neville cardus
International Debutant
A video created at the request of the authors of a new biography of the great Philadelphian swing bowler:
Yes, although I blush at the word "work."Exceptional stuff! Is this your work?
Worth remembering that Spofforth was in his fifties when those photographs were taken.Also, very interesting seeing Spofforth in "motion", his arm looks bent and it's quite round arm...Barton however is straight as an arrow, brilliant swing bowling action!
That's exceptional, do you have a youtube channel?Yes, although I blush at the word "work."
Worth remembering that Spofforth was in his fifties when those photographs were taken.
Yes. It's the one on which that video appears.That's exceptional, do you have a youtube channel?
Good question. I took my cues from the authors, whose book I haven't yet received. Will be interesting to see how they describe it.@neville cardus I know King clasped his hands behind his head baseball pitcher style, but is there any evidence he did that through his run rather than just as part of his pre-delivery sequence? And are there any sources describing how far he ran (such descriptive detail is bloody hard to find in my experience)
Cricket was actually a reasonably popular niche sport in the US, and particularly Philadelphia, during the last few decades of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th century. The Philadelphian cricket team made first class tours of England in 1897, 1903, and 1908 and Bart King topped the national bowling averages in 1908. It was only around the time of WWI that cricket effectively died out in the US.How'd this guy even get into cricket? Why wasn't he some gun baseballer?