neville cardus
International Debutant
I'll drop David Frith a line.A good idea would be to reach out to some cricket journalists or historians? They might be able to direct us to the right channels?
I'll drop David Frith a line.A good idea would be to reach out to some cricket journalists or historians? They might be able to direct us to the right channels?
Good grief.The rains resurged in the early-morning hours. They swept over London like a broken sea, slanting in sheets that flicked and subsided as the city’s heart began to beat.
What's VM, and where do I find it? :-)I'll VM you my email.
It's featured in song on a number of occasions mate. This is a famous example:Hey all,
I'm writing an essay for a Uni prize and the title I chose is 'Discuss the Historical Significance of the MCG' - I've found plenty of stuff of the Internet, but written sources are imperative. I've had a look for some books, but the ones I've found are published in Australia and thus shipping is either exorbitant or just not possible. Could anyone recommend any books on the history of the MCG or relevant topics which I might be able to acquire in the UK?
Interesting if they did.Apropos of nothing didn't the SABC sell their entire archive to DSTV for a fraction of what it was worth?
But there must have been some footage of the rebel series from the 1980s and some old Currie Cup stuff too. Maybe even the first few series after isolation, I'm not sure when M-Net/Supersport started broadcasting local international cricket.
"More Than A Game: The Story of Cricket's Early Years" (John Major) is one.Looking for a recommendation.
Anyone know of a book that's a researched history of cricket in the sort of pre-history origins of the game? Pre tests etc.
Ideally tracing from it's origins up until the first test matches.
WA Bettesworth's effort furnishes more detail:Of anything he took up he was bound to be a good judge, his perception of excellence amounting to an absolute gift. He often talked about putting into book form his 60 years' experience of the cricket field, but whether he ever seriously commenced the task one cannot say.
All of which raises the question: Does anyone have any idea where I might go looking for his papers?Among his most cherished possessions were valuable gifts and letters from numbers of prominent amateurs of the present and the past, ranging from Mr ID Walker to KS Ranjitsinhji. Last year, when he retired from umpiring, the Incogniti, at a dinner given in his honour, presented him with a cheque for £100 and a keepsake; twenty years before they gave him a cheque for a similar amount. He corresponded with many great cricketers, and in earlier days wrote a great deal for the Press, always having something interesting to say in quaint language, which was charming and entirely his own. It is devoutedly to be hoped that if anyone edits the notes which he has left, the editing will be confined to arrangement only, for to alter Thoms’s phraseology would decidedly not be to improve it. Many times—more frequently in the old days—Thoms wrote articles for Cricket, and it was but a few months ago that he sent the last of his annual reviews of the Incogniti season. He had been to a good school, and knew a very great deal more Latin and Greek than most people would have supposed, for he never paraded his knowledge. In his younger days his father was part proprietor of the old Eton and Middlesex cricket ground, where many actors used to play. This brought Thoms into connection with the Stage, and induced him to take a great interest in Shakespeare’s plays, many of which he learned by heart, as a few of his intimate friends can testify.... When the time at last came for him to retire he felt very depressed, for it was hard for him to give up the work which he loved so well. But he rallied, and, although he was never quite the same man again, he soon began to take a more cheerful view of things, and to think about writing his autobiography.
I found recently a documentary he made based on the book:Reading Beyond a Bounday. Liking it.
Thanks, I intend to read his non cricketing stuff too eventually. He analyses politcal stuff really well.I found recently a documentary he made based on the book:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E2eatQ7A9e8
This lecture is also handy:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hGxR-mSAq_8
On which note, you should try his non-cricketing stuff, too.
Thanks. Will do.Try tweeting the Lord's Librarian
Neil Robinson @mcclibrarian
How on earth have I not heard of this before? Was it a first-class match? If so, why is Sobers hailed as the first to pull it off?Ben Griffiths ... has the credit of hitting six "sixers" at Hastings in one over.
According to Wikipedia: "Griffith also once hit all four balls (although Ford mistakenly wrote about six) of an over right out of the Hastings ground in 1864, when playing for a United Eleven.... As the game was not a first-class match, his feat did not count as a record, but, as Pycroft recalled, "This we never knew equalled"."Thanks. Will do.
On a separate note, how about the following, from WJ Ford's contribution to Giants of the Game?
How on earth have I not heard of this before? Was it a first-class match? If so, why is Sobers hailed as the first to pull it off?