the big bambino
International Captain
They were never called. They bowled bumpers. No biggy. Nothing special. As any team would have done.
Never mind the nostalgia, nor the tit-for-tat discussion about "well he did it too, so nah nah nah".Bert Oldfield, the unlucky batsman at Adelaide Oval, had blood trickling from a linear fracture of the right frontal bone. An inch either way and he would have been killed.....
It was a dreadful realisation of the worst fears held by so many, as Bodyline crashed its awesome path through the summer, sooner or later somebody surely must get hit on the head and suffer serious consequences.
Woodfull, having been handed Oldfield's discarded bat by the umpire, eventually helped the dazed batsman from the arena. "Come along Bertie" he said gently. The captain later regretted not closing the innings there and then as a mark of disgust, as Bishan Bedi was to do 43 years later at Sabina Park, Jamaica as a protest against intimidatory bowling, with India at 300 for 6. He did the same in the second innings when India were 97 for 5, with two batsman nursing head injuries....
Bodyline Autopsy, page 197-198
asusual fails to grab the content of the post. The double standards are for the intimidating bowling of late 70s and early 80s. Not on bodyline.While the analogy may appear attractive it is false. The law makers actively pursued remedial action in an attempt to eventually outlaw bodyline altogether and they succeeded. This suggests it was a special instance of intimidation not an analogous to short pitched bowling at all. What also justifies the Australian complaint is the eventual agreement of England that bodyline was especially intimidatory and against the games interests after several fast bowlers provided a demonstration of the tactic in their fc season of 1933. The Australian case against bodyline was compelling and justified and the antithesis of hypocrisy.
funny thing was when West Indies didn't pitch it up there were rumors on killing and breach of spirit of the game.and then bouncer numbers were curtailed. And that's what I call hypocrisy.But no one's outlawed short pitched bowling. What Lindwall and Miller bowled was no different to anything any team possessing fast bowlers have done. Australia was under no obligation to force its fast bowlers to "pitch it up" due to the stance we took against bodyline.
Ha! See what happens when you let your base passion to square up a vendetta overrule your head? You make a fool of yourself. The post referenced Australia's supposed hypocrisy and used our reaction to bodyline as an example. But that isn't a sustainable comparison as the country that instigated bodyline eventually accepted the Australian complaint as justified to the extent they codified it in the game's laws.asusual fails to grab the content of the post. The double standards are for the intimidating bowling of late 70s and early 80s. Not on bodyline.
Once established that Australia's complaint against bodyline is justified it can't be used an instance of hypocrisy when set against the rule changes in the 80s. Those administrative changes were in reaction to the provocation of player's exploitation of the rules as they then stood. Hence the limit on bumpers as they were being bowled at tailenders and as a method to deprive batsmen of run scoring opportunities. In league with mandated over rates they were introduced to circumvent the player's cynicism...not just the WI. Factors not prevalent when Lindwall and Miller bowled bouncers. Or even Trueman, Statham, Tyson or Hall later. Griffith and Gilchrist though a different matter. Notably Gilchrist was drummed out of the game.funny thing was when West Indies didn't pitch it up there were rumors on killing and breach of spirit of the game.and then bouncer numbers were curtailed. And that's what I call hypocrisy.
It's a refreshing thing to be able to have a robust debate with someone who knows what they're talking about and who doesn't regularly eject toys from their pramYou're a determined man Fred and I give in. I don't think Jardine would have complained either. Gilbert was worth a run for one or both of the last 2 tests on his best grounds of Brisbane and Sydney. The bloke who they should've paired with him (and the joined with Tim Wall) is Laurie Nash. Nash claimed he'd have sorted this out if they gave him just 3 overs at Hammond. Nash was never lacking confidence but what he says has some truth. I think England's other batsmen would have understandably complained if they rec'd some bodyline in return as I have heard speculated. Then it would have been a real test of Jardine's iron will and control to quell that insurrection. Somehow I think he would have.
What exactly are you objecting to about the Australians actions in 32/33? Was it their refusal to bowl bodyline or something else?It's a refreshing thing to be able to have a robust debate with someone who knows what they're talking about and who doesn't regularly eject toys from their pram
Had bodyline been bowled at England then I would think Jardine would have just dropped any conscientious objectors like he did with Pataudi. Although I doubt there would have too many given the team spirit that they seemed to have had - Hammond I suspect would have adopted the Bradman approach but as for the rest I reckon Jardine would have gone in first with Sutcliffe and they would have shown the way - Wyatt, Leyland and Paynter certainly didn't lack courage
And on reflection I don't think I chose the word hypocrisy very well, and am slightly annoyed with myself for trotting it out without looking for means of expressing what I meant - having slept on it what I'm really accusing Australia of in 32/33 is being sanctimonious rather hypocritical
Wasn't Oldfield hurt because he top-edged one into his face?Never mind the nostalgia, nor the tit-for-tat discussion about "well he did it too, so nah nah nah".
The real point is this - there does come a point during a Test match where the use of bouncers becomes just plain idiotic.
I object to the Australians having a sook because they were being roundly thrashed.What exactly are you objecting to about the Australians actions in 32/33? Was it their refusal to bowl bodyline or something else?
I don't object to anything at all about the Bodyline series - because of the way it happened we have a slice of cricket history that is still talked about the best part of a century on, and has fascinated me all my life. I do think though that the way that the Australians who mattered reacted at the time was sanctimonious and, on that basis, distinctly "Un-Australian". I'm still glad they did it though, and that the two sides didn't sit down behind closed doors and come up with a half-baked compromise.What exactly are you objecting to about the Australians actions in 32/33? Was it their refusal to bowl bodyline or something else?
A very astute point!I don't object to anything at all about the Bodyline series - because of the way it happened we have a slice of cricket history that is still talked about the best part of a century on, and has fascinated me all my life. I do think though that the way that the Australians who mattered reacted at the time was sanctimonious and, on that basis, distinctly "Un-Australian". I'm still glad they did it though, and that the two sides didn't sit down behind closed doors and come up with a half-baked compromise.
No one denies bodyline was unsportsman like. The reason was the field settings, not the bowling it self. I am comparing how initimidation tactics used by Thommo and Lillee vs that of West Indian pace trio / quartret.Ha! See what happens when you let your base passion to square up a vendetta overrule your head? You make a fool of yourself. The post referenced Australia's supposed hypocrisy and used our reaction to bodyline as an example. But that isn't a sustainable comparison as the country that instigated bodyline eventually accepted the Australian complaint as justified to the extent they codified it in the game's laws.
Odd thing was the reaction occured when West indies used it. Lillee and Thommo did it for two full series over ten test matches but no one complained, rather they were lauded for their efforts. Suddenely when holding, Roberts and Croft decided to do the same, things changed.The rule changes in the 30s and 80s were in reaction to the way the rules as they then existed could be exploited. The rules were changed to make the game attractive and protect its participants. The treatment is consistent and therefore there is no hypocrisy.
Yeah, you'd have to think they would. Not least because there were a whole load of massively memorable contests in the 50 years before the Bodyline series.How much does everyone think the bodyline series has shaped the Ashes as we know it today? Had it never happened would this intense rivalry between two teams and sets of supporters be like it is now? Would Aussies and Poms be talking about the "history" of the Ashes that sets it apart from all other series in quite the same nostalgic way?
The use of the term 'sanctimonious' doesn't make sense. If the selectors had called up Eddie Gilbert and then asked him to pepper Jardine and Hammond with bouncers with a leg-side field, then sure, sanctimonious would be a good word to use, as would its synonym hypocrite.I don't object to anything at all about the Bodyline series - because of the way it happened we have a slice of cricket history that is still talked about the best part of a century on, and has fascinated me all my life. I do think though that the way that the Australians who mattered reacted at the time was sanctimonious and, on that basis, distinctly "Un-Australian". I'm still glad they did it though, and that the two sides didn't sit down behind closed doors and come up with a half-baked compromise.
I haven't been able to find any negative comments about the bowling of Gregory or McDonald in the autobiographies of either Hobbs or Hammond. That's why I asked you for 'evidence' in one of my previous posts. Did Gregory or McDonald deliberately and frequently target the batsman?I was thinking in terms of Warwick Armstrong, Jack Gregory and Ted McDonald, great players all of course, but a terrifying prospect for the previous generation of England batsmen
Ha thanks for that. Without wishing to appear to be pissing in your pocket I happened onto CW when a google search revealed your article on Bill Bowes. I saw the site, thought it better than the one I was on and joined. Its an idle leisure to wonder what would have happened if Australia retaliated (and I can already see Watson hoisting me on my own petard for speculating when I previously doubted the value of counterfactuals). I think England would have persisted as you say and for the reasons you explain. Also it would have been a major backdown that would have given Australia the ascendancy and that wasn't in Jardine's nature.It's a refreshing thing to be able to have a robust debate with someone who knows what they're talking about and who doesn't regularly eject toys from their pram
Had bodyline been bowled at England then I would think Jardine would have just dropped any conscientious objectors like he did with Pataudi. Although I doubt there would have too many given the team spirit that they seemed to have had - Hammond I suspect would have adopted the Bradman approach but as for the rest I reckon Jardine would have gone in first with Sutcliffe and they would have shown the way - Wyatt, Leyland and Paynter certainly didn't lack courage
And on reflection I don't think I chose the word hypocrisy very well, and am slightly annoyed with myself for trotting it out without looking for means of expressing what I meant - having slept on it what I'm really accusing Australia of in 32/33 is being sanctimonious rather hypocritical