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Counties want to leave their mark

English cricket has had an uneasy relationship with the Champions League T20, but both Hampshire and Yorkshire are keen to make the most of their opportunity

Firdose Moonda08-Oct-2012English cricket’s involvement in the Champions League T20 is difficult to compartmentalise. Their teams are not guaranteed places in the tournament like the shareholders’ representatives but they are the only country to have two in the qualifiers. There is a hazy disinterest in the competition at home, as it has forced changes to the season, but a strong desire from the teams maximise their opportunity.Hampshire and Yorkshire could be the last English sides to play in the CLT20, because of scheduling clashes between the tournament and the county season, and both want to leave a lasting impact. But while Dimitri Mascarenhas is bullish about his squad’s chances, Jason Gillespie was demure a feeling no doubt increased due to the absence from the Yorkshire squad of England pair Jonny Bairstow and Tim Bresnan through a combination of injury and ECB orders. Hampshire, too, are missing a key player in Danny Briggs, the left-arm spinner, who is getting married.”We want to give ourselves a huge chance to do well,” Mascarenhas said. “As cricketers, we want to do is play in front of big crowds and play in big tournaments and this is another opportunity.” Gillespie, in a softer voice and with less fire in his eyes, simply said, “We have nothing to lose in this tournament. No-one is expecting a lot of us. We’re quite comfortable with that.”Hampshire were England’s best limited-overs side last season. They won both the Friends Life t20 and the CB40 and Mascarenhas hopes they can “keep that momentum going in the next few weeks.” They are grouped with Auckland, who failed in last year’s qualifiers, and first-timers Sialkot Stallions and fancy their chances against both, especially because they have potential match-winner Shahid Afridi in their squad.”He is a legend. To have him in your team, is just amazing,” Mascarenhas said, although he was careful to qualify that Afridi’s role in the team is almost limited to bowling. “We’re not expecting a whole lot from him with the bat, whatever we get is a bonus but we know he can do it if he has to. We will use him more as a bowler who can bat a bit. He loves bowling, he loves taking wickets and we can all see that in his celebrations.”Mascarenhas himself is another of the key players for Hampshire. Having been the first English player to join the IPL he has significant experience in 20-over cricket and has seen the format develop. “It’s definitely getting better. You can see the standard is improving,” he said. “I read a couple of interviews recently from Eoin Morgan and Shane Watson recently saying the IPL experience helped them become better players. It’s made me become a better player.”He hopes that some of the Hampshire players can use the CLT20 to follow in his footsteps. “It’s big business now and if you do well at T20 you put your name out there,” Mascarenhas said. “Hopefully the IPL will come knocking for some of these players as well. There are a lot of avenues that open up.”Yorkshire do not have the same structure or ambitions. With no marquee superstar they want to compete with Trinidad and Tobago and Uva Next to show off what they have achieved together. “We pride ourselves in being a good unit and a good team. You can see that when we play,” Andrew Gale, the Yorkshire captain, said. “Other teams have people from all over the place and but with us, it’s pretty much our domestic team that’s here and we see that as a plus in the tournament.”Most of the Yorkshire players have “not had as much exposure,” on an international stage according to Gillespie and he has encouraged them to use the opportunity to show national selectors what they are all about. “People will be looking at our players and there is a lot of talent to look at in the Yorkshire line-up. We’re looking at this as a wonderful opportunity to play cricket against players that a lot of these guys have never seen before and have never played against.”Yorkshire stepped up their preparations with a 23-run win over Sialkot and although they were pleased with the result, Gale said he did not think they were at their best during the match. They will take Monday off to enjoy the warmer weather in South Africa before their first match on Tuesday.Hampshire open their account on Wednesday and while the two teams may cheer each other on in the qualifiers they are also ready for the possibility of playing against each other in the later stages. And what do they expect then? “I think it is going to be a pretty even tournament, there are no one or two stand out teams who are going to win it,” Mascarenhas said.

Gayle returns in terrific style

Chris Gayle returned to the West Indies side with a century in his first innings, a performance that has put them ahead in the Antigua Test

Subash Jayaraman in Antigua28-Jul-2012As far as comebacks go, it is tough to beat Michael Jordan’s triumphant return in 1995, which inspired the Chicago Bulls to three more NBA championship wins, but Chris Gayle’s emphatic 150 after a 19-month break from Test cricket must rank right up there. However, unlike Jordan, who had retired from basketball to try his hand at professional baseball, Gayle always knew he would be back in the whites.”It was just a matter of time,” Gayle said after leading West Indies to a dominant position on the second day of the first Test against New Zealand. “I knew I would come back at some stage, I never gave up. You know the thing is, even though it took a lot of time – as long as it did to rectify – I knew I’d come back. Even if it [took] two years. It was just a matter of time. I am here now.”West Indies had tried to fill Gayle’s spot with several young openers but none could match his intimidating physical presence on the field and cheerful attitude to cricket and life off it. However, even for someone as formidable as Gayle, it was a tough reintroduction to Test cricket. Despite having played 91 Tests, Gayle had apprehensions coming into this match.”I thought about it actually before the game started,” he said. “First I had to get the mental aspect of my game right. I was telling myself that it was going to be challenging. It’s tough cricket.”To be out and about around the world, and to be back suddenly, I [had to] assess the conditions, assess day one, and then being on the outfield, very tired, and then I had to field again in the morning and then come out and open the batting. It was a mental thing. I surpassed that now. It was a bit challenging to come back and [play Test cricket] five days after playing so many shorter version games. It was challenging.”In his first over back, Gayle dispatched Chris Martin for four consecutive boundaries. It was the Gayle we remember quite well from his limited-overs exploits. And there was a method to his approach. “The start was very important to me, after being on the field for nearly a day and a half. Go on the counterattack, make them ease off a bit and then it actually gives me time to make necessary adjustments. Then things start playing in my favour.”The eyes were deep and focused, the chest puffed out and that characteristic swagger was intact as Gayle bossed the New Zealand bowlers for more than 75 overs. There was the odd hiccup – dropped on 36 by Daniel Flynn, inside edges, and another dropped chance well past his century – but New Zealand could not capitalise. Capitalise is a word Gayle uses often. “Once you get a start, you need to capitalise on it. In Test cricket, once you [get] a chance, you have got to make sure you take advantage of that and that’s what I did. Getting a second lifeline, I punished them for that as well. Once you get a chance, you try to buckle down, get a bit more tight, dig deeper and score as many runs you can get with that chance.”His hunger remains. Gayle may have been a Twenty20 troubadour during his time out of the side but his commitment to West Indies endures. His partnership of 254 with Kieran Powell was the fourth-highest opening stand for West Indies and Gayle also surpassed Gordon Greenidge as West Indies’ highest run-scorer against New Zealand.”That’s good. The great Double G. I am happy to be in the record books once more, and continue to contribute to West Indies cricket as much as possible,” Gayle said. “At 150, I was looking to push to 200 and get a big total, but got tired a bit and I didn’t get much of it. That’s that.”There was a philosophical air about Gayle as he talked about events of the past 19 months. He said he did not like to hold grudges against the people and circumstances that prevented from representing West Indies. When he reached his century, there was no vengeful gesture or handwritten note. Instead, he took his helmet off and brandished that broad smile. The emotion was that of “big relief”. “Remember what happened to [Martin] Guptill in the first innings [out on 97]?” he said. “These things actually cross your mind as a batter even though you have scored centuries before.”At the end of the first day, Powell had spoken of how batting with Gayle took the pressure off him, and Gayle said his return meant that opposition bowlers were likely to target him more, reducing the heat on his team-mates.”From my personal point of view, it is a big effect, to be honest with you,” Gayle said. “Because most of the bowlers will be worried and try to get me out quickly, and before they realise I am up to 30-40 runs, and the batsmen at the other end can use this as an advantage and capitalise and get some runs. Obviously I am an attacking batsman and I’ll score runs once I am at the wicket. So they [bowlers] will pay more attention to that and not focus on the other batsman as much.”With West Indies ahead by 91 and four wickets in hand, Gayle is keen to close out the Test over the last two days. “The first game [of the Test series] is always important. We do not know what’s going to happen in Jamaica. We have to be mindful. When you get a chance like this, capitalise and cash in … Hopefully [we] can actually get 50 runs or more and put ourselves in a winning position.”If that victory should come to pass, perhaps Jordan will have competition for being the touchstone for comebacks.

Janmohammed faces battle to arrest slide

Kenya’s new chief executive was involved during the glory days of 2003 but their current international prospects are bleak

Martin Williamson03-Dec-2012The election of Jackie Janmohammed as Cricket Kenya chairman comes at a time when Kenyan cricket is not only at its lowest ebb since the heady days of the 2003 World Cup but is seemingly only heading in one direction. She faces a tough battle to arrest that slide, let alone turn it round.While the board’s finances are sound – in stark contrast to when Samir Inamdar, who she replaces, took over from the discredited Kenyan Cricket Association in 2005 – the national team is a mess both on and off the field and the domestic structure in the country remains poor.Janmohammed, a respected Nairobi lawyer, is no newcomer to Kenyan cricket and had links to the KCA, where she was for a time its legal advisor, which she will have to work hard to cast off. To that end it is important that some of the characters who were more heavily involved in the board at that time – and they have been spotted on the periphery in recent months – are not brought back into the fold either officially or unofficially.She also faces a difficult time internationally. By the time Sharad Ghai and the KCA were removed from office in 2005, Kenya were close to being international pariahs, dogged by endless financial problems, player strikes and internal bickering. Inamdar’s greatest achievement was to present the country as somewhere worth investing in, and so successful was he that he won a place on the full ICC board.Janmohammed will find it nigh on impossible to achieve that kind of acceptance from a conservative cricketing establishment, but her real problems are far closer to home.The general view internationally is that Kenya, less than a decade ago touted as the likely next Test country, are finished. Millions have been poured in and yet the game has not moved on – in fact, the national side is in freefall. Uganda are now seen as the next best hope in Africa, and internationally Kenya are barely mentioned any more.On the pitch, a succession of coaches have come and gone, broken and frustrated by the intransigence of a core of players who think they are owed a living and yet whose professionalism on and off the field has been at best suspect. Kenya have for several years been the only Associate nation with professional cricketers and yet have achieved nothing.The same goes for chief executives, who have arrived in hope and departed in frustration. The real sadness is that Tom Tikolo, a Kenyan cricketing legend who really could have made a difference, was forced to resign as CEO under a cloud. He is attempting a comeback but internationally will be regarded with doubt, and Janmohammed needs a board above suspicion.If, as seems increasingly likely, Kenya fail to qualify for the next World Cup and lose their leading Associate status, then the money will dry up almost overnight. With that the cricketers will go back to being part-timers, and given the attitude of some of them when they were being paid to play, it’s not hard to imagine what will happen when they are not.And if the large handouts from the ICC much go, then much the development will disappear, so too the cash for higher-profile chief executives and coaching staff, and Kenya will be not so much back to square one as off the board altogether.As part of the KCA, Janmohammed was involved at the top of Kenyan cricket in the glory days of 2003. Barring a dramatic turnaround, it seems likely she may be at the helm when the international dream finally dies.

'We've got a good bowling attack for English conditions'

Mohammad Hafeez’s resurgence, after three years in international wilderness, symbolises that of his team

Interview by Jo Harman20-May-2013The last time Pakistan were competing for an ICC trophy on these shores they were written off after losing two of their opening three fixtures in the 2009 World Twenty20, before sparking into life and going on to win the thing, with the mercurial Shahid Afridi leading from the front with bat and ball.In the four tumultuous years that have passed since, Pakistan have become a very different beast, but they are no less dangerous. Afridi is a fading force and the team is now characterised by the canny leadership of Misbah-ul-Haq, and his cerebral right-hand man, Mohammad Hafeez. It’s no longer a case of Boom Boom or bust. This new rejuvenated Pakistan is much more street-smart than that.Misbah will lead his country in the upcoming ICC Champions Trophy but as he approaches his 39th birthday it won’t be too long before his heir apparent succeeds him. It’s a remarkable rise considering Hafeez spent three years in the international wilderness between 2007 and 2010, and his resurgence symbolises that of his team, who remain unable to play in front of their home fans but have nonetheless emerged from the chaos as a force to be reckoned with.Pakistan have been steady in ODI cricket over the last couple of years, winning eight of their last 12 series. How do you rate your chances in the ICC Champions Trophy? Can you prosper in English conditions?
Some of our players are new to the side but most of the team have already been to England quite often. When we last came to England, in 2010, we had a good ODI series, and we always get good support from the crowd. So yes, there is no doubt that at the moment we have a good balance in the side and we have a really good chance to do well in this tournament. We’ve got a good bowling attack for the conditions.Left-arm quick Junaid Khan has been getting rave reviews, from Wasim Akram no less. Is he a bowler you’re expecting big things from?
With the new ball Junaid Khan and the new sensation Mohammad Irfan – with his great height – are something very special in our side and they are the impact bowlers. The new rule change means that there is a new ball from each end, and we’re really looking forward to them putting in some good performances in England, like they have done in the last two series against India and South Africa.Then we are blessed with some very great spinners in our side, like Saeed Ajmal – one of the very, very best in the world. So we really think we have a very good bowling attack that can give a tough time to any opposition in the world.In the batting department your opening partner Nasir Jamshed looks an exciting prospect. Just how big a talent is he?
He is absolutely fantastic to watch. The key thing about him is that he always tries to play good cricket shots, so I rate him as an opener very well and he is really doing a great job for Pakistan over the last year or so. I think he will have a very good chance to prove himself in English conditions too. I personally feel that he can do well in any condition because he’s a very good technical player and he’s got all the range of shots. I’m looking forward to his big performances in England.Are you confident he can translate his ODI form into Test cricket?
He has definitely got the technique and you can’t judge anyone’s future on one or two opportunities. He didn’t do well in South Africa earlier this year, but I personally feel that he can develop himself and become one of the very best in the world.Pakistan’s match against India at Edgbaston is a standout fixture in the ICC Champions Trophy group stage. Is there always an extra determination to do well against India?
Yeah, it is always special to have India as the opposition. We are looking forward to that match but we will play every match in the tournament with passion. There is no doubt that the crowd against India will be electric. I love that. I can already hear the sound; I can picture the electrifying moments…Having not had the opportunity to play international cricket in Pakistan since 2009, it must be an exciting prospect to play in front of such a partisan and enthusiastic crowd in England…
To be very honest, for the last three and a half years we have been struggling. We are facing this very difficult situation. I always praise my team-mates for the fact that under lots of difficult situations they are performing well around the world. We have not had home territory for three and a half years; we have not been in home conditions, but still the team has been working hard, as a team, as a unit, and the captain, Misbah-ul-Haq, is doing a great job. We really want cricket to come back to Pakistan as soon as possible – the chairman and the board are really working hard on it and the team and the nation know that their mission is to get cricket in Pakistan. I’m sure very soon teams will visit Pakistan again.

“There is no doubt that the crowd against India will be electric. I love that. I can already hear the sound”

What would winning the ICC Champions Trophy mean to fans back in Pakistan?
Pakistan is a great nation, a great cricketing nation. The people love their cricket. They are looking forward to this tournament and they want Pakistan to do well. We have been trying to do well in the 50-over format in order to go on and win this tournament.It’s been a turbulent few years for Pakistan cricket, on and off the field, but things appear to be more settled now. Is that the feeling in the dressing room? Is there a renewed sense of unity?
As I mentioned earlier, over the last three years we’d had some very difficult situations, on and off the ground. We had to fix our image. Pakistan is a great nation, Pakistan is a great cricketing nation as well. So for the last couple of years we have been working with each other very well. We have been supporting each other very well. From a difficult situation we have gelled very well as a team. We knew that we had to do something very special to bring the right image to Pakistan cricket, and the whole team and the management is working hard on that.How good can this current Pakistan side go on to become?
I think you can see there is experience. We always have some of the very best bowlers and we have a tremendous unit. Wherever we go, we don’t have the home territory, we don’t have the home conditions, but we still get good results for Pakistan. I think this team can emerge into a very good team. There are some newcomers in the side – like Junaid Khan, Mohammad Irfan, Nasir Jamshed – and this team can gel very, very well in the future.You’re now ranked the fourth-best ODI bowler in the world, according to the ICC rankings. Do you see yourself as a genuine allrounder, or is your responsibility still primarily as a batsman?
To be very honest I always see my responsibility as a batsman but whenever I’m in the field I always behave like a proper bowler. I never try to do too much with my bowling, I have some limitations and I know that, so I always stick to the basics, and it’s been working for me for the last two or three years. I feel that I’ve found good consistency. I try to stay economical for my team and pick up the odd wicket.What do you mean when you say you have limitations in your bowling?
Saeed Ajmal has his doosra and many different varieties. I don’t have those, to be honest. So I know my limitations, I don’t try to do something special, because I know I’m a very different type of bowler. I use my skills to do the basics right.As an opening batsman, is your role primarily to set a platform or is there an onus on you to make the most of the Powerplays?
There is not too much pressure on me to make the most of the Powerplays. For the last three years I’ve had to give a solid start to my team. It is key as an opener to see off the new ball and my role is to play long innings for my country.In recent times you’ve gone from being a bit-part player who was in and out of the side to becoming one of Pakistan’s most influential cricketers. How have you developed as a player over the last few years?
You never know about your future, but when I was out of the team in 2007 to 2010, those three years were very crucial for me. I had to work hard at domestic level, and I realised that at the top level you require good technique and if you’ve got a good technique then you can survive. So I really worked on my technique in those three years. I’m still working on it but for the last three years since I came back into the side, it’s been working for me.Your team-mates know you as “The Professor”. Where did that nickname come from?
It’s funny. I always stick with logic, I always try to get the details of the thing and I always try to go about my business in a positive way. So this is just the name that’s come from that and I really love that. I’m happy with it!The growth of T20 has led some to say that 50-over cricket is living on borrowed time. Does 50-over cricket still have a role to play in the modern era?
I’m more concerned about Test cricket. T20 has grown quickly and is an exciting format but I think Test cricket should always be looked after really well. In only a couple of countries people come and watch Test cricket, in the rest they don’t, and this is something that must be looked after.Is 50-over cricket a format the players still enjoy?
There is no doubt that the 50-over format allows you to equip yourself with a good technique and take your time, but T20 is all about just getting on with it. So I think 50 overs is a good format for cricket, but too many rule changes is a concern for me. Whatever changes are made, it should be for a certain period of time, not changed every six months. Too many things have been changed, and I think this is the major concern for me in ODIs. Whatever the changes the ICC want to make, they should remain for two years or five years and not quickly be changed.

Who's the next-best batsman after Bradman?

We all know who the greatest batsman of them all is, but who’s second in line?

25-Mar-2013Geoff BoycottJack Hobbs: a run machine everywhere•Getty ImagesIn terms of figures and performances, making runs, and helping win matches, it has to be Don Bradman. The best. But the people in the era he played, think that on all types of pitches, and I repeat, on all types of pitches, John Berry Hobbs was the best player the world has ever seen.Now, nobody can compete with Bradman on good batting pitches. His record is unbelievable. But you have to remember, right up to the 1970s, cricket was played on uncovered pitches in Test matches. In many of the hot countries, they didn’t get much rain, so you hardly ever got a wet pitch – or a sticky dog, as they call it in Australia. But in places like New Zealand and England, where we get lots of rain, you never quite know what you are going to get. The pitches would be juicy. Even if they were not wet, the grass would make the ball move around.Hobbs played 61 Tests. Remember, only England, Australia and South Africa played then. He averaged 56.94. It doesn’t even come close to Bradman’s 99.94. He played his first Test in 1907-08 and his last one in 1930.He was the oldest of 12 children. He taught himself the game by actually using a cricket stump and a tennis ball in the fives court – which is very much like a squash court – at Jesus College, Cambridge, where his father was the groundsman and umpire for the college. With no formal coaching, Hobbs practised on his own through the long vacations, hitting the ball with a stump. He said in his autobiography, years later, that this was responsible for his ability to play predominantly off the back foot and to place the ball accurately.I think this simple practice laid a wonderful foundation. As a boy Hobbs watched the older boys playing cricket at the college and tried to pick up things. He had no formal coaching; he became a natural batsman with hand-eye coordination and footwork, the neat, quick footwork you need to hit a tennis ball with a stump on a fives court.This, to me, is what made him a great player on all sorts of pitches, where the ball turned alarmingly, where it jumped when it was wet. It was fascinating when I read that the greatest batsman ever, Bradman, born a few years later, used the same method as a child when he was growing up in Bowral on the other side of the world. When you think about it, Bradman hitting a golf ball with a cricket stump was making the same type of cricket match for himself as Hobbs was doing on the other side of the world.Hobbs was more or less brought up on the principle laid down by the first great batsman, WG Grace, which was to get the left leg forward to the length of the ball and the right foot right back to the short ball. That’s how Hobbs played, from Grace’s way of playing and by watching his elders. He made his first-class debut for Surrey in 1905 and scored 197 hundreds.He is known to have been the best player anybody has ever seen. Now how do I know this? I never saw him play, but I’ve read so much about him by the doyen writers of the day, who wrote about the way Hobbs played and what he did, and the batsmen of that era who talked about him.Hobbs had never played on matting wickets when he went to South Africa for the first time to play. The ball turned alarmingly on matting pitches there, but in five Test matches in 1909-10, he worked it out and scored 539 runs at an average of 67. The key is not the 67. It’s that it’s double the average of the next four run-makers for England – George Thompson, Frank Woolley, Lucky Denton and Wilfred Rhodes. They averaged 33, 32, 26 and 25.He more than doubled their averages, which showed how good he was compared to everybody else, which is how we rate Bradman. We look at how many players average 50 in Test cricket and they are the iconic greats of our era. Yet Bradman averaged twice as much.Hobbs’ nickname was “The Master”, because he played on all types of pitches. He had a great opening partnership with Herbert Sutcliffe of Yorkshire. They were fantastic players on sticky pitches, when it rained overnight and the ball jumped. At The Oval in 1926. In Melbourne two years later, they just played out of this world.Hobbs was just an outstanding player. Wilfred Rhodes, the great allrounder of the time for Yorkshire and England, said, “He was the greatest batsman of my time. I learnt a lot from him when we went in first together for England. He had a cricket brain, and the position of his feet as he met the ball was perfect. He could have scored thousands more runs, but often he was content to throw his wicket away when he had reached his hundred and give someone else a chance.”Sutcliffe, who formed the greatest opening partnership ever for England with Hobbs, said: “I was his partner on many occasions on extremely bad wickets and I can say this without any doubt that he was the most brilliant exponent of all time and quite the best batsman of my generation on all types of pitches. On good wickets, I do believe that pride of place be given to Sir Donald Bradman.”Jack Fingleton played with Bradman and became a great writer. He wrote, “Although figures indicate the greatness of Hobbs, they don’t convey the grandeur of his batting, his faultless technique and the manner in which he could captivate those who could recognise and analyse style. Australians who played against him believe cricket never produced a more correct batsman but it is well to note Hobbs’ claim that he never had an hour’s coaching in his life. He was a self-taught cricketer, observing, thinking, and executing for himself.” Very interesting, that.And the great doyen writer of the time, Neville Cardus, wrote: “Immediately the bowler begins his run, Hobbs seems to have some instinct of what manner of ball is on the way. Rarely does he move his feet to an incorrect position. His footwork is so quick that even from behind the nets it is not always possible to follow its movement in detail.”Mouth-watering stuff, eh? What a player he must have been.As told to Siddhartha Talya. Geoff Boycott scored 8114 runs in 108 Tests for England between 1964 and 1982

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Suresh MenonTendulkar: a post-modern batting giant•Getty ImagesAll things considered – longevity, domination in more than one format, stamp on more grounds in more countries around the world, pressures of travel and media – there is an argument for placing Sachin Tendulkar above Don Bradman in the pantheon. Bradman played 52 international matches over 20 years, at an average of 2.6 matches per year. Tendulkar’s combined total of 662 international matches in 25 years means he has played an average of 26.5 matches annually. While Bradman played on just ten grounds in two countries, Tendulkar has played on 105 grounds in 16 countries. As CLR James said in another context, “You need not build on these figures a monument, but you cannot ignore them.”But, for the purposes of this piece, these are side issues. As is the fact that an entire new approach to bowling – Bodyline – was invented just to check one batsman, and even then Bradman averaged 56 for the series.In any case, Bradman is too firmly entrenched in our collective consciousness to concede ground to any other batsman, however Bradmanesque his record. That 99.94 alone is a conversation-stopper.The best after Bradman? Averages and statistics are one way to go. Then there is the modern concept of “impact”. Once the cricketing criteria are discussed, there is the matter of what the player meant to his country psychologically. An Australia emerging from the Depression needed a Bradman as salve; so too did an India emerging from economic backwardness need a Tendulkar as symbol and aspirational figure.Among those who would challenge Tendulkar for the No. 2 spot, the Jamaican George Headley alone possibly carried that burden, not so much economic as cultural and political as the rising hero in a region beginning to establish its own identity.But divorced of history, sociology, even context and seen as pure batsmen of their time and place, there are surprisingly few who are in or around what the mathematician GH Hardy referred to as the “Bradman class”.WG Grace, Ranjitsinhji, Jack Hobbs, Victor Trumper, Vijay Merchant – how can we ever judge their skills and compare them to one another? We are defeated by time and place; statistics seem a weak tool.It becomes a little easier when Bradman is used as the cut-off, as the player who, in the words of Cardus “brings to an extensive technique the modern outlook on cricket”. That was written in 1930, when Bradman made 974 runs in a single series, a mark that has not been bettered.And then came (in no particular order), Garry Sobers, Viv Richards, Brian Lara, Greg Chappell, Ricky Ponting, Sunil Gavaskar, Tendulkar. The post-moderns, if you will, who batted with authority over a long period and carried the flag for batsmanship. Forget the caveats (covered wickets, better equipment, changing laws biased towards batsmen), consider only the evolution of the craft. Later generations start from a place where previous generations left off.From that list, the only challenger to Tendulkar’s pre-eminence is Sobers, probably the greatest cricket player of all time, the man who could do everything including keep wickets, bowl two styles of left-arm spin and as fast as anyone else when he took the new ball.Yet as a batsman, Tendulkar, both orthodox and creative, explored deeper and in greater detail the possibilities inherent in playing a leather ball with a wooden implement. His was the wicket most coveted since Bradman’s by bowlers. Above all, there was the endorsement from the Don himself, who saw in Tendulkar the man who came closest to his own style of batting.Bradman retired in 1948. Sixty-five years later, the game has changed so much that it is difficult to believe a single player can dominate it to quite the extent he did. Yet, Tendulkar, in a career spanning nearly a
quarter of a century has done exactly that. He is the don of the post-Bradman era.Suresh Menon is editor,

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Mike CowardTendulkar’s figures would have enthused Bradman•BCCIDon Bradman was a pedant and a stickler for courtesy and convention, so he would not have appreciated anyone, especially someone attached to the fourth estate, second-guessing who he thought to be in his league as a batsman.Furthermore, as a virtual recluse late in his long life, he had a well-known aversion to the listing of the best players and the naming of best XIs and the like, although it is true that one such compilation surprisingly appeared under his name.So the age-old question of who is the best batsman after the Don has currency for yet another generation.He may not have liked subjective exercises of this nature but, wittingly or not, as far back as 1950, Bradman prepared a template to assist our judgement.
In , one of his five books on the game, he observed: “Figures are not entirely conclusive, especially short-term figures, but it is difficult to avoid their significance if a man produces them year after year against every type of opponent and under all conceivable conditions.”Visionary he may have been but not even Bradman could have imagined the dimension and complexity of cricket’s New World and that the rival for his mantle as the game’s pre-eminent batsman would hail from the Indian megatropolis of Mumbai.Sachin Tendulkar has irrefutable claims to the distinction. He is the Bradman of his day, of the New Age.It is well documented that Tendulkar is deeply embarrassed by any comparison with Bradman and deftly steers any such conversation in another direction. At the same time he is proud that his style and success evoked in Bradman memories of his salad days. That Lady Bradman also clearly saw the comparisons delighted the Don. And Arthur Morris and Neil Harvey, the only survivors of Bradman’s undefeated Invincibles to England in 1948, also are of the view that Tendulkar is the only player they have seen to rival their master and mentor. This counts for a great deal.If only we knew what was said when Tendulkar, cannily chaperoned by Shane Warne, visited Bradman at his home in Holden Street, Kensington Park, South Australia to wish him a happy 90th birthday in August 1998.There are, of course, inherent dangers in making comparisons and judgements across the ages, and ideally this debate should always extend beyond a comparative study of the exploits of Bradman and Tendulkar.That said there are issues that must be addressed given Bradman’s conviction that the significance of certain figures cannot be avoided if they are produced year after year against every type of opponent and under all conceivable conditions.For all his greatness and his mind-numbing average of 99.94, it must be remembered Bradman played his entire 52-Test match career on uncovered pitches at ten grounds in Australia and England, over a 20-year-period ruptured by World War Two. He only toured England – on doctor’s advice he was unavailable for the tour of South Africa in 1935-36 – and played at home against England, West Indies, South Africa and India.As a point of interest Tendulkar’s first ten Tests were played on different grounds outside India and completed four months after his 17th birthday.At the time of writing Tendulkar is in his 24th year in the international arena and had played 198 Test matches on 59 Test match grounds in 14 countries, if you respect the sovereignty of the constituents of the West Indies Cricket Board. He has complemented this with 463 one-day internationals and captivated crowds everywhere with 100 international hundreds and an imposing Test average of 53.86.These are remarkable statistics that provide some measure of Tendulkar’s greatness – figures that would have enthused the Don.Tendulkar has complemented his unique and thrilling batsmanship with exemplary courage, sturdiness, discipline, adaptability, consistency and resilience, which are admired by his contemporaries and, indeed, his predecessors the world over. Keen of mind, intensely competitive, intuitive and self-effacing, he is, in his 40th year, still blessed with a boyish and infectious enthusiasm that has uplifted all of us who love the glorious game.Like Bradman before him, Tendulkar has taken the art of batting to new and unimagined heights and made the cricket world a better place. Mike Coward is an Australian writer who is establishing the interview archive at the Bradman Museum and International Cricket Hall of Fame

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Garry Sobers: did cricket plenty of good•Getty ImagesIan ChappellSir Garfield Sobers is easily the best cricketer I’ve ever seen, and if you’re not convinced, then accept the opinion of the next best allrounder, Keith Miller, who once declared: “Best batsman of all time – Bradman. Best cricketer of all time – Garry Sobers.”Sobers is also the best batsman I’ve ever seen. Just like he could do everything on the field – bowl three different styles, take brilliant catches and throw down the stumps regularly – he was also a great all-round batsman. I rate him just ahead of another fine left-hander, South Africa’s Graeme Pollock, on the basis that Sobers hooked and Pollock didn’t.In a 1960-61 tour match, one of Australia’s fastest bowlers bounced Sobers and followed up with a stream of invective. Never one to shy away from a challenge, Sobers responded casually: “You’re not fast enough to bowl bouncers.”With smoke coming out of his ears the quickie delivered his fastest bouncer and Sobers hit it like a rocket in front of square leg. Having completed the swivel that follows a well-executed hook shot, Sobers looked the bowler in the eye and said: “See, I told you you’re not quick enough to bowl that stuff.”I had the good fortune to play with Sobers in my late teens and then against him in the international arena. On a few occasions for South Australia he was awoken from sleep on the masseur’s table with his pads on. He would simply shake his head, grab his bat and gloves and stroll to the middle to do battle. He wasn’t a believer in early-to-bed-and-no-strong-drink but it rarely seemed to even up the on-field contest.I only once saw him bat in a cap for South Australia. It was the maroon West Indies cap, in a game against the touring South Africans. He went out and flayed the tourists in making a century. Years later in a Barbados bar I quizzed him: “Garry, why did you ask Les Favell [SA captain] if you could wear the West Indies cap that day against South Africa?”He took a sip of his Banks beer. “Ian,” he laughed, “at that stage they hadn’t seen a West Indies cap [because of apartheid] and I thought it was time they had a good long look at one.”For fans who didn’t see Sobers play, he could be every bit as destructive as Viv Richards or Adam Gilchrist, but he was technically superior. He completed the demolition job with less risk. Because he was so successful there, it’s assumed he batted at six, but in his early career he was either at three or four. His record over a significant number of innings in those positions is better than lower in the order on both average and strike rate. He was a born No. 4 but he could bat anywhere with equal flair. He chose to move down to No. 6 once he became captain and took on a greater bowling load.He’s one of only three players, Jack Gregory and Keith Miller being the others (and Imran Khan a borderline fourth), who were genuine new-ball bowlers and batted high in the order. Jacques Kallis is close but he doesn’t qualify as a genuine new-ball bowler.Sobers’ name appears on most run-scoring graphics, but this one time a commentator chose to highlight another player. “There’s Geoff Boycott,” he said, “a great player.”I challenged him off air. “Boycott played for himself and averaged 47,” I said. “Sobers played every second for the good of cricket and he averaged 58. That’s a great player.”Former Australia captain Ian Chappell is now a cricket commentator for Channel 9, and a columnist

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Martin CroweSunil Gavaskar: passed the ultimate trial by fire•PA PhotosDonald George Bradman. Australia. Greatest Ever Batsman. Just rolls off the tongue, easy peasy. Question is, who comes next behind the great man? Daylight? No, a bit flippant. So how do we decide? Let me name four candidates from four different eras and then make a decision.Do I need to go back to the start, to the 19th century? Not really, cricket was a bit raw back then. So how about we start with Bradman’s era? Does this first candidate’s name start with an H? It does, but it’s not Hammond, it’s George Headley, the Black Bradman, from the West Indies.Headley over Hammond because he scored a century exactly every four innings, Hammond one nearly every seven. So Headley’s ratio was closer to Bradman’s than anyone else. Also similar to the Don was Headley’s mindset. He spent a lot of time visualising what he wanted. He often didn’t sleep prior to a match, so when he got to the middle he was calm and relaxed. Headley is the first candidate.Next era is 20 years on and another West Indian, Garry Sobers, the flamboyant, brilliant left-hander from Barbados. It’s not so much the record, which is lofty, but the way in which he played and dominated. Like Bradman, he was the best of his day. He succeeded in all conditions and in all situations. He scored big, he scored fast, he scored consistent Test centuries, one every six innings, on top of his all-round duties. Sobers is candidate No. 2.Moving on to the next 20 years and to the batsmen who faced the might of the greatest fast-bowling attack ever, the vaunted West Indian big men. This was the hardest assignment of all: to survive, attack and conquer this uncompromising blitz of short fast bowling. The man to do it best was Sunil Gavaskar from India. Roberts, Garner, Holding, Croft, and Marshall – the little master stood up to them and scored seven* fine centuries against them, amongst his 34 Test hundreds overall. Gavaskar pips Viv Richards and Greg Chappell from that era for that one reason alone, that he passed the hardest exam, a test not even Viv would have topped. Gavaskar is candidate No. 3.Twenty more years on, the final man is easily found; it’s the other little Indian master, Sachin Tendulkar. Bradman himself thought Tendulkar looked the most like him – high praise indeed. Tendulkar continues to show us why. The greatest run-scorer, century-maker and household name, he is candidate No. 4.So who will it be: Headley, Sobers, Gavaskar or Tendulkar? It’s almost impossible to know where to start, to start removing anyone of these unbelievable batsmen. So I will add a new premise to finding the next best after Bradman. It is who would be the ideal batting partner to join Bradman? After all, isn’t batting all about the partnership? So if you had the right-handed Bradman at one end, who would you want to see join him to bat with? Or if you were a bowler, who would you prefer not to see?I have my answer. I believe the greatest batting partnership you could ever wish to lay your eyes on would be Don Bradman and Garry Sobers, the greatest left-hander of all time. The Australian and the West Indian; the short, fast-moving run machine and the tall, languid, carefree freak. The ideal contrasting yet complementary pair.So there it is, close your eyes and dream the dream, Bradman and Sobers batting together at Lord’s on a great pitch, with the sun blazing down on a full house. Enjoy it. It’s heavenly.*The number of centuries Gavaskar scored against Marshall, Holding, Croft, Roberts and Garner (facing at least one of the five in each match) has been corrected from nine to seven Martin Crowe, one of the leading batsmen of the late ’80s, played 77 Tests for New Zealand

Strauss the perfect fit for ECB

With a complicated web to weave, the ECB may have identified the ultimate company man in charming, soothing Andrew Strauss

David Hopps13-Sep-2013Ever since he became captain of the England cricket team, there has been a sense of entitlement about Andrew Strauss. Suggestions he would be fast-tracked as a Conservative MP have so far proved unfounded, but whether it be as a summariser on Sky Sports, a motivational speaker, or, the role in sharpest focus, the next managing director of England cricket, he has no shortage of admirers.Bright, diplomatic and persuasive, you could also envisage him as a British High Commissioner in one of the nicer, trouble-free parts of the world, discussing trade deals and educational opportunities and slipping into the conversation at an appropriate time how something really must be done about this immigration problem. That Strauss will charm and soothe in whatever he commits the next phase of his life to is rather taken for granted.There will be other candidates, naturally, when the deadline for applications closes on September 25: Nasser Hussain, another former England captain, would keep the role focused and demanding; Clare Connor, former captain of the England women’s team and head of England women’s cricket, is mulling over whether to apply; and Angus Fraser, managing director of cricket at Middlesex and a former England stalwart, would also be an obvious fit if he moved offices across Lord’s.To further complicate matters, Andy Flower’s future as England team director remains uncertain, perhaps even to him. England split the coaching role to accommodate Flower’s wish to spend more time with his family, putting Ashley Giles in charge of the one-day set-up, but ESPNcricinfo first indicated last month that Flower’s appetite to remain as coach of the Test side might not extend beyond this winter’s Ashes series in Australia.In the middle of it all, Strauss had the luxury this summer of shadowing the former managing director of the England team, Hugh Morris, as he goes about his job. It has been quite a privilege, an invitation into the inner sanctum if ever there was one. There is no doubt who is seducing whom. It would be no surprise to find that the ECB quietly slipped a few of Strauss’s favourite wines into the office.The ECB has a complicated web to weave and, not for the first time, there is the danger of adding to an ever-growing bureaucracy. The more Flower retreats from day-to-day coaching, the more his role begins to overlap with that of MD of England cricket. A structure that has done much to improve the performance of the England cricket team is in danger of becoming bloated and confused to satisfy the individual aspirations of talented individuals.Senior officials have been known to disappear for years within the offices of the ECB – and that includes Morris, whose role became increasingly hard to define and who certainly distanced himself from media responsibilities as Flower asserted his own, highly-disciplined and protective approach. Quite what does the MD of England cricket do? This is a chance to re-examine demarcation lines.Strauss has been suitably discreet about his potential job application. “I’m looking into it,” he said. “But they’re decisions that need to be made over the next couple of weeks and I’ll think quite long and hard about whether it’s the right time and the right job for me. I haven’t decided one way or another but I’m certainly looking at it, as will a lot of other people be.”I’m very passionate about the game of cricket and want to contribute to it. In exactly what way that is, that kind of remains to be seen.”

It is impossible to avoid the conclusion that when it comes to the ECB, Strauss is the ultimate company man. He does not as much tick the boxes as employ others to tick them for him.

Not to be too distasteful, because Strauss would have politer sensibilities, but there is also the issue of money. Morris’s salary is thought to have been around £150,000, which for most of us would be nice if you can get it, but so soon after retirement Strauss can command considerably higher figures in other areas. Since retirement, he has also been in demand as a “brand ambassador”, and although anybody with a real desire to achieve can surely not feel satisfied with such a superficial existence for long, he has felt the attraction of easy money. Perhaps at the moment he is simply not affordable?It was intriguing to Strauss’s approach to his role for Sky Sports during the Ashes series. “I really enjoyed doing the Sky stuff,” he said, but at times he seemed cautious in the role – uneasy even – as his fellow commentators gently tried to tease out opinions about a dressing room of which he had so recently been such a dominant part.Every former England captain faces a difficult transition in moving to the commentary box. As a captain, the protection of team unity is essential. A successful captain builds a strong sense of loyalty and mutual support. Then comes the switch to the commentary box where tactics are debated, techniques are dismantled and strong opinions demanded.Time soon makes that transition more comfortable. Dressing rooms evolve, ties weaken, loyalties are no longer as strong. But some make the shift more quickly than others. For Michael Atherton, it was merely part of the intellectual process; his move from captain to analyst, whether on TV or in the written word, has been hugely successful. Hussain, driven by a wish to express strong, honest opinions, also benefited from an independent spirit.But there were times, when Strauss’s discomfort seemed to have a deeper source; the discomfort of a man born not to debate but to lead. Insights were hard to find, presumably because he did not always wish to offer them. His belief in the England project seemed absolute, his unwillingness to undermine it apparent. To some extent, he was still acting as a brand ambassador – for English cricket.His autobiography comes out next month and it is hoped that it is more deep and meaningful than many, but if it reads more like a job application than a dismantling of the system, nobody will be overly surprised.If Strauss and the ECB demur, what then? While the job specification requires “international playing experience”, David Collier, the chief executive of the ECB, has indicated that such experience need not necessarily be in cricket. Collier also went on to suggest that while “playing at international level is strongly preferred, consideration could be given to someone who has outstanding international cricket management experience with the senior national team.”That encourages all manner of names to be conjured up: Sir Clive Woodward, the former England rugby coach or Peter Moores, Lancashire and former England coach, would both qualify for consideration. According to the most informed sports gossip column around, Darren Gough and Nick Knight are also expected to be among the applicants.But it is impossible to avoid the conclusion that when it comes to the ECB, Strauss is the ultimate company man. He does not as much tick the boxes as employ others to tick them for him. One senior official has even been known to refer to him at times as “Dear Andrew”. Flower’s future massively complicates the issue. But we may be about to find out whether Dear Andrew is ready to answer the call.

'Feet are the most important thing in batsmanship'

Arthur Morris, Australia’s oldest living Test cricketer, talks about batting, coaching, self-doubt, the Don, and being mates with Lindsay Hassett

Interview by Steve Cannane25-Sep-2013At the age of 91, Arthur Morris is Australia’s oldest living Test cricketer and one of only two players left from Bradman’s Invincibles of 1948. On that tour he became the first Australian batsman in 20 years to outscore Bradman in a Test series. He was the first Australian to score two centuries on first-class debut. He was also named in Australia’s team of the 20th century. Click here to listen to the full interview“If you see kids with a lot of ability, don’t coach them. Let them develop their own cricket”•Getty ImagesYou scored 196 in the innings that was Don Bradman’s last. Not many people remember your innings. Everyone remembers Bradman’s duck. Do people come up and ask you about that innings, not knowing your score?
It did occur in business when a fellow came up and didn’t know all that much about cricket, but he did know about Bradman’s duck. In the conversation something reminded him of that and he said, Bradman got a duck. I said yes, I was there. He said, “Were you? What were you doing over there? Were you on business?” I said, “No, I was up the other end.” He said, “Did you get any runs?” I said, “196”. Then I stopped a little moment to get the message across. “Run out,” I said. “Nobody got me out. I ran myself out.”That team you were part of became the Invincibles – the only Australian team to tour England without losing a match. What made that team so special?
I think it was a very good side. The English side was also a very good one – Hutton and Compton and Bedser – but we were very strong. It was just after the war and we had all the players to click. Neil Harvey was the only one who hadn’t been in the services. The others had played the Englishmen in 1946-47 and India in 1947-48 before we went to England.Did the fans love seeing the Australians?
It was very important that we did play. This was before colour television. Unfortunately a lot of young players today think the game only started when colour television came in. It was very important to the counties that we played three days. We were there for six months and played each county, one or two of them twice. That was a source of money for them. I felt very sorry for Don, because every county wanted him to play, because it meant more people. It wasn’t easy. Hotels were pretty average, but we battled on. It was a great tour.Bradman’s biographer, Irving Rosenwater, pointed out that Australia didn’t lose any of its first 20 Tests after the war. And he put that statistic down to what he called “an efficiency approaching ruthlessness” and that much of that ruthlessness stemmed from the influence of Don Bradman. Is that a fair assessment in your eyes?
No. Where do they get all these fantasies? Really, I am amazed sometimes when I read of these things. We’d go to play to win. The silly part about this is that sometimes I wish he had been more ruthless and not played extra counties. They wanted him and he didn’t want to. Once or twice we played on the third day to keep the game going to get the crowds there, and I’d rather have been back in London than be stuck out in Leeds or whatever.So you don’t buy the argument that Bradman was driven by Bodyline and previous Test matches to grind the English into the dust?
I think there was a bit of that in one or two games. I think there was the memory of his 1938 tour when they got about 11 hundreds, and he broke his ankle bowling. I think that was a little on his mind.The 1948 tour was the first in 20 years in which an Australian batsman outscored Bradman in the Tests. That batsman was you. You scored three centuries, 700 runs – that tour was a personal triumph for you, wasn’t it?
Yes, I enjoyed batting over there. I think the more you play, the better you get.But you started that tour slowly. Is that a lesson in itself that it’s good to have a number of warm-up games on an important tour and it’s also important to stick with your players and let them strike a little bit of form?
I think you’re right. Well, that happened in those days. Today they can fly everywhere. You get so many more Test matches in small amounts of time. On the tour, Don and I got hundreds in the first match, in Worcester. In fact, I got a century in my first match in South Africa, West Indies and England.In that world-record chase in Headingley, when Australia chased 404 on the final day on a turning pitch, you and Bradman put on a partnership of 301. Did you give yourself any chance of chasing down that total when you walked out to bat?
I know Don wrote in his diary that he thought we’d be beaten. I was bloody sure we’d be beaten. Lindsay opened, because Sid Barnes had been hurt in the match before. He got out early and then we battled away. I was a bit lucky with a stumping – the ball jumped and hit Godfrey Evans on the chest and bounced back. That showed you what the wicket was like. It turned a lot, but it turned slowly. We were able to penetrate the field because Yardley, their captain – and everybody else – was thinking they would win this match, so he kept the field up.We were not aware at that stage that we had any chance of winning, during the morning session. It was only after lunch that we got at it.Is it true that Bradman was having trouble with Denis Compton’s bowling, so you decided to hit him out of the attack?
Yes, Don was having trouble picking his wrong’un a couple of times. He did come to me at one stage after lunch and said his back wasn’t going too well. When Compton – who was a good bowler but not a regular bowler – and playing him defensively made him a better bowler – came on, I decided to go after him. It didn’t matter where he pitched them, I hit him. He wasn’t able to bowl a good length at me, because I was covering him, back and forward. I was very disappointed at [Jack] Fingleton writing that Bradman was very unlucky to have Compton bowl four poor overs, because I made them poor. Anyway, that put us on the road to the fact that we’d gain a draw, at least. But from then on we just kept the pressure on and saw that we were going to win it.

“I would hate it if Cricket Australia or Cricket New South Wales could ring me up because I am employed by the cricket authorities and say, ‘You will be here at 3’o’clock or such and such a thing'”

You used to hit over the top a bit and Bradman didn’t like that, did he? Did he ever tell you to stop hitting the ball in the air?
No, never. In fact he said to me one day – and this is why I get cranky about coaches – “I don’t know how you do it, but keep doing it.” It means I played so differently from the way he played. In our day you had players of different physiques and they played differently. There were no coaches to tell them to perhaps end up looking like a lot of sausages coming out of a machine, all doing the same thing.I believe in coaches teaching the fundamentals to youngsters. But cricket doesn’t have a place for coaches. You have to have them in football for positions, playing. In cricket, there’s no case when a bloke is bowling 100mph and drops one short for a coach to say, “Don’t hook that. There’s a bloke out on the field.” Your little computer in your head tells you what to do. If you see kids with a lot of ability, don’t coach them. Let them develop their own cricket, because they will learn to bat by watching better players play. Bradman, McCabe, Trumper had no coaches. It started when the big money came in. Then you started having coaches for everything.Didn’t you and senior players like Lindwall play a kind of coaching role to younger ones coming in, like Richie Benaud?
Very little. If they asked a question, then that’s all. When you get into bad habits you can ask another player, what am I doing wrong here? But you don’t need a coach to tell you that you must put your foot there or do that. I think Ian Chappell was right when he said he used coaches to get to the ground.I would never get involved in coaching or go tell a player that this is what I think you should do. Sometimes I could say, please use your back leg a bit more, or use your feet a bit more instead of getting defensive, use your back foot to get into defence, or don’t put your front foot down, because once you put your weight on the front foot, you’re stuck there. Feet are the most important thing in batsmanship. It goes for everything – football, boxing. If your feet are in the right spot, you’re a good player.Do you think many modern batsmen tend to lunge on the front foot too early?
I think so. I’ve been seeing it, particularly in opening batsmanship. It is a very good defensive but it doesn’t win games. McCabe never played forward in his life and he was the fastest batsman I saw. People tend to say, “Oh, he’s on the back foot”, but I found most of the players on the back foot are very fast scorers.On the 1948 tour you dined with Douglas Jardine, the English captain during the Bodyline series, probably the most loathed English cricketer ever to come to Australia.
He was a most charming man. A different person when on the field to when he was off the field. It’s often been said that Bill O’Reilly and Bradman were two different types of people, but they had immense admiration for each other on the cricket field and they were great for Australia. You can have a team of different people, which you do have, but when you’re playing for your country or your team, you do the best you can, but you don’t have to love them.In those days you travelled to England by ship. What was it like for players getting to know one another on the ship?
Very important, I think. We didn’t have to hug each other, which is good because we didn’t have all these deodorants you have these days. If I had put my arm around Bill O’Reilly I wouldn’t be here talking to you today. I’d have been dead many years ago.Bradman and Morris during their record triple-hundred stand at Headingley in 1948•PA PhotosIn the fifth Test, at The Oval, Compton came in and Lindwall bowled him a short one. Compton hooked with him with all his force, and I had just been moved by Bradman five metres near the umpire. After I took the catch, and if I hadn’t I’d have been in hospital, I said, “Why did you move me?” He said, “I remember in 1938, Compton hooked down that line from Ernie McCormick.” I said, “God, you’ve got a memory like an elephant.” Years later I had lunch with Bradman and said to him, “Remember that time you moved me at The Oval and I caught Compton?” He said, “I remember it well, but you don’t,” He said it happened at Lord’s. I could still see the gasometer in the background where I caught it. I said, “No, it was at The Oval.” He said, “No, I’ll bet you £100 it was at Lord’s. I thought, gee I need the money but he’s always so right, and I could still see the gasometer. Then we go down to £50 and I can see the gasometer starting to fade in the background. We finally got down to £10. And then I got a cheque in the mail. I showed it to Tiger O’Reilly and he said, “You have to frame it.” I don’t know what he meant by that but I needed the money so I cashed it. I was right.What about the differences in pay between now and then? Did you make any money out of the 1948 tour?
No, we had enough to get by for drinks and so on. It was like having expenses really, and virtually like playing as an amateur. I wouldn’t like it today, frankly. I wouldn’t like it instead of having a job out in the business world. I would hate it if Cricket Australia or Cricket New South Wales could ring me up because I am employed by the cricket authorities and say, “You will be here at 3’o’clock or such and such a thing”. I am pleased that I played at a time when I wasn’t under that pressure to come and practice at a particular time.What was your pre-match routine? I’ve heard a few rumours that you relied on a few beers to relax the nerves.
I did often. Not late nights, but a few beers to get to sleep, because if you’ve got any imagination and you’re thinking about going out the next day opening for Australia, it tends to get in your mind.Your mother and father separated quite early on in your life. What influence did that have on you?
I don’t know. It must have had some influence on me. Made me very shy, I think. It took a while for me to overcome that. My father was keen on sport and I played good football, rugby union for St George and in the army and Combined services. Johnny Wallace, a top centre in the 1930s, said I was the best five-eighth in Australia. I accepted that and enjoyed it.Marriage breakdowns were unusual back then and also for fathers to get custody of a son. Was that hard for you and your father?
Hard to tell. I think break-ups are very upsetting to a child, and I was an only child. My mother was English. I think she took one look at Dungog when the old man was sent there and went back to Bondi. I loved Dungog – you could play all day long, cricket, football, tennis. It was upsetting of course, but he accepted it. He was among children all day long and his influence was tremendous. He was a schoolteacher, a bit pedantic, not the sort you get terribly close to, but he looked after me tremendously well.I’ve been told he had very high hopes for you as a cricketer, and asked the St George’s coach when you moved to Sydney to look after you as a 14-year-old, because he thought you were destined to play for Australia.
My father said, “My son will play for Australia.” The captain, who was 17, said, “Mr Morris, if your son plays for Australia, you can kiss my arse.” And the old man never came up to watch me play after that.

“We didn’t have to hug each other, which is good because we didn’t have all these deodorants you have these days. If I had put my arm around Bill O’Reilly I wouldn’t be here talking to you today. I’d have been dead many years ago”

At that club you came under the influence of Bill O’Reilly, the man Bradman said was the best bowler he ever faced. What was it like meeting Tiger for the first time?
Oh, great. I fielded at slips to him. He had just come back from South Africa and he came on to bowl. I had never seen anything like it: fast spin, he cut his legspinner, but his wrong’un was superb and it bounced. It was a good side we played against. I think he got 6 for 28 or something. I took a couple of catches. Shane Warne is a great legspinner but if you look at Tiger’s wickets to number of runs, it will be half of Warne’s. I’ve never seen a better bowler. But I think Shane’s the best orthodox legspinner I have seen.O’Reilly was the man who turned you into an opening batsman. Tell us how he did that.
I was batting in the middle order. I had had my first grade match at the age of 15. I bowled offspin and batted last. Alec Marks got about 187 and took me for a lot but kindly gave me his wicket. I got 20-odd runs batting last, and he said to me, “Son, you are going to be a good batsman, give the bowling away.” I was bowling quite often until Tiger really took over. We had a very good bowling side.Ray Lindwall once bowled four overs and took two for none. After four overs, Tiger said, “Give us a bowl, son”. And Ray said, “But Mr O’Reilly, I got two for none.” O’Reilly said, “I can get them quicker.” Which he could. A wonderful character and a wonderful captain, Bill. He could have been captain of Australia, but everybody wanted batsmen as captains.One day he said, “You’re opening, son”, so I opened. At that time I was opening for my school, but it was wonderful that he took that decision for me.And just a few years later you were opening the batting for New South Wales as an 18-year-old. How did it feel that day to turn up at the SCG?
I got a hundred in the first innings but I didn’t bat well.It’s strange you say that, because you were the first person in the world to score two first-class hundreds in your first game.
I batted much better in the second innings. I really felt that I wanted to prove my point. Queensland had a very good bowler called [John] Ellis, and I made about three or four attempts to hook him. But it might have been good, because they flew away to the off side for four fours, and I don’t know what it looked like from the outside. They might have said, “What a good square-cutter this boy is.” But then I concentrated in the second innings. So that’s why I got two hundreds – I wanted to prove I was better than I was in the first innings.Is it true that you made those two hundreds with a bat borrowed from the St George club?
Oh yes. We were too poor, those days. My father was a school teacher and didn’t have money. A prominent Australian, Doc Evatt [leader of the Australian Labor Party from 1951 to 1960], very kindly bought me a bat after the match. I still have the letter. He wrote, “You go down to McCabe’s and choose yourself a bat.” That’s the only bat I owned then, apart from having kids’ bats. He was a cricket enthusiast. Robert Menzies too.Were there times during the war when you thought you won’t get to play for Australia?
Oh sure. There were times when it looked like the war would go one forever. I was playing a lot of football at the time, against top-line rugby union, rugby league players. Then I was sent to Finch Haven, where the Americans were, so there was no cricket. We played softball with the Americans – underarm stuff. In fact I ran into Ray Lindwall, who was on his way to one of the other islands. He took a marvelous catch in the deep. The Americans we were playing with were ecstatic.So after the war Test cricket resumed and you were picked for Australia. You described that as scaring the hell out of you. Why was that?
I had a little doubt there. I was always out to prove myself, I suppose. A little bit of self-doubt helps. It really makes you concentrate. If you think you’re the best and you go out there and start throwing your bat at everything then you’re back in the pavilion very early. I was nervous when opening. Most of us are. I asked Bob Menzies and Neville Wran, “Do you get nervous when you speak?” Both of them said yes.Morris (second from left), along with Shane Warne, Ian Healy, Allan Border and Neil Harvey, was named in Australia’s Test team of the century•Getty ImagesOne of your team-mates in your first Test match was Lindsay Hassett. He became a great mate of yours. What are your memories of Lindsay Hassett?
Wonderful character. I was vice-captain to him for 25 matches. I got along very well with him. He was a very nice, delightful young man.Did he ever do anything to wind you up? What about the time you played the Prime Minister’s XI game
Oh yes, I am furious about it. I had retired after my first wife died, and I hadn’t played cricket for a while. The English boys came out [in 1958-59] and they played the Prime Minister’s XI in Canberra. Hassett was also chosen. I had bought a bat, a beautiful bat I had a great loving regard for. As I was going out, Hassett had to go in to bat. He said, “I haven’t got a bat.” I said, “Well, here’s mine.” I think he had had a couple of gin and tonics, so I thought there’s no way he’d be able to do any damage to this bat. So off he went.I’m standing next to the prime minister, Bob Menzies, who loved Hassett. And he said, “Isn’t that typical?” I said, “What happened?” And he said, “Hassett’s just got out and he’s given his bat to a little boy in the crowd.” I remember the words I said. “Pig’s arse, that’s my bat!” He gave my bat away to this bloody kid! And the prime minister’s saying how typical of him, what a wonderful character, what a gesture to see this international give his bat to this little boy. And I had to even sign it when the kid came in. If the team hadn’t been there, I’d have hit him on the head with the bat and run out with it.This interview was first published in ABC’s Conversations series of interviews. Click here to listen to it.

Swann leaves huge hole for England to fill

Graeme Swann will be remembered as England’s finest spinner since Derek Underwood and their finest off-spinner since Jim Laker. The fact that he had a bowling average of 22 in the Tests he won underlines his colossal value to the side

George Dobell22-Dec-20130:00

George Dobell: Five things I love about Graeme Swann

Of all the players that took England to No. 1 in the Test rankings and their first global silverware, Graeme Swann might prove the hardest to replace.Swann did not possess the talent of Kevin Pietersen and does not finish his career with the records of Alastair Cook, but he was the man that balanced the England side. As a spinner good enough to demand respect in the first innings and threaten in the second, his involvement allowed England to field a four-man attack while his excellent catching and aggressive lower-order batting gave him an edge over all his rivals for the role. England have nothing close to a replacement.He probably deserved a better send-off. He probably deserved better than seeing his final over in Test cricket thrashed for 22 and the side he had done so much to improve humbled in the series about which he cared most.But sport doesn’t work like that. For the vast majority it ends in tears. And Swann, reflecting the experience of this England team, arrived in Australia in high spirits only to leave broken and disappointed a few weeks later. It really is always later than we think.Graeme Swann played the game with a smile on his face, but was a serious competitor•Getty Images”It’s easy to wish you’d gone out taking 10-for in your last game and been hoisted on to people’s shoulders as you walk off,” he said. “But I look back and I don’t regret a single day I’ve had for England. They’re all part and parcel of the magnificent journey I’ve been on.”There had been increasing signs, as well as rumours, that his right elbow – twice operated upon – was bothering him again in recent weeks. It was not that he was bowling poorly – he seldom did – just that he couldn’t bowl as well for as long. When Australia’s batsmen, confident and playing on fine wickets, attacked he had no longer had the answer.There will be those who accuse him of selfishness for retiring mid-series. But if he knew his form had dipped, if he knew he was no longer quite capable of reaching the standards he once did, if he knew the light had gone out, he is right to go.Personal records and landmarks are fine, but they are never and should never be what a team sport is about. Besides, if Swann waited for England to uncover a replacement, he might be playing until he was 60. There are decent young spinners in county cricket – Yorkshire’s Azeem Rafiq and Nottinghamshire’s Sam Wood stick out, though Swann backed Monty Panesar to take his place in the short-term and Durham’s leg-spinning allrounder Scott Borthwick in the longer – but there is no-one anywhere near Swann’s class.”I knew more or less that the time was coming up,” he said. “At the end of the Oval Test, I think ‘why didn’t I just stop then?’ But then I’d never have forgive myself if I hadn’t come out here and given it a crack – we had the chance to potentially win four Ashes series on the bounce. When I came out on this trip, I half expected it to be my last tour for England.”It was probably halfway through the Perth game [that I made the decision]. My body doesn’t like playing long forms of cricket. My arm doesn’t cope very well with bowling 30-40 overs in the first innings and then repeating it in the second innings a day later. I could feel my performances tapering off towards the back end of games and I wasn’t happy with that. I’m not willing just to hang on and get by being a bit-part player. I want to be a guy who wants to win matches for England and I don’t feel I was doing that in the second innings any more. As a result, it is time to go.”The ending should not obscure the achievements. Swann will be remembered as England’s finest spinner since Derek Underwood and their finest offspinner since Jim Laker. The fact that he had a bowling average of 22 in the Tests he won – 30 of the 60 he played – underlines his colossal value to the side. Bearing in mind the era in which he played, with shorter boundaries, better bats and covered pitches offering little, a Test bowling average a fraction under 30 is deeply impressive. He reached 250 Test wickets in just his 58th Test, becoming the quickest finger-spinner to the landmark in Test history.Graeme Swann was found great success as a conventional offspinner rather than a box of mystery deliveries•Getty ImagesSome feel that Swann revived the art of traditional off-spin, but it is hard to see many following in his footsteps. It is more likely that Swann simply provided a coda to the life of the traditional off-spinner. It really is possible that his like – sans ‘doosra’ – will not be seen again excelling at the top level.Certainly Swann was something of a throwback. With an unimpeachable action, relied on weapons that were thought to be obsolete before he started: a bow and arrow in the age of the gun. But his ability to get the ball to dip sharply remained dangerous until the end – he dismissed Michael Clarke, perhaps the best player of spin in the world, in such fashion in the first innings in Perth – while his sharp turn, unusually good arm-ball and excellent control rendered him valuable on good wickets and deadly on those offering assistance. It was a package good enough to see him rated, for a while, No. 1 in the ODI and T20 bowling rankings and No. 2 in Tests.Quite when he made the transition in perception from honest journeyman enjoying a few days in the sun to a highly-respected, key player is hard to say. It wasn’t when he dismissed Gautam Gambhir and Rahul Dravid in his first over of Test cricket in 2008; it wasn’t when he bowled England to Ashes victory at The Oval in 2009 – the moment he described on Sunday as the greatest in his career – and it wasn’t when he bowled England to victory in Durban later the same year. But somewhere, as he claimed five-wicket hauls in the Caribbean, in Bangladesh, in India, in Australia, in South Africa, in Sri Lanka, in the UAE and in England, it became apparent that Swann’s success was not fleeting and fortunate. He had developed into a high-class bowler.He will remembered, too, for playing the game with a smile. Of course there were frustrating days where that smile was hidden for a while, but Swann – having only broken into the Test side in his late 20s – never lost sight of how fortunate he was to play cricket for a living and represent his country in the process.The salary may have increased, the pressures too, but Swann remained, at heart, the enthusiastic boy who used to watch his father, Ray, playing minor counties cricket, and emerged as a likeable larrikin while he developed through the Northamptonshire system with his brother, Alec. Later, when he moved on to Nottinghamshire, he embraced the fitness and lifestyle choices that hoped him maximise his talent, but the sense of job never ebbed. Family, club and county can take much pride in his success.”I hope my legacy is someone who always enjoyed it,” Swann said. “Someone who always played with a smile on his face.”But since I got back in the England team, I’ve treated every day like a lottery win. That’s what it is. I’ve been privileged to play international cricket. It really annoys me when people take it for granted and get above their station; they shouldn’t.”It’s the most privileged thing any man can do. I hope people will look back and say ‘Yeah, he did always play with a smile on his face and enjoyed himself … and he walked as well, when he nicked it’.”Swann’s departure, Jonathan Trott’s absence and the loss of the Ashes all point to the same conclusion: the foundations of England’s success have crumbled and they have now entered a rebuilding phase. It could well contain some very uncomfortable moments. And, as England struggle to regain former ground, Swann’s immense contribution could well win greater recognition and respect.

It's the build-up, silly

The entire cricket-watching public will have their eyes peeled when MCC takes on Rest of the World on July 5. It isn’t difficult to see why

Vijay Subramanya23-Jun-2014″We all have our time machines, don’t we. Those that take us back are memories… And those that carry us forward, are dreams.” — H. G. Wells, The Time Machine.For a sports fan, if there ever is a thing more appealing than watching contemporary stars in action, then it must be the prospect of past greats taking centre-stage. The MCC v Rest of the World XI clash on July 5 offers just this for us cricket fans. With some of the biggest names in recent times set to face off, this will be one of those very few matches that fans across the world will tune in to. And what better venue to host it than the historic Lord’s celebrating its bicentenary. It does appear that the organizers have ticked all the right boxes . (Except, perhaps, bright and sunny weather. No, let’s not jinx it.) But, if you look carefully, you will see that there is one crucial box that they have ticked, probably even without realizing it. I call this criterion crucial because it reveals a fundamental point of sport that cricket’s administrators seem to have forgotten of late.They say life is about moments that take your breath away. Sport is no different. Ian Chappell recalls a straight hit from Gary Sobers en route to his magnificent 254 at MCG in 1971-72. In his words, “O’Keefe (the bowler) sort of ducked and…[the ball] went like a plane taking off, for a six. That shot has always stayed with me.” We have our favorites too, be it a Tendulkar straight drive, a Richards flick for a six or a Shane Bond inswinging yorker. Or a Michael Holding over or even an entire session. Such moments, or periods of play, are what create memories and stories to tell our grandchildren. These memories drive people to write articles and books on cricket and pass the baton of passion to future generations.Creating lasting memories is, in my opinion, the raison d’etre of any sport. When folks turn up at stadiums or switch on their televisions, they do so with the hope that they witness acts of brilliance that not only thrill in the short term but are memorable enough to look back upon in ten years’ time. I’m no psychologist, but I guess that is why viewers prefer watching Kevin Pietersen to Alastair Cook, or Australia v South Africa to New Zealand v West Indies. Pietersen has a greater probability of producing a magic innings that people talk about for years and attacking teams like Australia and South Africa tend to deliver a higher standard of cricket and closer finishes.I have a small task for you. Pick three of your favorite matches which you have watched live. I’m guessing, if you have followed cricket for at least a decade, then there are no IPL or BBL games on your list. The reasoning is pretty simple: in spite of their close finishes and thrill-a-minute rides, domestic T20 games lack a vital ingredient. The build-up. My choice of games are the 2001 India v Australia Test at Eden Gardens, the Ashes Test in Edgbaston, 2005 and the 1999 World Cup semi-final between Australia and South Africa. One common thread among these games was the build-up. Australia had cruised to 15 wins on the trot before landing in India – their final frontier. On the other hand, India were a rebuilding side under Sourav Ganguly. Australia were the favourites ahead of the 2005 Ashes as well, though an English fightback was at last not beyond imagination. There isn’t much to be said about the build-up to World Cup semifinal.Of course, the build-up is not absolutely necessary; the 438 game between Australia and South Africa, for instance, wasn’t a high-profile one. But, more often than not, a sufficiently hyped encounter lingers in memory for a longer duration. Building up a series requires an adequate action-free period before it commences. From the viewers’ perspective, this period must be a characterized by a sense of void which they try to fill by visualizing the action likely to occur. A bit like planning a vacation, and looking forward to it. For the players, more time before important tours means better preparation which results in closer contests; and fewer one-sided series such as the recent Ashes where Australia whitewashed a jaded England team.Fortunately, the MCC vs RoW game has got this part covered. With the date and teams announced well in advance, and with the superstars off the field for a while now, the anticipation in the air is palpable. Can Shane Warne get some past the bat despite having lost that rip he used to impart back in the day? The last time an MCC v RoW match was held at Lord’s in 1998, Tendulkar scored a marvelous 125. Can he do something similar this time around? Oh, and will he dance down the track to Warne and send one to the pavilion? Seven years away from cricket may have subdued Lara’s backlift but who wouldn’t love a crisp cover drive with his flair written all over it? If you like mouthwatering battles, look no further – the pace battery of Brett Lee, Shaun Tait and Umar Gul is pitted against Adam Gilchrist, Virender Sehwag and Kevin Pietersen. To top it all, Rahul Dravid’s pristine drives are set to flow along the 200 year old slope. If only Ricky Ponting and Jacques Kallis could have joined the party.The warriors may be past their prime, but let’s hope for one more exhibition of their class. Let’s hope for one more picture-perfect Tendulkar straight drive, one more magic Warne delivery that pitches outside leg and clips the top of off, and one more Sobers-esque straight hit from Lara on a sunny London evening as the old Father Time weather vane watches over. That would be a picture to remember.If you have a submission for Inbox, send it to us here, with “Inbox” in the subject line

Finch's one-handed six

The Plays of the day from the game between Sunrisers Hyderabad and Delhi Daredevils

George Binoy25-Apr-2014The test
Kevin Pietersen was playing his first game of the season after recovering from a hand injury and his bandaged fingers were tested in the first over. Aaron Finch glanced Shahbaz Nadeem towards fine leg, giving Pietersen a tough chase. He caught up with the ball with a slide but went over the boundary after he pulled it back. The ball trickled on, though, and when Pietersen pushed it back to ensure it wasn’t a boundary, his body was where the dislodged advertising signs had been, and a four was signalled.The wound and the salt
The first three balls of the fifth over, from Wayne Parnell, were short, short and down leg, and short again. Shikhar Dhawan feasted on them, cutting the first to the point boundary, hoisting the second over long leg for six, and lacing the third through point for four more. The fourth was short and wide too, and Dhawan cut hard once again, aiming for a fourth consecutive boundary. His placement was off, though, and the ball flew straight to Manoj Tiwary at point. Parnell grimaced after he saw the ball spilt on the grass.The one-handed six
Finch moved a couple of feet outside leg stump, to create space to hit on the off side. He had moved too early, though, and JP Duminy fired the ball flat and wide outside off stump as a counter measure. Finch lunged and swung. The ball was nearly at the wide-indicator when he made contact. And despite one hand coming off the bat, Finch stuck it so powerfully that the ball flew flat and over the extra-cover boundary. He did it again, off the medium-pacer Jaydev Unadkat, his one-handed slice resulting in a four at point.The freebie
David Warner was dropped before he had scored, and then plodded from 8 off 5 balls to 18 off 27. He was struggling for fluency while Finch steered the Sunrisers innings and desperately needed another lucky break. Parnell provided it – a juicy, high full toss on the pads. Warner smashed it to the square-leg boundary, was dropped again, and went on to make Daredevils pay.The face-off
Quinton de Kock looks worried quite often on the field, even when he has no apparent reason to be. This time, however, his wide eyes could have been because the man staring him down was his countryman Dale Steyn, the fastest bowler in the world. Steyn charged in to bowl his first ball, de Kock prepared for battle, and the next thing everyone knew was that the ball was being retrieved from the boundary. Little de Kock had stood tall and punched the ball past Steyn’s fingertips, and timed it superbly.The back of the bat
In this age of batting innovation, there isn’t much that surprises anymore. The range of reverse-shots, the switch-hit, the scoop … an increasing number of batsmen are attempting to play them. Dinesh Karthik, however, did something unusual against Darren Sammy. He shaped to play the reverse paddle but instead of turning his bat over to make contact with the face, he hit the ball with the back of his bat and sent it to the third-man boundary. It’s a shot Mahela Jayawardene plays.

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