Any modern bowlers you’d compare to him Fred?I met Sir Alec once - grumpy old bugger, but generous with his time and had a sense of humour
I suggested to him I imagined him as being a bit like Gus Fraser - he said he wasn't as quick as Gus, and compared his pace to Tom Cartwright - didn't have the heart to tell him Cartwright was a bit before my time
Didn't rate many batsmen, but clearly thought Bradman was the hound's testicles
Can't think of any tbh - the thing about Bedser was he had that pretty gentle run up with most of his pace coming in his delivery stride something which, as he told me several times, was because he was bowling over 1,000 overs a season - Fraser for example had a much more bustling approach but then, as Sir Alec again told me, with feeling, he only had to bowl a few hundred (with a gruff "if that" added on at the end) over a summerAny modern bowlers you’d compare to him Fred?
Sir Alec was a borderline fascist, sadly. A member of the very right wing Freedom Association, founded by Norris & Ross McWhirter, which is very anti statist, anti EU, pro libertarian but ironically not so fond of worker's rights or gay marriage.The Bedser Twins, Alec and Eric, both part of Surridge and May's great Surrey side of the 1950s. Eric couldn't get into an England with Laker and Lock.
Later in life Alec had a controversial career on the Selectors, leaving out D'Oliveira in 1968 and to threatening Botham with the chop in 1981 - Botham hasn't a kind word to say about him.
Alec Bedser actually fought against fascism during the second world war. I fail to see what the freedom association's campaigning against gay marriage has to do with his bachelordom.Sir Alec was a borderline fascist, sadly. A member of the very right wing Freedom Association, founded by Norris & Ross McWhirter, which is very anti statist, anti EU, pro libertarian but ironically not so fond of worker's rights or gay marriage.
Which, for a confirmed bachelor like Sir Alec, might've produced some inner conflict that explains the grumpiness.