Shaggy Alfresco
State Captain
Could anyone tell me?
Players now may be better than Grace was in his day but they have only been able to progress to this stage because of the massive contribution and developments Grace made."Bernard of Chartres used to say that we are like dwarfs on the shoulders of giants, so that we can see more than they, and things at a greater distance, not by virtue of any sharpness on sight on our part, or any physical distinction, but because we are carried high and raised up by their giant size."
Did he also hang out with Bollywood actresses ?FRAZ said:He was truely Shoaib Akhtar of his times.
Did he keep Sonali's picture in his walletFRAZ said:Once he was batting and the ball popped up in the air and Sir grace ran for the run and as the ball was about to fall into the hands of the fielder near by , he screamed "Missed it" . And the catch was dropped (I heard this thing from some one) .
He was a true gentleman and he did put some colour into the game . You see he played the game with passion .He made the game famous and he moulded the game like his own style . He was truely Shoaib Akhtar of his times. Great man I salute him.
That sounds familiar. Billy Midwinter, was it?UncleTheOne said:Loads of great stories about Grace, whether myth of fact. Like nipping off to Crystal Palace during a game to win a 100 yards sprint at an athletics meet. Another great one is he apparently kidnapped a member of the Aussie touring party and refused to let him go until he agreed to play for Gloucs that summer.
BoyBrumby said:That sounds familiar. Billy Midwinter, was it?
Probably 1 and 100. I'm guessing it was this game.archie mac said:Yes, thats him, and yes he did declare on a score so he had made every score between 1 and 100 or was it 1 and 200?
They were. He made cricket with his popularity. People came to watch Grace.Oli Norwell said:Certainly a great cricketer. But I've read stories of him being given out and not walking, being very un-sportsman like and arrogant believing that people were only there to watch him, and other incidents that suggest his large amount of runs were as much down to his status than his actual ability. (I mean the guy was larger than Inzaman!)
Add to that the fact cricket wasn't anywhere near as professional back then. I'd go as far as to say some bowlers were told not to bowl him out to ensure the match wasn't abandoned.
For me the likes of Bradman are a league above.
Not sure about questioning his ability, but I do agree that he seems to have been a bit up himself, and for that reason I've never really liked him that much. Some great stories, though.Oli Norwell said:Certainly a great cricketer. But I've read stories of him being given out and not walking, being very un-sportsman like and arrogant believing that people were only there to watch him, and other incidents that suggest his large amount of runs were as much down to his status than his actual ability. (I mean the guy was larger than Inzaman!)
Add to that the fact cricket wasn't anywhere near as professional back then. I'd go as far as to say some bowlers were told not to bowl him out to ensure the match wasn't abandoned.
For me the likes of Bradman are a league above.
Agreed. The not walking, the whole pro-am business, some examples of blatant cheating...you have to look at it within those times of course, but in today's terms he'd be a Kevin Pietersen / any footballer type. You can admire him for his sporting exploits but it's hard to like him because he's too snotty for his own good.andyc said:Not sure about questioning his ability, but I do agree that he seems to have been a bit up himself, and for that reason I've never really liked him that much. Some great stories, though.
Neither of those stats are particularly relevant. His test career began when he was well past his best, and his FC stats were dragged down by the length of his career. The true class of Grace shows through when you look at his FC record in the years leading up to test cricket, where he would routinely be the best batsman in England by an absolute mile. Check our the links posted above by AMZ, where he would average 60-80 in seasons where the next best batsman averaged mid 20s, and score 8-10 centuries when nobody else managed more than 1.Oli Norwell said:Yeah I admit I haven't read a lot on Grace, but based on stats alone his performances in tests isn't spectacular.
22 games, 2 hundreds, average of 32. I guess those figures don't mean much in today's world though.
He did play a lot of games, and scored 54,000+ FC runs in 800+ games. But compare that to Graeme Hick, 39,000+ FC runs in 496 games, averaging over 50.
CricInfo mention that he was paid £1,500 (£100,000 +) in todays money for a tour of Australia in 1873/74, so in his day I agree he must have been a Tendulkar like god.