BoyBrumby
Englishman
This is undoubtedly true, but there are many more who respect him as a tactician & fine man.Sussexshark said:Oh, and by the way, I'm no whingeing Aussie, but what Jardine did was, yes within the Laws, but only just. He bent them somewhat and certainly had no respect for the spirit of the game. I have actually found some of the footage from that series quite sickening. I have every respect for Bill Bowes, who refused to do what Jardine wanted because he did not believe it was right to play the game in that way. And quite right too. Play hard, bloody hard, with a degree of sledging, but play fair, and there're many, many people who believe to their souls that Jardine did not play fair.
Just my two penn'orth.
Peter
In his autobiography DRJ speaks of the occasion in 1953 when he was persuaded by Jack Fingleton (a close friend of Jardine's, as was Bill O'Reilly, which may be surprising to some given DRJ's reputation) to visit Oz as a representative of the Scottish Australian Company. Jardine hesitated, for the obvious reasons, but Fingleton assured him that his countrymen were "a noisome (sic) lot, but quick to forgive & forget and to offer to 'come and have a beer, mate'".
A reunion lunch was arranged with then PM Menzies, with Larwood, Mailey, Bardsley & Oldfield also in attendance. From all accounts is was a convivial affair, with jokes made about "bodyline" without embarrassment. In Jardine's own words he was treated as "an old so-an-so who got away with it".
Now this may simply be an instance of time healing all, but does suggest that DRJ was certainly respected by his contemporaries, with perhaps one notable exception: DGB. For all Sir Don's qualities as a batter his personal qualities are perhaps less worthy. He would never acknowledge Larwood as the very good bowler he was, nor Jardine as a worthy opponent; he was ruthless, certainly, but not unfair.
Such was DGB's standing in his later years in Oz as a living demi-god it's no surprise that his view of DRJ has become the accepted received wisdom.