Ha, nah sorry its my ol mans stuff. I think he either bought it of cricinfo or cricketvideos.com though.I want that DVD aussie. Can you mail me a copy?
Well seeing it, i now see why you rate Vishwanath so highly. His technique really was textbook.No I haven't really. That should be really interesting. Must look for it.
It can be purchased from the UK Sporting Gifts site. I can vouch for them as far as ordering in the UK is concerned.Any idea where it is available?
IIRC Boycott is unique amongst those who pissed Fletcher off but did not apologise to him – what sticks in the memory about that book is the catalogue of folk who crossed him but, to their credit (his invariable comment), apologised when they realised he was right and they were wrong – to name a few of the contriteJust started on Duncan Fletcher's autobiography. Am up to the point where he has taken the England job and he's talking about Boycott dissing him in the press.
Interesting read so far anyway, the man has quite the ego though, even more than I realised.
He strikes one a the kind of bloke to keep a list of perceived greivances. In his Guardian column (which is good value on cricket, if short on laughs) he's forever returning to his pet theories like spinners needing to be able to bat.Um I think it was more he was saying how surprised he was to be made school captain wasn't he?
Gotta say though, I liked his point about Australia being crap in the 80s and that this caused England problems through the 90s because we overrated ourselves by winning the Ashes. Bet Richard loved that bit (if he's read it)
Guy talks fascinatingly on cricket and knows the game well, but he really does rate himself highly. I knew that from the Ashes regained book anyway, but so far the whole thing is like one big pat on the back. Still interesting, but it might get a bit nauseating when I get to the bit when we win six series in a row.
Considering the bloke (Wilde that is - not Warne), to my knowledge, has never played the game to a high standard, the first chapter is certainly an impressive, as well as unique, way to begin a biography of a cricketerAnyway, have just procured Shane Warne: Portrait of a Flawed Genius by Simon Wilde, mainly 'cos it was cheap.
http://www.cricketweb.net/cricketbooks/5862.php
We may have mentioned him before, but has anyone read much by Alan Gibson? I've been enjoying some articles he wrote for the Times, in a collection of the paper's cricket writing entitled Double Century; I note that there is a book of his on eBay at the moment about the Tests of 1905. Any recommendations?
Thats the only book I have read of him. Its not a great book I am afraid.Just picked up a bio of Lord Hawke (imaginatively titled "Lord Hawke") by James P Coldham for a song. Don't know the author at all. Anyone read it or any of his stuff?