as good as Fifty Years in Cricket. For the statistically minded there is also a volume in the ACS Famous Cricketers series.

During his tenure Hutton missed only two Tests, at home against Pakistan in 1954. His deputy on both occasions was David Sheppard, not then ordained. There are two Sheppard autobiographies, Parson’s Pitch from 1964 and Steps Along Hope Street that appeared in 2002. There is also a fine biography from Andrew Bradstock, Batting For The Poor, published only last year.

Hutton was followed by Peter May, who led England as many as 41 times, winning 20. The first book about May appeared in 1960. It is a rather odd 109 page book in a series of Living Biographies For Young People. Peter May by Robert Rodrigo, who to the best of my knowledge never wrote another cricket book, is an oddity. Subsequently in 1985 May himself published an autobiography, A Game Enjoyed, and a year later a biography by Alan Hill was published. There is also a volume in the ACS Famous Cricketers series.

Between 1959 and 1969 Colin Cowdrey captained England on 27 occasions, without ever really being able to call the job his own. Cowdrey’s first autobiography, Time For Reflection, was published in 1962 and is nothing special. His second, from 1976, MCC – The Autobiography of a Cricketer, released soon after his playing career ended is much better. Other books are an ACS Famous Cricketers effort, a limited edition monograph, Sir Colin Cowdrey, written and published by Richard Walsh in 1995 as well as biographies from Mark Peel (The Last Roman from 1999), Bernard Black (The Test Match Career of Colin Cowdrey from 2005) and Andy Murtagh (Gentleman and Player from 2017). There is also a 1990 book from Ivo Tennant on The Cowdreys but despite the existence of all of those titles I am far from convinced that the whole Cowdrey story has been told nor, sadly, that it ever will be.

In the period spanning Cowdrey’s first and last Tests as captain no less than four other men led England. The first was Ted Dexter who was in charge for 30 Tests between 1961 and 1964. Dexter won nine and lost seven, so slightly inferior to Cowdrey’s eight/four record. Ted Dexter Declares was published in 1966 and a biography by Alan Lee, Lord Ted, in 1995. There is also an excellent little limited edition publication by Nicholas Sharp and Roger Packham from the Sussex Cricket Museum, Ted Dexter: A Celebration that appeared in 2012 and from 1989 The Test Match Career of Ted Dexter by Derek Lodge.

The Dexter era gave way to MJK ‘Mike’ Smith whose 25 Tests as leader in the mid 1960s achieved a record of five wins (three coming against a weak New Zealand side in 1965) and three defeats, which meant that as many as 17 of those Tests were drawn. There is just one book about Smith, and we had to wait until 2013 to get it, but Douglas Miller’s MJK Smith: No Ordinary Man is one of the best books in the ACS Lives in Cricket series.

When Smith and Cowdrey lost three of the first four Tests in the 1966 series against West Indies the selectors brought in Brian Close for the final match. Close won that, and five of the six Tests against India and Pakistan in 1967 but then lost the job for disciplinary reasons. There are two Close autobiographies, Close to Cricket that appeared in 1968 and I Don’t Bruise Easily ten years later before, in 2002, Alan Hill produced a fine biography, Brian Close: Cricket’s Lionheart. That selection have only just been joined by the splendid Just a Few Lines, and there is also an ACS Famous Cricketers volume.

The great stylist, Tom Graveney, stepped into the captaincy for a single match in the 1968 Ashes series when Cowdrey was injured. There are many books about Graveney as well as a Famous Cricketers booklet. There are as many as four books that are essentially autobiographical, Cricket Through The Covers (1958), On Cricket (1965), Cricket Over Forty (1980) and The Heart of Cricket (1983). The better books however are two biographies, Tom Graveney: The Biography from Christopher Sandford in 1992, and more recently Touched by Greatness from Andy Murtagh, published in 2015.

England moved into the 1970s with another tough Yorkshireman at the helm, albeit a rather less abrasive one that Close. Ray Illingworth was selected over Colin Cowdrey for the successful trip to Australia in 1970/71 and altogether Illy led his country on 31 occasions with twelve wins and only five defeats. Slightly surprisingly there has been no full biography of Illingworth, but there are four books of an essentially autobiographical nature, Spinner’s Wicket (1969), To Yorkshire and Back (1980), The Tempestuous Years: 1979-1983 (1987)and One Man Committee (1996), and in addition Mile Stevenson wrote Illy in 1978.

After the 2-2 Ashes series in 1972 Illingworth decided not to tour India and Pakistan in 1972/73 and the Welshman Tony Lewis became the last man to make an England debut as captain. Those eight Tests on the sub-continent and one the following summer against New Zealand were the totality of Lewis’s Test career. He has written two autobiographies, Playing Days in 1985 and Taking Fresh Guard in 2003.

Illingworth’s reign finished at the end of the 1973 summer and, amidst some controversy, Kent’s Mike Denness was chosen to take England to the Caribbean in 1973/74 and the torrid winter that followed in 1974/75 in Australia. There is just one book on Denness, his 1977 autobiography I Declare.

Denness’s successor was Tony Greig, but before the giant blond South African took over another man briefly took the reins, for a single Test in 1974/75, John Edrich. Remarkably there is a but a single autobiography on the subject of Edrich, Runs in the Family, written with the assistance of David Frith in 1969 at a time when his career still had several summers to come. In addition Edrich  does, naturally, figure in a book about his family, The Cricketing Family Edrich that was written by Ralph Barker and published in 1976 and, if only some publisher were prepared to back Frith is (or certainly not all that long ago was) to update Runs in the Family.

As for Greig soon after ascending to the captaincy he became persona non grata for his involvement with Kerry Packer and in 1980, by then long retired from playing despite still being only 34, he published My Story. The next book concerning Greig was a double biography involving brother Ian, The Cricketing Greigs, written by David Lemmon and published in 1991. That was followed by David Tossell’s book, Tony Greig, in 2011, which is a fine read. A later book Tony Greig: Love, War and Cricketwritten by Greig’s son and mother is also a good ‘un and, for the reader with less time on their hands, there is a fine tribute from the Sussex Museum, Tony Greig 1946 – 2012: A Tribute. Both were published in 2013, and this year we have had another biography, If Not Me, Who?, by Andy Murtagh.

After Greig came the 31 Test reign, in two distinct stints, of Mike Brearley, with 18 victories and just four defeats. Brearley has written several books, but none of them are true autobiographies. Finally however we have a biography this year, Mark Peel’s Cricketing Caesar.

The first Brearley captaincy period was, briefly, interrupted by a broken arm and, for just two Tests in 1978/79, Geoffrey Boycott got the chance he had always coveted to lead his country. From Boycott there are several books including Boycott – The Autobiography and The Corridor of Certainty which, published in 1987 and 2014, are autobiographies. As for biographies Don Mosey, CD Clark, John Callaghan and Paul Booth (ACS Famous Cricketers) have written them but, with all due respect to them, if you’re going to read just one book on the subject of Sir Geoffrey then Leo McKinstrey’s Boycs: The True Story, published in 2000 is the one even if, as I believe to be the case, the subject himself does not entirely approve.



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Sunday, August 23, 2020

The Stories of England’s Captains, Part 2 of 4

The first ‘new’ England captain after the Great War was the larger than life Hampshire captain Lionel Tennyson, grandson of the famous poet. Tennyson could not defeat Warwick Armstrong’s men but did at least restore some pride to England’ s performances in the second part of the series. Tennyson wrote two autobiographies, From Verse to Worse in 1933 and Sticky Wickets in 1950, and in 2001 Alan Edwards’ Regency Buck was published.

Middlesex captain Frank Mann led England in all five Tests in South Africa in 1922/23. A generation later his son, George Mann, did likewise in 1948/49 and retained the job for the first two of the four drawn Tests in the 1949 series against Walter Hadlee’s New Zealanders. Neither father nor son was the subject of very much in the way of biographical writing until, in 2015, the ACS published a double biography in their Lives in Cricket Series, Frank and George Mann: Brewing, Batting and Captaincy by Brian Rendell.

Frank Mann was followed as skipper by, in this writer’s opinion anyway, the man who is by far the most interesting man to have captained England whose biography has yet to be written, Arthur Gilligan. I can help a little with this feature which, I hope, illustrates why I make the comment that I do. Hopefully our friends at the Sussex Cricket Museum will ensure that this particular gap in the game’s literature will be filled sooner rather than later.

In 1926 the Ashes came back to England for the first time since Armstrong’s men had taken them back so comprehensively in 1920/21. England had two captains in that series. The first four Tests were all drawn under the leadership of Arthur Carr before, for the fifth, Carr was dropped and replaced by the dashing Kent amateur batsman Percy Chapman who went on to lead England to a famous victory. Unusually for the times there was an autobiography from Carr, Cricket With the Lid Off, published in 1935. A controversial figure Carr’s book is a decent read and copies regularly crop up on the second hand market. There is also now a biography from the pen of Peter Wynne-Thomas, Arthur Carr being published in 2017. As for Chapman, who went on to greater glories in 1928/29 before himself being ‘sacked’ in 1930, he was the subject of a sympathetic and perceptive biography from the prolific writer David Lemmon. Percy Chapman – A Biography was published in 1985.

In 1927/28 an England side travelled to South Africa under the captaincy of the amateur Yorkshire wicketkeeper (albeit a man who was never a regular in his county’s colours) ‘Rony’ Stanyforth. The first four Tests in the 1927/28 series were the only Tests in which Stanyforth appeared and indeed his entire First Class career consisted of only 61 matches. England were led in the fifth and final Test by the 27 year old Middlesex leg spinner Greville Stevens. There is no book devoted to Stevens but, perhaps surprisingly, there is a 29 page monograph around that amounts to a biography of Stanyforth. The bad news is that, privately published by author Martin Howe in 2012 in a very small print run, I have never seen a copy on the market for sale.

Chapman missed the final Test in Australia in 1928/29 and England were led by his vice-captain, the Somerset orthodox slow left arm bowler Jack ‘Farmer’ White. White also shared the captaincy duties with Carr against the visiting South Africans in 1928/29. A Somerset Hero Who Beat The Aussies is the title of White’s biography, written by Basil Ashton Tinkler and published in 2000. Two more men whose lives had not been chronicled fully led England on two separate overseas tours in 1929/30. Harold Gilligan, brother of Arthur, took one side to New Zealand, and another led by the Honourable Freddie Calthorpe went to the West Indies. Gilligan was not at that stage Sussex captain, although he led them in 1930. Calthorpe led Warwickshire through the 1920s.

When Chapman was relieved of the captaincy for the final Test of the 1930 series the selectors turned to the Warwickshire batsman and useful medium pacer Bob Wyatt, who would end his career having led England 16 times altogether, although unfortunately with only three victories. Wyatt’s autobiography, Three Straight Sticks, was published in 1951 and an excellent biography, RES Wyatt – Fighting Cricketer by Gerald Pawle was published in 1985.

The selectors took the view that Wyatt was probably not the right candidate for the job of recovering the Ashes in 1932/33, and the man appointed for the 1931 series against New Zealand was Douglas Jardine. That the Iron Duke was a success is amply demonstrated by his record in his fifteen Tests as captain of nine victories against just a solitary defeat. Christopher Douglas’ 1984 biography Douglas Jardine – Spartan Cricketer is one of the very best cricketing biographies. For those with deep pockets there is also a slim 1994 monograph from Irving Rosenwater, Douglas Robert Jardine.

With Jardine retired Wyatt got an extended run as skipper in 1934 but, thanks to injury, he missed the first Test and Cyril Walters stood in. Walters only played for England on eleven occasions and averaged more than fifty with the bat. Another man with an interesting story he would also be a fine subject for a biography but, sadly, never has been although, as with Arthur Gilligan, I can refer readers to a piece of my own writing.

Once the selectors dropped Wyatt back into the ranks the leadership baton passed to Gubby Allen, who led England at home against India in 1936 and in Australia in 1936/37 and, as a 45 year old, in the Caribbean in 1947/48. Allen never wrote an autobiography but was the subject of Gubby Allen – Man of Cricket, a biography by EW ‘Jim’ Swanton in 1985. Swanton’s book is, to say the least, something of a hagiography. It is recommended reading nonetheless, although it should be read in conjunction with either or both of Brian Rendell’s later books, Gubby Allen – Bad Boy of Bodyline and Gubby Under Pressure, reviews of his letters home during his two trips to Australia and which demonstrate a side to the Allen character that Swanton chose not to reveal.

There were to be two more England captains before the Second World War closed the game down for seven long years.The first, who led England against New Zealand in 1937, was the Middlesex all-rounder Walter Robins. A biography of Robins finally appeared in the ACS Lives in Cricket series in 2015, Walter Robins: Achievements, Affections and Affronts. The author is Brian Rendell again.

England’s last pre-war captain, and he would still be in post for the first two post war series, was Walter Hammond. A great player in any currency the professional who turned amateur in order to take up the position led England twenty times, and has been the subject of a number of books. An autobiography appeared in 1946, Cricket My Destiny. That one is still easy enough to pick up, but is not one of the better books of its type. Biographies from Ronald Mason (1962), Gerald Howat (1984) and David Lodge (1990) are all worth reading, but by far the best is David Foot’s Wally Hammond – The Reasons Why, published in 1996.

Yorkshireman Norman Yardley was the man the selectors chose to be Hammond’s vice-captain in Australia in 1946/47 and he assumed the captaincy for the visit of the 1947 South Africans and, the following summer, Bradman’s Invincibles. Altogether Yardley led England fourteen times. His autobiography, Cricket Campaigns, appeared in 1950 and in 2015 Martin Howe’s Norman Yardley: Yorkshire’s Gentleman Cricketer was published in the ACS Lives in Cricket series.

Yardley was unavailable to lead England in South Africa in 1948/49 hence George Mann, referenced in part two of this post, getting the job. Before that Gubby Allen had led England in the West Indies in 1947/48. Injury badly affected Allen’s tour and he had to miss one Test. The Lancashire amateur Ken Cranston replaced him. A fine all-rounder Cranston played eight times for England before leaving the game for a career in dentistry. Sadly there is no biography.

The man who took over from Mann for the third and fourth Tests against New Zealand in 1949 was Freddie Brown one of the men who, 17 years previously, had toured Australia with Douglas Jardine. All told Brown was to captain England on 15 occasions. Surprisingly for such an interesting character he has still not been the subject of a biography, but his own Cricket Musketeer, published in 1954, tells his side of the story.

 



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Saturday, August 15, 2020

Cyril Walters – A Lost Talent

There is a well known phrase that casts doubt on the value of statistics but, generally, for cricketing purposes at least, they tend to tell the truth. By way of example is the question of who are the best opening batsman to have played Test cricket for England. Leaving aside the claims of WG Grace, who came to Test cricket too late in life for his figures to be a proper reflection of his pre-eminence, then the table of averages will tell you the answer is Jack Hobbs (56.94) and Herbert Sutcliffe (60.73), with a good deal of daylight between the next pair, Geoffrey Boycott (47.00) and Alistair Cook (45.35). Parameters exist in that table for a good reason, but stretch them just a little and a name appears at 52.26. History has largely forgotten Cyril Walters, but he played in 11 Tests, five against Australia and three against West Indies at home, as well as England’s first three Tests on the sub-continent.

In his first Test against Australia Walters led England, although in fact he wasn’t English at all. He was born in Bedlinog in Glamorgan, and learnt his cricket at Neath Grammar School, coincidentally also the alma mater of the second Welshman to captain England, Tony Lewis. As a 17 year old schoolboy in 1923 Walters was fast tracked into a Glamorgan side that was competing in the County Championship for just the third time. He made seven appearances altogether, but an average of 14.90 showed he was not quite ready for the step up. He played almost a full season the following summer, but went backwards averaging just 11.91. Any forward progress in 1925 was imperceptible, another full season seeing that average rise only marginally to 12.41. Wisden’s summariser for the most recent addition to the County Championship had not yet bothered to mention Walters.

In the circumstances it was perhaps not surprising that the young amateur decided to concentrate on developing his career as an architect and surveyor, and was therefore available for only eleven of Glamorgan’s fixtures in 1926. His form was nonetheless much improved as he averaged 34.70, and recorded centuries against Warwickshire and Leicestershire. The following year he was only available to the end of May, and his average fell to 24.85. He played through most of June and early July in 1928 and his form was woeful, that average slipping to a mere 9.33. Something however rekindled his cricketing ambitions, or if not that something put him off his property work, as after that barren period he announced that he was going to join Worcestershire as their secretary, a position which would, once he had acquired a residential qualification, allow him to play for the county as an amateur.

As the image of Walters that accompanies this feature demonstrates he could only ever have been an amateur. He closely resembles the matinee idols of his time with the dashing good lucks, jet black immaculately groomed hair and the scarf or cravat and blazer regular fixtures when he was not on the pitch. He batted like a throwback to the golden age of amateur batsmanship as well. Even if at Glamorgan it was a case of rather more elegance than substance he was always a stylish and fast scoring batsman. He was particular strong off his legs, and signature shots were a flowing off drive and a leg glance in the style of Ranjitsinhji.

History seems not to record what Walters spent his summer of 1929 doing. We know he played just one First Class match, for Wales against MCC at Lord’s in late August. He didn’t make many runs, but saw enough of his teammate Sydney Barnes, then aged 56, to maintain for the rest of his days that he was the best bowler he had ever seen – and this was a man who faced Harold Larwood, Tiger O’Reilly and Clarrie Grimmett. What he did do, unsurprisingly given his playing record at Glamorgan, was to make the decision to start again with his batting, and play as he wanted to rather than the way the coaches wanted him to play.

The effect was immediate, if in statistical terms unremarkable. In his first summer as a Worcestershire player, 1930, Walters made 1,000 runs and averaged a respectable 27.84. His figures the next summer, when he assumed the captaincy, were much the same, but good enough to earn an invitation to tour the West Indies with a side raised by Hampshire skipper Lionel Tennyson. After that he seemed to add some consistency to his batting, as whilst 1932 saw him reach his century only once, as he had done in each of the two previous summers, he raised his aggregate by more than 500 runs and his average was up to 34.54.

Walters seems not to have been considered for selection for the ‘Bodyline’ tour that followed that 1932 summer but in 1933 his form was such that the selectors, unfashionable county notwithstanding, simply could not ignore him. He began with a century against Nottinghamshire in his very first innings of the season and never looked back. By the time of the first Test, against the second West Indian touring side, he had added what was to remain the highest score of his career, 226 against Kent, another century and four fifties. He was selected to open the innings with Herbert Sutcliffe.

The first day of Walters’ debut was marred by rain, only 45 minutes play proving possible after Douglas Jardine won the toss and chose to bat. At the end of that time England were 43-0 with Walters on 21, The Cricketer observing that he seemed far more confident than Sutcliffe. On the Monday Walters started well with Walter Hammond but having raised the hundred both were quickly out and England were dismissed for 296. Only Les Ames, with an unbeaten 83, made more than the 51 Walters scored. The bowlers then dismissed West Indies twice in short order for England to win by an innings.

The second Test at Old Trafford was altogether a more competitive affair. Unlike for the first Test the West Indians were able to secure the release of their pace bowling all-rounder Learie Constantine from his League commitments. The result was an opportunity for West Indies to give England a taste of the fast leg theory they had inflicted on Australia the previous winter. The game began with a much improved batting performance from the visitors who, thanks to centuries from Ivan Barrow and George Headley, reached 375. Eventually England got within a single run of them, but only after Douglas Jardine scored his only Test century.

At the start of the England innings Second Slip of The Cricketer was content to glory in the attractive batting of Walters, as Sutcliffe’s new partner made 46. The game ended in a draw before the visitors, once again without Constantine, failed once more to make England, this time without Jardine, bat twice at the Oval. There was a rare Walters failure as well. He scored only two, dismissed in the first over of the match. Despite that his season was a remarkable one as he ended up with 2,404 runs at 50.08. Prior to 1933 he had scored five centuries in ten years. That summer alone there were nine, for many years a Worcestershire record.

Prior to the final Test Walters had already accepted an invitation from MCC to tour India the following winter for what would prove to be Jardine’s last Test series. The party was not a full strength one. In addition to their captain only Hedley Verity had been in Australia the previous winter, but there were plenty of good players selected for the first Test series to be played on the sub-continent. As Jardine’s vice-captain Walters had to get to know the Iron Duke, a man to whom he was very different and by all accounts he did not particularly warm to him.

The main difference between the two men was that Walters, albeit as firm in his resolve and determination as Jardine to play sport at the highest level, was also a great believer in good manners. He would have struggled with the brusqueness that Jardine often showed, and in an interview in the autumn of his years with David Frith told him of an occasion at a reception in India when Jardine even went so far as to walk past his own uncle without acknowledging him.

On the field in India Jardine was the tourists’ leading batsman, followed by Walters. There were three Tests. In the first Walters scored 78 and 14* as England won by nine wickets. In an innings victory in the second he scored 29 before, in a 202 run victory in the third at Madras, he scored 59 and 102, an innings that was to remain his only Test century.

After his run of form there was never any doubt that Walters would play against Australia in the 1934 Ashes, but he wouldn’t have expected, as proved to be the case, that he would be leading England in his first Test against the oldest enemy. That he did so was because of an injury to the man appointed, Bob Wyatt. The game ended in defeat for Walters and England, although no blame could be attached to the captain.

Unfortunately for him Walters lost the toss, although to then restrict a side containing the names Bradman, McCabe, Woodfull and Ponsford to 374 was something of an achievement in itself. The Australian line up was a curious one as it relied on only three specialist bowlers. They were the two great leg spinners, Clarrie Grimmett and Tiger O’Reilly, and just one pace bowler, Tim Wall, who shared the new ball with Stan McCabe, a wonderful batsman but with the ball no more than a modest medium pacer.

Walters took the first ball of the England innings and probably expected what he got, a distinctly quick bouncer from Wall. If he hadn’t taken any lessons in etiquette from Jardine he showed he had learnt something about batting from his display against the West Indian leg theory a year before as he drew himself up to his full height and presented a defensive straight bat to a delivery that climbed towards his shoulder. He saw off the new ball easily enough, but was deceived by Grimmett on 17. In the second innings England’s victory target was 380, but they never looked like saving the game and were beaten by 238 runs. Walters top scored with 46, and looked markedly more confident against Grimmett, marking him out as a quick learner.

The second Test, for which Wyatt was back, was ‘Verity’s match’, the only time England beat Australia at Lord’s in the twentieth century. The Yorkshireman’s 15-104 were the decisive contribution, but Walters scored 82 to set England on their way. He was a little fortunate, being dropped twice, but even Jardine, from the press box, described his innings as a delight.

With the series level at 1-1 the third Test was drawn. England set the tone with a record 627-9 in the first innings, and in benign batting conditions there was never going to be a result after that. Walters’ contributions to the cause were 52 and 50*. The fourth Test was likewise drawn, although a second Bradman triple century at Headingley meant Australia were well on top. By contrast no English batsman scored even a half century, although Walters was close, scoring 44 in the first innings and 45 in the second. He was batting well in both when he was dismissed, in the first by giving a tame return catch to the Australian third string leg spinner, Arthur Chipperfield, and in the second bowled by O’Reilly when he seemed to have a complete lapse of concentration shortly after being at fault when Hammond was run out.

With all to play for the final Test at the Oval was timeless. England lost the match when they lost the toss and Australia’s margin of victory was the small matter of 562 runs. Walters made 64 in the first innings as England set off in pursuit of Australia’s first innings of 701. They were all out for 321 but, as was only to be expected in a timeless Test, Australia batted again before England limped to 145. For once Walters failed, scoring just a single before giving McCabe his third wicket of the series.

From Walters’ personal point of view his first Ashes series was a great success. He averaged 50.12, just a tick below Sutcliffe and 17 short of Maurice Leyland. In the press box all summer was Jardine, whose verdict was; Walters proved himself the prettiest bat on the England side, nor was he lacking in consistency. His swinging of the bat is a perpetual delight, whilst his confidence against the new ball is a phenomenon of the utmost value. Although he did add a barb, expressing the view that Walters was essentially a natural, rather than a thinking cricketer, he still has much to learn. England’s former captain was also critical of Walters’ consistency in the field and, understandably, his habit of getting out when well set, a problem he believed was best cured by playing a series in Australia.

On 31 January 1935 Walters married Clara ‘Peggy’ Pitt. He had only met her the previous July, and they had become engaged in the November. Ominously a contemporary newspaper report said of Clara; She professes little interest in cricket, but is an enthusiastic tennis and hockey player. Clara was also a woman of means. An only child she was the daughter of a chartered accountant who had died earlier in 1934. Clara was granted Probate of her father’s substantial estate, the equivalent of around £2,000,000 today. Her mother was still alive at that time, but she was independently wealthy thanks to a successful family butchery and meat product business so, to use the vernacular of the day, Walters had most certainly ‘married well’.

Despite his marriage Walters remained Worcestershire skipper and he began the 1935 season by leading his side against the touring South Africans in their traditional first fixture at Worcester. He missed only one of the county’s first ten matches, and that was only to enable him to accept an invitation to play for MCC against South Africa. After that there was an injury to a tendon in his left hand and Walters was out of action for almost two months. He returned to play twice more, at home against Kent and then an away fixture at Chelmsford. Worcestershire supporters did not know that the 118 and 94 they saw Walters make in the drawn encounter with Kent would be the last time they saw him. He took 53 from the Essex bowlers as well before ending his career in disappointing fashion. A thumb injury delayed his appearance in the second innings until number nine in the order and, in what proved to be a heavy defeat, his final First Class innings brought him just six runs.

There was no expectation when Walters left the field at Chelmsford that he would not play again, but in August he resigned both the captaincy and his position as county secretary. There was talk of a comeback from time to time, and Walters was asked to captain England in Australia in 1936/37, but he never reappeared. Even today 29 is no age for a batsman to end his First Class career, and cricketers played at the top level for much longer in Walters’ time. Why did he stop playing? The answer seems to be for the love of a good woman, and it cannot have detracted from that motivation that she was a wealthy one as well. The explanation seems to be as simple as Clara not caring for the prospect of following her husband round the country, nor a six month sojourn in Australia.

Instead of cricket Walters started working in the family business. His marriage was clearly a happy one, although not blessed with children. Clara died in 1979. For some years Walters remained in the family home but in the 1980s he returned to South Wales where he died, shortly before Christmas in 1992. He was 87.



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The Stories of England’s Captains, Part 1 of 4

On 8th July 2020 Ben Stokes became the 81st man to captain England in a Test match when he stood in for Joe Root to enable the latter to fulfill his paternal obligations. Root was back in time for the next Test, so having lost the only match in which he las led his country at the moment Stokes has a 100% failure rate. It could be worse. John Emburey lost his only two, and Allan Lamb his only three, but as Stokes is clearly next in line for the job when Joe Root decides that he would like to drop back into the ranks I am confident that, come the end of his career, Stokes record will be much, much better.

Amongst the 81 are many of the biggest names in English cricket, but there are some who are largely forgotten today, but by virtue of the office that they held or are interesting men and, for almost all of them there is either a biography or an autobiography out there and the purpose of this post and those that will follow on the same theme is to set out the books that are available or, in the case of a few giants of the game, a selection of what is around.

The first England captain was a member of a famous cricketing family, James Lillywhite. There is no full biography of Lillywhite, who led England in the two matches in 1876/77, although there is a volume in the ACS Famous Cricketers’ Series.

In Australia two years later England were led by Lord Harris, who also led England in 1880 in the first Test match in England and, altogether, four times. The renowned historian James D Coldham wrote a biography, Lord Harris, which was published in 1983.

Nottinghamshire professional Alfred Shaw was the captain in four Tests in Australia in 1881/82. There was what amounts to a ghosted autobiography of Shaw published as long ago as 1902, written by “Old Ebor”, the nom de plume of AW Pullin. The title is Alfred Shaw, Cricketer: His Career and Reminiscences. The only later Shaw publication came five years later and was a booklet written by WF Grundy on the twins subjects of Shaw and his long time Notts and England teammate Arthur Shrewsbury, A Memento of Two Great Notts Cricketers. Shaw was an interesting man any would certainly be a good subject for a modern historian to try and tackle.

There was a home Test in England in each of the summers 1882 and 1884. On both occasions Lancashire skipper AN ‘Monkey’ Hornby led England. In 2013 AN Hornby: The Boss appeared in the ACS Lives in Cricket series. Prior to that there had also been a little known biography by WH Hoole, who published The Cricketing Squire in 1991. A further book, dealing more with Hornby’s life outside cricket is expected in the not too distant future from Max Books.

In 1882/83 it was, following ‘Spofforth’s Match’, that the Honourable Ivo Bligh led England to Australia in order recover ‘The Ashes’. Bligh is the subject of a volume the ACS Famous Cricketers Series and in addition, whilst not strictly a biography, Cricket’s Burning Passion by Scyld Berry and Rupert Peploe contains much new material the subject of Bligh and his life beyond cricket.

As a professional Shaw’s partner Shrewsbury led England sides in Australia twice, in 1884/85 and 1886/87, and was successful in both series. As well as being featured in the Grundy booklet already mentioned A Biographical Sketch of Arthur Shrewsbury the Famous Notts Cricketer was put together by SW Hitching in 1890. In 1985 a retrospective biography, Give Me Arthur, appeared from the well known historian Peter Wynne-Thomas whose breadth of knowledge of cricket history in general and Nottinghamshire cricket in particular made him the ideal man to write it.

Allan Steel was England captain in 1886, and he deputised once in 1888, so for four Tests in all. He has yet to be the subject of a book. There are a number of books that touch upon Steel and his life and a particularly good one is The Cricket Captains of England by Alan Gibson, published in 1979.

The Surrey amateur Walter Read was next, leading England in the only Test in Australia in 1887/88 and, four years later, once in South Africa. In 2011 Walter Read: A Class Act appeared from Keith Booth in the ACS Lives in Cricket series. Read’s own book, Annals of Cricket, was published in 1896. There is a very attractive contemporary limited edition, but the content of the book is, shall we say disappointing.

The next England captain who falls to be considered has no shortage of books on the subject of his life. WG Grace led England in 13 of his 22 Tests. He was the winning skipper in four series in England and lost only once, on his visit to Australia in 1891/92. There are many books, ancient and modern, on the subject of WG.

For the purposes of this post I will put forward three books I am familiar with. One is Simon Rae’s monumental 1998 WG Grace – A Life and is a fine effort, as is the more recent Amazing Grace by Richard Tomlinson that appeared to mark the centenary of Grace’s death in 2015. Of the older books the Memorial Biography that appeared in 1919 is recommended. Many contributed to a book which credited Lords Hawke and Harris as well as writer Home Gordon as editors, but in reality the hard yards were put in by Gordon.

The next two men to be considered each led England only once, in South Africa in 1888/89, not that either realised at the time just what they were doing. The first, Charles Aubrey ‘Round the Corner’ Smith found greater fame in Hollywood. He missed the second Test through injury giving the other, Monty Bowden, his chance. At 23 England’s youngest ever captain Bowden stayed in South Africa after the tour and four years later was dead. It is no surprise that there is a biography of Smith, Sir Aubrey by David Rayvern Allen and published in 1982 with a second edition in 2005. Rather more unexpected is the existence of a biography of Bowden, England’s Youngest Captain by Jonty Winch, which was published in 2003.

Andrew Stoddart first took over as captain in 1893 when WG missed the first Test of that Ashes summer, and he then took sides to Australia in 1894/95 and 1897/98. Stoddart, also an England captain on the Rugby field, was largely forgotten until David Frith took up his cause. AE Stoddart appeared in 1970 and a revised edition appeared in 1977 with the title My Dear Victorious Stod. In 2015 Stoddy – England’s Finest Sportsman, more than two decades of further research later, became a third edition.

The trips to South Africa in 1895/96 and 1898/99 both, like their two predecessors, attract much criticism for being classified as Tests at all, but they are not going to be down graded so need to be considered. One of the captains, Sir Timothy O’Brien, an Irishman who later skippered Ireland in First Class cricket, did also play against Australia, but there is no biography of him. The second was Lord Hawke who, of course, led Yorkshire for many years.

In 1924 Hawke published an autobiography, Recollections and Reminiscences, written for him by Pullin. Later in 1990 James P Coldham, the son of the renowned historian James D, published a biography entitled simply Lord Hawke.

Stoddart missed three of the Tests in the 1897/98 series and those marked the first three of the 22 occasions on which the autocratic Lancastrian Archie MacLaren led England. Of those 22 England won only four, so MacLaren has a poor record, but he did not have a lot of luck, and some decent ideas didn’t come off. Michael Down’s 1981 published Archie is an excellent biography. There is also a monograph, Archie Remembered, that was published by Malcom Larimer in 2004.

Another famous name is that of Pelham Warner, who got the nod over MacLaren to take England to Australia in 1903/04. ‘Plum’ justified the selectors faith in him, but then became the first England captain to lose a Test and then a series to a side other than Australia when a pack of South African googly bowlers took the 1905/06 series 4-1. A prolific author Warner’s Cricket Reminiscences in 1920 and My Cricketing Life in 1921 are both largely autobiographical, and eventually a full autobiography, Long Innings appeared in 1951. That latter year also saw a short biography from Laurence Meynell, and a much fuller one from Gerald Howat, entitled simply Pelham Warner, was published in 1987.

Another Honourable, this time Stanley Jackson, led England with great success in 1905. He was one of the few cricketers of this era who was the subject of a contemporary biography, FS Jackson by Percy Cross Standing in 1907. Much later, in 1989, the same title was used by James P Coldham, putting into print one of his late father’s unfinished projects.

The next England captain was tasked with bringing the 1907 South Africans back down to earth, and RE ‘Tip’ Foster did win the three match series 1-0. Like Stoddart a double international Foster had to wait until 2018 for Anthony Collis to publish Fostershire, a ‘joint’ biography of him and his six brothers, all of whom played First Class cricket.

With Foster and Jackson unavailable to go to Australia in 1907/08 the captaincy passed to Nottinghamshire’s Arthur Jones. Unable to play in three of the Tests due to ill-health Jones only two Test appearances came on this tour. He died of tuberculosis in 1914 and no biography has ever appeared although Jones was the subject of volume 63 of the ACS Famous Cricketers series in 2001. In the three Tests that Jones missed England were led by the Essex batsman Frederick Fane, like O’Brien an Irishman. Fane also led England twice in South Africa in 1909/10. He has never been the subject of a book.

The appointed captain on that 1909/10 South African tour was the vertically challenged HDG ‘Shrimp’ Leveson-Gower. By no means a poor batsman Leveson-Gower was, despite only playing in the three Tests, well known in the game as he was an administrator for many years, but nonetheless he has never been the subject of a biography. Part of the reason for that may be that in 1953 he did produce an autobiography, On and Off the Field.

There were to be two more England captains before the Great War brought the so called ‘Golden Age’ of the game to a close. One of them, CB Fry, was one of the great names of that period even if his Test record is a little disappointing in the light of his dominance of the First Class game. Fry led England in each of their six Tests is the Triangular Tournament of 1912. There are many books that concern aspects of his life. Iain Wilton’s CB Fry – An English Hero is a comprehensive biography that was published in 1999. Fry’s autobiography was published in 1939. Life Worth Living is, unusually for a book of its type, a lively and entertaining read albeit one that did not deal as fully as it might have with some of the more controversial aspects of its author’s life. Another good biography of Fry, that pre-dated Wilton’s by 15 years is CB – The Life of Charles Burgess Fry, by Clive Ellis.

England’s final pre-war skipper was the Essex amateur JWHT Douglas. In 1911/12 Douglas led England to an Ashes victory as a result of the incapacity of the appointed captain, Warner. Subsequently as captain in his own right he led England to a handsome 4-1 win in South Africa in 1913/14. Still around after the war Douglas had the misfortune to lead the 1920/21 side that was beaten 5-0 by Warwick Armstrong’s Australians. He suffered two more defeats in 1921 to the same opposition. An interesting man his life went unrecorded until 1983  when David Lemmon’s biography, Johnny Won’t Hit Today, appeared.



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Monday, August 10, 2020

ICC Super League to Serve as Qualifier for 2023 World Cup

The International Cricket Council (ICC) has announced that the ODI Super League will serve as a qualifier for the 2023 World Cup in India. This decision comes after questions about the relevance of the Super League with the intention of bringing some much-needed context to ODI cricket. ODI cricket has a lot to live up to with the increasing popularity of T20 and Test cricket.

As a number of matches in 2020have been postponed, after the prolonged hiatus in cricket, many fans are now looking to the newly established Super League format. The thrilling nature of this format has seen fans flocking to websites such as Sportsadda to place a bet and be on the edge of their seats during a game.

What to Expect

The Super League will feature 13 teams — the Netherlands, who qualified for the SL by winning the World Cricket Super League 2015-17, and the 12 ICC full-time members (Afghanistan, Australia, Bangladesh, England, India, Ireland, New Zealand, Pakistan, South Africa, Sri Lanka, West Indies, and Zimbabwe).

Each side will play four home matches, and four away matches in a three-match series. To break it down, each team will play matches against eight of the other 12 teams in a series comprising three ODI matches. All in all, one team will play 24 matches in total during the League’s duration, meaning that all teams will have more than enough opportunities to prove themselves in the competitive world of professional cricket. Similarly, avid sports bettors will have an abundance of opportunities to wager on their favorites.

Moreover, each team will receive 10 points for a win, five points for a tie, no result, or abandonment, and zero points for a lost game. If there are two or more teams with the same number of total points earned, the League will apply predetermined criteria to break the tie.

The first Super League match will take place in Southampton between the world champions, England and Ireland. The exact date of the first match has not yet been revealed, but many fans expect it to be soon, so keep an eye on the schedule.

What’s Next?

The seven teams with the highest scores on the final table will advance to play at the World Cup in India. Keep in mind that India qualifies directly for the World Cup because of its host duties. Ultimately, eight teams will move on to play in the World Cup 2023.

Since the World Cup in India has ten open slots, there will be two team slots left to be filled. For that reason, the remaining five teams that didn’t make the first cut, will join five Associate teams and compete in the ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup Qualifier 2023. The two finalists of this qualifier event will join the previously mentioned eight teams at the World Cup in India.

Keep in mind that not all ODIs scheduled in one calendar year will be part of the Super League. The ICC has already identified the cricket matches that will be part of the Super League.



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Ireland Recorded its Highest Successful ODI Chase After the Match with England

Aside from football, rugby, and hurling, another popular sport in parts of Ireland is cricket. Cricket has been introduced to the country in the 18th century and it was in the early 1880s when it became really popular in the country. The Irish Cricket Union has been governing this sport in Ireland since 1923.

Cricket has also been a popular option for people to wager on. The recent match between Ireland and England has been great for many punters. Ireland was able to pull off a remarkable run-chase to stun England and they were able to hit the seven-wicket triumph. The next match for Ireland will be on August 10 against Sri Lanka. It’s best to check strategies for cricket betting if you’re planning to wager on this match.

The recent win of Ireland’s cricket team is a big deal because they have only ever beaten England once in their last 12 ODI meetings. The last time they won against England was in the 2011 World Cup when they were able to chase down a 328 win. However, the recent match was even better when they were able to reach their 329-run target.

In the team’s win in 2011, Kevin O’Brien played a very important role in his amazing 50-ball century. This time, O’Brien once again played an important part in hitting the winning run. He talked about their recent win in an interview and he said that it has been a long time since their last win and it was starting to be frustrating.

O’Brien said, “It’s coming on 10 years now. It’s a little bit frustrating. It’s obviously a very proud thing, and to talk and think about it does give me goosebumps. But I’d like to think I’ve had some performances since then to not just go back to one game.”

He also talked about his performance and said, “Whether my scores show it or not, I think I’m a better cricketer now: more rounded, with more experience under my belt. I’m certainly in a better space now; a more comfortable space with where I am mentally and physically.”

He also talked about the younger athletes in the team. He said, “There are four or five players all around a similar age,” O’Brien says, “and for them, it’s a great opportunity to write their own legacy and write Irish cricket’s next chapter. The hunger’s certainly there with the young guys to get better, train hard, and be the best players that they can be.”

He added, “Ultimately it’s up to them to bring Cricket Ireland forward when myself and a few of the older boys hang up the boots. We’ve brought it as far as we can, and it’s up to the younger guys to bring it even further. It’s certainly something that I’ve taken notice of over the last 14 or 15 weeks, over lockdown – a few areas that I need to improve on to stay a step ahead of the younger guys. That’s great to have for me as an individual, and from the team’s point of view if we’re all trying to be better than each other, ultimately the team should be in a better place going forward.”

When asked about going against England, he had this to say, “I didn’t need any reminders of how England would play against us,” he says. “The depth in their squad is probably the strongest in world cricket, with the talent on display the other night.

“We always have a chance. We’ve got match-winners in our squad with both bat and ball as we’ve since in the last six or seven months. When we play well, we’re a good team – we’ve just got to put in a performance for 100 overs, or as many of those 100 overs as we can. We know if we’re not on the ball against England they’re going to capitalize. We’ve got to be positive with everything we do and take them on. That’s the only way we’re going to compete with them.”

During their recent win, O’Brien was superbly supported by Harry Tector who is just 10 years old. Tector is in line for an ODI debut in the middle order. O’Brien also talked about Him. “He was all the way through, all the underage teams and was captain of the U-19s a few years ago. He’s been earmarked. Harry’s a very technically correct batsman: he can score quickly, and he’s got most if not all the shots in the book.”

O’Brien also said that he feels that the seniors have already brought Irish cricket as far as they could. He thinks that it is now up to the younger guys to take it further.



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Sunday, August 9, 2020

England Vs Pakistan 3 Match Test Series Preview August 2020

England welcome Pakistan to Off Trafford and The Rose Bowl for the 3 match Test Series in which has the recipe to be a competitive and compelling series. England test team have just come from off a 2-1 win over the West Indies in which is seems they made it harder than it needed to be and had to dig deep to win on Day 4 of the final test. However, Pakistan are a different animal; highly skilled, more ruthless and will pick England apart if they aren’t up to their best. We take a look at a preview to the rest of the series.

England are heavy favourites for the series and here are some Gambling Sites Not on Gamstop in which you can find odds as good as 4/11 for England to take the series. Naturally this would be the safe bet for the series however Pakistan have looked strong in the first two days of the series, and at a price of 7/1, it could be worth the punt. Sites not on Gamstop offer access to users that have previously opted-out on Gamstop. That’s positive news for some, who can now again get involved in the cricket markets and on a huge variety of other sports, offering some of the best odds available.

The single biggest threat to England this series is Babar Azam, tipped as one of the Top 5 batsman in all 3 formats of the sport. However, Babar comes into his own in Test Cricket, having an average of 45.12 in 26 games, and 5 tons and 13 half centuries. He’s taken test cricket by storm and England bowling attack will certainly have to try and contain him if they want to have any chance of winning this series.

Talking about bowling, Pakistan are going to have to do without Mohammed Amir, a cricketer than England know very well. Amir has recently retired however Pakistan have some serious young talent coming through their ranks in Naseem Shah and Shaheen Afridi.
Naseem being only 17 years-old, he became the youngest ever bowler to take a Test hat-trick at 16 years old back in February; one to watch for the future and certainly this series!

Although all the above threats could prove problematic for England, I believe they will have the fire power to be able to overcome whatever Pakistan throw at them, especially with the strong bowling attack of Anderson, Broad, Archer and Woakes. Nether the less, its certainly guaranteed to be an entertaining series and one I am seriously looking forward too!



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Saturday, August 8, 2020

Another Look At “Cricketing Caesar”

Following Martin Chandler’s review in May of Mark Peel’s biography of Mike Brearley (JMB), this supplementary review article focusses on three particular matters that this stimulating and thoroughly enjoyable book brought to the forefront during my reading. I should add that whilst it is an “unauthorised” account, Peel’s discussion of JMB’s upbringing, his time at Cambridge and also the chapter On the Couch read as though he had access to a number of JMB’s personal documents. And it has a mouth-watering eleven page Introduction.

JMB as a Captain – in Tests and for His County   

I read the consideration of JMB’s captaincy having had a careful look at his record in relation to those adjacent Test captains (1969-88 period) and all others of post-WW2 times. Suffice to say that, in whatever way one examines this (versus Australia, versus Pakistan and India at home and then away, and so forth), he comes out exceptionally well on win to loss ratios and also on the relatively low proportion of drawn matches that were not due to rain.

Without dwelling on these comparative statistics, Peel handles the dual aspects of JMB’s captaincy admirably at both Test and county level, with discussion entering at various parts of the book. On player management and motivation, he largely lets the players themselves do the talking. Illuminating comments are given on the Test arena from, for example, Mike Hendrick – making you feel you were the only person capable of doing the job he wanted done at that specific time (p225) – Graham Gooch, on his ability to relate to all types of people (p224); David Gower on empathy for his own players (p225); and Ian Botham on effective communication and commanding respect (p231). Even the prickly Geoff Boycott – who coveted the captaincy role but messed up on his brief go at it – confessed: “His attitude {towards me} was balanced and honest….I felt that Mike understood me”. (Page numbers being cited as the book has no index.)

These comments, often quoted verbatim, from the great and the good – and others besides – are usually placed in the context of a particular match or series, or the player’s overall career. All summed up by Rodney Hogg’s pithy phrase that “Brearley has a degree in people.” Only Phil Edmonds is identified as being a glaring exception, often at loggerheads with JMB both on and off the field, which once nearly ending in a physical brawl!

At county level, Peel tells the story well of JMB being confronted with the scepticism and resistance of the old guard to his unconventional ideas when appointed as Middlesex captain (with the decisive backing of Gubby Allen, also ex-Cambridge) and his endeavours to ultimately get each of them on-side. JMB had to convert, most notably, the seasoned Test players, Titmus, Murray and Parfitt (9, 7 and 5 years his elder), having worked their way up the traditional way on the ground-staff with various mundane tasks to perform to boot. In contrast, a number of the youngsters during JMB’s early times as captain expressed their appreciation – such as Simon Hughes, encouraging him to go all out for wickets; and Mike Gatting, surprised and dead chuffed that his opinion was sought on occasion about what to do when in the field. Some players on the way up are quoted for being given recognition and being helped – such as Roland Butcher, getting public credit for his observation about the team’s lack of focus and making you believe in your own ability. Middlesex’s recruit from South Africa, Vincent van der Bijl was full of praise for JMB’s efforts to help players attain their own aspirations within the body of the team.

Turning to the flip side of captaincy, tactical nous, this is handled with a number of well chosen instances of JMB’s decision-making, again mostly through the perspective of individual players – including some opponents as well those of his own teams. For instance, there is Brian Rose of Somerset (p143) who learned from JMB about the importance of thinking well ahead – where a captain wants to be in five or ten overs time and letting his bowlers know of this. One perhaps little known ploy that is noted is JMB occasionally using Boycott’s medium pace deliveries as an attacking weapon in Tests. Australians aren’t generally known for complimenting opposing counterparts, but Kim Hughes is quoted for considering JMB’s captaincy to be outstanding during the 1981 Ashes series – sufficient to deny Australia the series win they were set up for. In its aftermath, even Dennis Lillee was moved to say: “From an opposition player’s point of view, it was obvious that his tactical manoeuvres were of an exceedingly high standard.”¹

And the doyen of commentators, former Australian captain, Richie Benaud singles out JMB’s ability to gauge the strengths and weaknesses of the opposition and being confident enough to go with his hunches. Peel lets JMB make the point that, once a decision is taken about a bowling or field change, the result is largely (though certainly not entirely) out of the captain’s hands.

There is rather less material on JMB’s tactical ability than managing players which is in order given the thorough treatment of it in his own widely acclaimed book, The Art of Captaincy. First published shortly after retiring with a new piece, In Retrospect, for the 2001 edition giving a psychoanalytic angle on the role; and a further edition in 2015 with a substantial interpretive Foreword by Ed Smith (another former Cambridge and Middlesex batsman-captain, retiring in 2008 and now the chief national selector), plus a new Introduction by JMB himself which subtly underlines the relevance of the book’s unchanged body for present times. Collectively, Peel’s portrayal of his tactical ploys give the lie to a traditional Australian view that captaincy is very largely a matter of luck. Peel makes us realise that this may be true of run-of-the-mill Test captains but not of the outstanding ones.

Yet the reader doesn’t go away with an all-sweetness-and-light version of JMB in the captaincy role. Peel reveals his toughness with his players when called for, Botham included. As for opposing teams, JMB was keen on sledging, often orchestrating audible chatter in the slips cordon about a batsman’s weaknesses; sledging done in a more subtle manner than normal! Among controversial ploys that Peel reveals is having a bowler deliver a series of lobs that appear to the batsman to be dropping near vertically out of the sky, being both difficult to swot and embarrassing if he fails to do so. Another is JMB putting himself on to bowl a couple of overs of underarm when captaining Cambridge in the annual varsity fixture, arriving as grubbers, having tried this out against Sussex earlier that season.

As well as this kind of innovative streak, we learn of a “ruthless” one in striving to win. JMB’s hard-line attitude is exemplified by praising a bowler who directed vicious bouncers at a nightwatchmen who hung around (resulting in a negotiated pact with the opposition). Wicket-keeper Roger Tolchard is called upon, reckoning that JMB was the hardest man he had ever played with, and “clever enough to know how to be nasty and cruel!” In short, happy – indeed keen – when circumstances “called for it” to play to the very limits of the rules.

JMB as a Test All-Rounder

JMB was a highly effective all-rounder for Middlesex in his captaincy-opening the innings roles, having seven big seasons with the bat, six of these when captaining the side and usually opening the batting (1974-75, 1977 and 1980-82). He was also a competent wicket-keeper, as shown in his time at Cambridge University – later able to deputise for John Murray, and later Paul Downton, if they happened to get injured during a match.

Whilst Peel leaves us in no doubt about this, some assessment of JMB as an all-rounder at Test level seems in order. Having played himself in, reaching 20 on twenty-three occasions during his 66 innings, he went on to make nine scores of fifty and above – including 74, 81 and 91 when opening the innings – plus four scores in the mid to high-forties.

I feel an opportunity is missed to examine if JMB’s batting – in conjunction with his success as captain – could be interpreted in a way that might conceivably rank him as a genuine Test match all-rounder. Peel could have addressed questions such as: how many of his scores in the mid-forties and above were made against elite bowlers; how valuable were those innings to the team given the state of play at the time and the match outcome; did he have some telling opening partnerships? A number of JMB’s innings do seem to have had a significant influence on the match outcome, such as in the 5th Test in India in February 1977, the 3rd Test at home against Australia in July 1977, the 2nd Test in Pakistan in January 1978 and the 4th Test against Australia in 1981. The conclusion to be reached, whether negative or positive, would I think be of general interest.

I have been intrigued enough to take up this Test all-round question in a journal article to be submitted, viewing JMB in relation to a selection of leading Test batting-pace bowling all-rounders.

Assessing JMB’s Unfulfilled Potential as a Test Match Batsman

JMB reproaches himself about his batting career in a number of respects in his books On Form (2017) and On Cricket (2018), as well as in some newspaper articles. He does so for being unjustifiably arrogant following his success at Cambridge, for being naïve about the demands of Test match cricket on entering the big stage, for ignoring good advice, being a slow learner from his own experiences and suchlike.

Peel asks whether the severity and number of these reprimands has really been warranted which soon, inevitably, leads to consideration of JMB’s unfulfilled potential as a Test level batsman – being the subject of the seven page Chapter 13. He takes it as an accepted fact that JMB didn’t fully exploit his abilities, and seeks to judge the scope and extent of this. Part of the context is JMB’s statement, made in recent times in light of what he learned from his playing days, which Peel quotes: “…I might now be better able to encourage the modest batsman in me to do moderately well in Test cricket rather than poorly.”

Based on the three overall observations below about his Test innings – 66 in all, in 39 matches covering ten series, at an average of 22.9 – Peel comes to a gloomy conclusion:

  • The fact that JMB only twice averaged over 30 for a Test series (38.0 and 34.2).
  • “The majority of his nine fifties lacked sparkle”, being characteristic of his overall slow scoring rate (28.9 runs per 100 deliveries), and
  • “His figures suggest a remarkable consistency throughout his Test career.” Adding that at no particular stage did they differ markedly from his general norm, and nor did he particularly succeed against any one country.

The last two contentions are borne out by close examination. On a standard statistical test of variance about an overall average value, the extent of JMB’s variance in his individual Test series averages is substantially lower than for each of the eight batsmen who usually opened in Tests for England during the 1970s and ’80s (applying a minimum of six series and 40 innings).²

As to JMB’s scoring rate, when making scores in Tests in the 40-80 range, he was one-fifth slower (runs scored per 100 deliveries) than the same eight comparators combined when they also scored in that range. And he was slower than all of them individually, though very similar to both Tavaré and Boycott; taken over all his Test matches, JMB was nearly one-third slower than the rest of the team taken together. Also, his scores of fifty plus came at 31 runs per 100 deliveries, little different to his average for all his innings, with his highest three scores being generated at no more than a moderate rate (38.4, 35.1 and 34.8 runs per 100 deliveries). On JMB’s own admission, he never took full control of the bowling.

Without using the term explicitly, it is clear that Peel comes to rate his unexploited Test batting potential as small rather than substantial/sizeable. Importantly, Peel bases his judgement solely on what JMB actually did in Test matches and disregards indications from his performance in other matches when confronted by international standard bowlers playing in England’s county championship, including those of overseas touring sides. This seems to me an unnecessarily restrictive approach to assessing someone’s potential. Peel doesn’t say anywhere that he is departing from what is usually meant by the term “potential”, being on the lines of a player’s latent abilities that might be developed, and what they are feasibly capable of achieving.

At this point, I am going to indulge in artistic license by devoting a few paragraphs to some of JMB’s more successful times with the bat against high calibre bowling outside of Test matches. This is of crucial importance to the following discussion of how JMB himself, and then Peel, interprets his poor overall performance in Tests.

With the bat for Middlesex, JMB had seven big seasons, all during 1974-82 – four times averaging in the mid-high forties and three times in the mid-fifties – usually flowing and fluent after getting established. In four of those seasons he featured among the top twenty players in England on first class averages (not counting members of touring squads). He had shown much promise early on: including as a freshman at Cambridge, in May 1961 making 73 and 89 against the Australians; and for Middlesex in 1964 making an undefeated century against them when demonstrating his high capability facing spin – “playing some exquisitely polished strokes” (The Times).

For Middlesex against other counties, when opening the innings JMB made 15 centuries during 1975-77 and 1980-82 against ten different overseas Test bowlers and four different England Test bowlers, all when in the prime of their careers.³ JMB also did very well for Middlesex playing some of the touring sides. Against the West Indians in 1973, coming in at number 3 and making 87 and then 70 not out, dealing with Holder, Boyce and Shillingford and the off spin of Lance Gibbs; and when playing them again in 1976, making 62 in a second innings opening stand of 131 with Mike Smith – fronting Andy Roberts and Collis King – to set up a notable victory by 4 wickets. Also, a month before his recall to Tests in July 1981, JMB made an undefeated 132 in the second innings against the Australians “with the best batting of his career”, dealing with Dennis Lillee, Rodney Hogg, Geoff Lawson and Ray Bright.

For the MCC, in late-April 1965 playing Yorkshire, making 90 when opening and carrying his bat – early on, hooking Fred Trueman for 3 successive boundaries – to bring MCC level on first innings with a total of 197. And when back again at Cambridge University, in May 1966 making 101 opening the second innings, countering Trueman, Illingworth and Don Wilson; the next highest score that innings being 47.

For England, in the one-day series of 1977 against Australia, in an opening stand of 161 with Amiss, making 78 from 113 deliveries facing Thomson, Dymock and Pascoe plus the spin of Bright and O’Keeffe. Also, when opening for an England XI against Victoria in Melbourne in November 1978, making an unbeaten 116 in a total of 241 for 8 declared, facing Alan Hurst (fast) and Jim Higgs (leg break-googly).

JMB also demonstrated that he could score at a decent rate against strong bowling, especially in pursuit of a target, as these examples illustrate:

  • For MCC X1 vs the touring Australians in 1964: set to score 228 in 2.5 hrs, with a full range of strokes JMB, with Boycott, had “a scintillating opening stand” of 121 made in 84 minutes – countering Graham McKenzie and Neil Hawke.
  • For MCC vs Leicestershire in 1976 – chasing 325 to win, JMB with Amiss had an opening stand of 301 made at 4.3 per over, disposing of Paddy Clift and Ken Higgs.
  • For Middlesex vs the touring West Indians in 1976 – set 274 to win in 5.5 hours, an opening stand with Mike Smith of 131 (JMB making 62) paved the way for a victory – this time countering Andy Roberts and Collis King.
  • For Middlesex vs Surrey in August 1977, after a gambit of a one ball declaration on a difficult rain-affected pitch, then (with conditions improved) needing 139 to win in 88 minutes, JMB and Mike Smith “set about their task with gay abandon, plundering 47 runs from the first seven overs, and putting on 101 for the first wicket. Thereafter the result was barely in doubt…”.

This account amply demonstrates that when batting high in the order JMB could handle Test-class bowling and often come out well on top. Peel has plenty of references to his good scores for Middlesex, but most are very brief. He comments in some detail only on a handful of JMB’s many successes in county championship matches against such bowling, most notably from the mid-1970s onwards.

It is clear, then, that something must have gone very wrong when JMB batted in Tests. The big question, which Peel does address, is what happened to drag down his form and result in generally low scores? The role of captaincy didn’t weigh down his batting, judging by his similar pattern of scores and his average before and after taking it on: 24.3 pre versus 22.5 post.

First, JMB’s own view. Peels notes that he never felt he truly belonged on the big stage when at the crease. A feeling of inadequacy came over him in such company, and he never had a solidly successful series with the bat to shed that feeling. Although the reasons for this “not belonging” state of mind are not given explicitly, Geoff Cope – who played with JMB in Pakistan – recalled “he tended to look around at some of the players who were with him who were better than he was. He was finding that part of it demanding.” Opening the batting in the majority of his 39 Test matches, JMB started by partnering John Edrich (who made 37 and 76*) and soon moved on to Amiss (5 matches), then Gooch who was recalled after a false start three years earlier (3 matches) and Boycott (13 matches). The last three rarely failed in both innings when opening with JMB, and respectively averaged 46.0, 55.0 and 59.9 for those innings – dwarfing JMB’s own average when partnering them. The disparity was sufficient to induce JMB to bat in his last nine Tests mainly in the middle order.

To heighten JMB’s task with the bat, he arrived on the Test scene late in his career, at age 34, with excellent form for Middlesex during the previous season. He had also made two centuries and two fifties in the matches prior to his debut in early-June 1976; plus a composed and staunch innings of 36 for the MCC against the West Indians, lasting for nearly three hours, when fronting up to Roberts and Holding – this being shortly before the team for the first Test against them was chosen. The selectors expected him to succeed straight away. He wasn’t given time to settle in the team, and was unluckily dropped after his second Test having made a valuable (if very slow) contribution in the first innings by scoring 40, and sharing a 84 run stand with Brian Close after the side were in difficulty at 31 for 2. Of the other six openers tried in that match and the rest of that series, only Amiss did any better than JMB.⁴ Compare Colin Cowdrey’s experience. He was apprehensive and felt out of his depth when taking each step up from schoolboy ranks through to the Test arena, but was eased in to both county and Test cricket when young.⁵

JMB’s “not belonging” feeling in Tests, while also badly wanting to do well, resulted in him experiencing an abnormally high degree of tension when batting (and was acute during the few days leading up to his debut). It was, as Peel notes, a tension that never left him when at the crease. His mental tension translated into a way of making strokes in Tests that has been variously described as somewhat mechanical, rigid or stiff. He soon became over-anxious to prove himself and worried about failing. “…in Test cricket an inner voice told me that I had no right to be there. I would then become more tense, try harder than ever, and play further below par” (p 182). In trying to minimise the risk of giving up his wicket, JMB also became highly cautious, as John Arlott has highlighted: “Although he often batted freely and fluently in county cricket, when he played for England anxiety drove him constantly into over-care…this frequently cost him his wicket.”

As JMB put it in his recent book, On Form, a concern about the prospect of failing tends, in turn, to create the outcome that we most fear. We create the very thing that we strive most to avoid happening (Chapter 16). An example is his Test innings of 91 in India. Having established himself and playing well he got bogged down; after being dropped on 87, scoring just four more runs in 85 minutes. Another case is his Test innings of 74 in Pakistan which came to an end when trying passively to bat out the final half an hour in order to remain undefeated – the match by then already destined for a draw.

Peel takes a contrary view to that of JMB. He downplays the effect of his “not belonging” and associated tension: “A niggling doubt that he wasn’t fit to play in such company…may have simply reflected Boycott’s crushing assessment that he lacked Test class” (p307). Peel contends that technical problems have been the prime cause of JMB’s low scoring and that he basically wasn’t up to it – hadn’t got it in himself. He also notes a run scoring limitation of a lack of back foot shots against high pace – though Peel praises his “rasping square cut” and his hooking once confidently helmeted (as from the 1978/79 series in Australia, previously using a less protective small plastic skull-cap in his four series during 1977-78).

He cites Tony Lewis who played very successfully in the Cambridge side with JMB in 1961 and captained him the following season (p181). In his memoirs, writing: “I knew him from Fenner’s (the University’s home ground) as an excellent player, but saw at the higher level one technical flaw that denied him many big innings…his right shoulder came around strongly and opened him up to the bowlers.”

This “opening-up of his body” – particularly against pace bowling when defending on the back foot – was a trait throughout JMB’s career. In Tests in England, I find this resulted in him being caught by the wicket-keeper or in the slips from pace bowling in 20 of his 36 dismissals when scoring under twenty runs (spin dominated in his Tests India and Pakistan). This is a high ratio, equivalent to 5.5 innings in every 10. Peel draws attention to this in general terms: JMB being “liable to get out to a good ball defending…always more vulnerable to pace than spin…his chief nemeses invariably getting him caught behind or at slip” (p180).

The “opening-up” trait seems to have been exaggerated during Test matches under the associated tension. Taking JMB’s dismissals under 20 from pace bowling: for Middlesex during his period playing Tests (1976-81), he was caught by the wicket-keeper on 33% of those occasions (15 from 45) whereas in Tests in England this happened on 42% of such occasions (13 from 31) – an appreciable increase.⁶ Some commentators have suggested that the high tension may have inhibited JMB’s footwork, which would have contributed to the higher incidence of wicket-keeper catches from pace – highly plausible!

Geoff Boycott is quoted by Peel in support of his case that technical problems were at the root of JMB’s poor Test record: “He tinkered with his style, his stance, his back-lift, but nothing really worked. That did not surprise me, because it was all too manufactured” (p11). Yet there is no mention anywhere in the book of JMB seeking concerted help for his problem of “opening-up” to the bowler.

Peel also draws attention to JMB’s over-tight grip on the bat handle which hindered him. Well before the time he began playing Tests, he had acted on the advice given by former Warwickshire stalwart opening batsman “Tiger” Smith, at start of the 1974 season, to lighten his grip and relax his arms, which soon led to a sustained improvement in his scoring. However, during the 1978 season Ian Botham noticed that his bottom hand grip was still tight enough in Test play to inhibit his ability to play lofted drives over the in-field – something JMB very rarely managed to do during his Test career. Whilst this somewhat restricted his run-getting, it didn’t contribute directly to his dismissals. If Botham had a Latin phrase book handy at the time, he could also have usefully reminded this former Classics scholar of Virgil’s saying: audentes fortuna iuvat⁷.

I find Peel’s line of argument to be unconvincing. It doesn’t square with JMB’s emphatically demonstrated capability against Test standard pace (as well as spin) outside of Test matches themselves. He simply made too many high scores when playing against such bowling from the mid-1970s onwards to have an ingrained flawed technique, as distinct from a tendency of “opening-up to the bowler” that became greater under high stress. In my view, JMB’s Test match potential comes down, in large part, to whether he could – with help – have resolved his mindset issue, as this would also have partially cured his “opening-up” through employing resulting tension-freed footwork.

The obvious question now surfaces: what could JMB feasibly have achieved if he had taken sound advice at the outset of his Test career for that technical weakness and his inhibiting frame of mind? Peel notes that the technical help JMB did get amounted to little more than a series of tips from different people, some of it conflicting, and didn’t get continuous help from any single trusted individual. JMB regretted his failure to find a mentor.

A preliminary matter is whether suitable help could actually have been obtained had JMB sought it. It was the early days of sports psychologists, so finding a suitable one might have been difficult.⁸ However, a flexible general practitioner of psychology could presumably have given the right kind of advice and “treatment” for as long as needed to achieve JMB’s desired state of “relaxed concentration” at the crease. He had been seriously interested in psychology since the mid-1960s, and so should have known how to sort the wheat from the chaff in choosing someone. As to what would then have been a residual, less severe, tendency to “open-up” against pace, the need was for an on-going relationship with an adviser he could put his faith in – as pointed out in the biography. There were a number of candidates available.

There was also more than one way to skin this cat: as an alternative to the conventional keeping sideways to the bowler technique, there was the fully open-chested-to-the-bowler method favoured by Gary Sobers (shown, for instance, on the cover of his 1985 instructional book). Additionally, JMB could have worked on better judging which deliveries to let go by on length or width; like most Test batsmen, he could have safely resisted attempting to make contact on more occasions.

Had such help been obtained, there is not much doubt that JMB would have been able to put it into practice at the crease. He was a determined and conscientious character, and so would have worked assiduously to improve his mindset and technique. He was also agile on his feet, being a capable wicket-keeper. And he had the patience to build a big innings – indeed, on occasion he displayed a Boycottian desire for amassing runs – witness his score of 312 when opening for MCC’s Under 25 team in Pakistan against North Zone in February 1967; and his 202 (made in 361 minutes) when opening for the MCC in India against West Zone in November 1976.

Given this, and JMB’s cogent reasoning for his own poor Test record with the bat, I would have expected Peel to subject the negative view he formed of JMB’s unexploited potential to the kind of straightforward, common sense, tests that I have been driven to make – as now outlined.

The principal test of what JMB was capable of – with a corrected mindset and sounder defence against pace – is to determine what his Test average would have been if his high frequency of dismissal before having played himself in is normalised, instead of accounting for 65% of his Test innings. Taking completed innings of below 20 runs as the marker, the norm is established in relation to 14 batsmen who usually, or quite often, either opened or went in at first wicket down for England during the decade 1974-83 (minimum of ten Test matches). These 14 batsmen combined were dismissed for under 20 runs in 48% of their innings during this period. Applied to JMB’s average for his dismissals under 20 (at 8.1 runs) and applying the balance of 52% to his actual average for his 20 plus innings (at 52.1) yields an adjusted overall average for him of 30.1. If JMB were in the middle of the top half of these 14 comparators, his adjusted average would then be 33.9. 

As a supplementary test, I looked at what the typical relationship is between Test and county averages (over a whole career) for those who usually batted in the top seven in the order for England during the 1974-83 decade (minimum of 10 Tests). After setting aside those six players with a “perverse” ratio (Test average higher than their county average), the representative ratio of Test to county average for the 18 players comes out at 86.4% (within an overall range of 64-97%). This implies a potential Test average for JMB of 33.1; and if he were in the middle of the higher half it implies a Test average for him of 36.2.⁹

Hence, on these two bases it is reasonable to expect results for JMB with the bat in Tests to have averaged out in the early to mid-30s – an uplift of some 30-50% on his recorded average. Placing his potential in this range, under a corrected back foot defence scenario against pace, also seems plausible intuitively. As an opener, being the position he was most suited to in temperament and approach,10 JMB would have migrated from the likes (during his era) of Bill Athey, Wayne Larkins and Barry Wood, to join the ranks of Graham Fowler, Brian Luckhurst, Chris Tavaré and Bob Woolmer. It would likely have come with an aspiration to emulate Middlesex and England’s John Edrich, a batsman with whom he had some similarities in manner of playing.

This conclusion chimes with JMB’s own statement, quoted earlier – thinking that he might, on a re-run of opportunities, now be better able with his learnings to do moderately well in Tests with the bat rather than poorly. This is not to say that Peel’s assessment is necessarily “wrong”. Rather, to suggest that a contrasting conclusion can be made out and defended against objection – in short, tenable.

Finally, why has JMB been so concerned for such a long while after finishing his cricket career about not doing more to exploit his potential as a Test batsman and, especially, why so strong with self-criticism in public – in published material in various places – rather than only in private? This is intriguing. My personal speculation is that he would, justifiably, have harboured a conviction early on – during his undergraduate days at Cambridge – that he could succeed at Test level with the bat. His own reasonable hopes were shared by some others, including no doubt his father, Horace, to whom JMB was close – a capable sportsman who reached first class level at cricket with Yorkshire and Middlesex, and played club cricket successfully until well into his fifties. And who knows, maybe subconsciously (on the other side of the ledger) trying to live up to the deeds of his namesake, Walter Brearley, who did so well as a fast bowler in his three Tests for England against Australia in 1905 and ’09. Hence, a strong and lingering disappointment, lamenting what could have been.

Actually going public with his self-reproaches may, I feel, have acted as a liberating catharsis – a release, and thereby relief, from the trauma, disappointment and regret experienced – perhaps heightened by introspection that tends to come with a subsequent career in psychoanalysis. A fair amount of material in his two recent books can, I surmise, be viewed this way.

To end with a general comment on biographies of sports people: they are more valuable when, like this one, they are thought-provoking and motivate further enquiry – pursuit of the issues raised. Before opening this one by Peel, I had only general impressions of Mike Brearley the cricketer.

Tempus in agrorum cultu consumere dulce est (Ovid, 43 BC-18 AD).11

 

¹ Postscript to Phoenix from the Ashes, being JMB’s account of that 1981 series. Hodder and Stoughton, 1982.

² JMB displays one-sixth less variance than the batsman statistically closest to himself, and nearly two-fifths less variance than the eight comparators collectively. They are: John Edrich, Brian Luckhurst, Chris Tavaré, Dennis Amiss, Geoff Boycott, Graham Gooch, Chris Broad and Tim Robinson.
³ The notable overseas bowlers being: Sarfraz Nawaz, Bishan Bedi, Vanburn Holder, Srinivas Venkataraghavan, Andy Roberts, Richard Hadlee, Dilip Doshi, and the South Africans Clive Rice, Garth Le Roux and Mike Proctor. The notable England ones being: JK Lever, Underwood, Willis and Hendrick.
The others being Wood, Close, Edrich, Woolmer and Steele.
M.C.C. The Autobiography of a Cricketer, 1976 – see Chapters 5-8.
The corresponding figure during JMB’s seasons as an under-graduate at Cambridge (1961-64) was considerably lower, at 13% (4 of 31 such occasions) – perhaps a reflection of the abnormally batsmen-friendly pitches when playing at home. For his relatively few matches for Middlesex during this period, the figure is 23% (3 of 13).
7 favours the brave.
8 indicated by The International Society of Sport Psychology becoming a prominent organisation only after a world congress on the topic in 1974. Professional golfers, for instance, didn’t benefit in any numbers until the late-1970s.
Perversity is probably due to being inspired by the big stage with county matches tending to become something of a chore over a lengthy career.
10 And having a slightly higher average opening in Tests than batting lower in the order.

11 It is delightful to spend one’s time in the tillage of the fields.

Peter Kettle was born in London but has lived and worked in Melbourne for more than 30 years. He has written a number of books including two that we have featured. Rescuing Don Bradman From Splendid Isolation was reviewed by Martin here, and by Dave hereBoth also reviewed his play A Plea For Qualitative Justice, Martin here and Dave here. Peter has also written a biography of the Leicestershire and England batsman of the 1920s and 1930s, Eddie Dawson.



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