Extract - The Five Mile Press
Transcription
Extract - The Five Mile Press
FAVOURITE FROM LAUGHS & LEGENDS TO SLEDGES & STUFF-UPS KEN PIESSE THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 3 2/07/14 1:58 PM The Five Mile Press Pty Ltd 1 Centre Road, Scoresby Victoria 3179 Australia www.fivemile.com.au Part of the Bonnier Publishing Group www.bonnierpublishing.com Copyright © Ken Piesse, 2014 All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted by any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher. First published 2014 Printed in Australia at Griffin Press. Only wood grown from sustainable regrowth forests is used in the manufacture of paper found in this book. Page design and typesetting by Shaun Jury Typeset in Adobe Caslon 11.5/15 Cover design by Luke Causby, Blue Cork Cartoons by Paul Harvey Endpapers: Country Cricket by Christine Atkins, www.christineatkins.com.au National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-Publication entry Piesse, Ken, author. Favourite cricket yarns : from laughs and legends to sledges and stuff-ups / Ken Piesse. ISBN: 9781760060305 (hardback) Includes bibliographical references and index. Cricket–Anecdotes. 796.358 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 4 2/07/14 1:58 PM Contents � Foreword by Ricky Pontingvii Author’s Introduction 1 1 Amazing & Mostly True 9 2 Bad Boys 51 3 Bloopers, Gaffes, Quips & Sledges 69 4 Laughs 95 5 Legends 135 6 Loves 187 7 Matches 197 8 Men in White 247 9 Stats 269 10 Stuff-ups 301 Author’s Acknowledgements 311 Bibliography312 Index317 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 5 2/07/14 1:58 PM Foreword by Ricky Ponting � I was destined to be a cricketer. I never wanted to be anything else. Mowbray Cricket Club was my home away from home. I was in my element sitting in the rooms among the players and their gear, listening to their banter. When everyone had gone out to field I’d pick up a bat and play some strokes, imagining I was in the middle at Bellerive, or even better, at the Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG). My Dad would take me to all sorts of games, from club to Sheffield Shield matches. For a few years I worked the scoreboard at the NTCA Ground in Launceston. I felt like I had the most important job in the world, especially if there was a Shield game on. Mowbray picked me in their firsts when I was fourteen, a game I still recall fondly for a sharp catch at gully. It was a full throttle cut shot and I just thrust out my hand and miraculously it stuck. Our wicketkeeper Richard Soule dashed across and picked me up in a bear hug and told me it was as good a catch as he’d ever seen. You can imagine how I felt after that. He was keeping regularly for Tasmania back then and the guy I’d caught, Richard Bennett, was a regular in the Tassie top-order. Yes, that was a good day . . . At school, my mates would ask me what I wanted to be. It was a silly question really. I was going to be a cricketer. Full stop. And other than working as a groundsman at Scotch Oakburn vii THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 7 2/07/14 1:58 PM FAVOURITE CRICKET YARNS College for a few months in my mid-teens, that’s what I’ve been ever since. I was telling the story of my early days to a gathering at the MCG late last year when I was made Patron of the Australian Cricket Society (ACS). Among the crowd, sitting close to me in the front row, dressed in whites and a cricket shirt, was a young boy. He was clutching his bat, just as I used to when I was a similar age. I stopped what I was saying and said to him, ‘You know, I was just like you . . . exactly like you. Going everywhere in my whites . . . hoping one of the older guys wouldn’t show up so I could get onto the field . . . anything to be involved.’ He was only knee-high, but I could tell how passionate he was about the game. Later I picked up his bat. ‘Feels pretty good,’ I said. And it did. One of the things I admire about the ACS is its involvement in the scholarship scheme run by Bryce McGain and his Elite Cricket Academy in Melbourne. The course revolves around the fast-tracking of twelve and thirteen-year-olds, giving them the best possible coaching and experiences. When I turned sixteen, I was fortunate enough to have some time at the Australian Cricket Academy under Rod Marsh. Along with Andy Gower, another junior from Launceston, I spent a fortnight in Adelaide on a scholarship organised by the Century Club in Launceston. You need skill, passion, commitment and luck to be a cricketer and having that time in Adelaide under one of the greats in Rod was a real eye-opener. I realised a career in cricket was a possibility after all, and I still thank those businessmen in Launceston who were so generous in backing me. It’s a story I never get tired of repeating. Cricket people are good people – and they all have a story to tell, as I found flicking through some of the early manuscript pages for Favourite Cricket Yarns, Ken Piesse’s latest book. In between being president of the Australian Cricket Society and captain of the Kingston Saints third XI, mentoring and encouraging young players, Ken lives, eats and breathes cricket like few I know. viii THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 8 2/07/14 1:58 PM FOREWORD Ricky Ponting with Ken Piesse at the launch of Ricky's autobiography in Melbourne late in 2013 Most of you are likely to have at least one of Ken’s books in your libraries. This is his forty-ninth cricket book and his sixty-eighth overall on cricket and football. That’s a fair innings. There’s a great blend of characters in this one, from the current crop to the oldies-but-goodies. I especially like David Lloyd’s pun at Lord’s when he was worried about the press-box lift stopping again (see ‘Handsome but not handsome enough’ in chapter 4). Ken helps give everyone the best seat in the house, bringing us all closer to the action, with the emphasis on his amusing anecdotes. Like me, he thinks cricket is the best game ever invented and I wish him well with his latest creation. Ricky Ponting Melbourne ix THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 9 2/07/14 1:58 PM Author’s Introduction � T he great game of cricket charms us in so many ways, from matches and events to the mates we make. I revel in the backroom stories, like Tony Greig failing to recognise the Don at Adelaide Airport at the start of the Rest of the World tour and shrinking in embarrassment when Garry Sobers arrived and said, ‘Sir Donald . . . what an honour.’ And Greigy, on his UK debut at Hove, being caught plumb in front, first or second ball, only inexplicably to be given not out. It just so happened that the umpire and Greig’s Dad had been drinking buddies in Queenstown . . . Terry Jenner told me about a prison cricket match at Waikerie, during his stint in jail. T J said, ‘Our team had the best record of all: a murderer, a drug pusher, two embezzlers, a couple of bank robbers and a few blokes who’d tried to diddle social security!’ So upset was rookie captain Ian Craig by his poor form in South Africa that he went to fellow selectors Neil Harvey and Peter Burge in mid-tour and said he was stepping down. ‘No way will I be a part of that,’ said Harvey. ‘No touring captain has ever dropped himself. Forget it, you’re playing.’ An eighteen-year-old Ian Chappell, motoring to his first ever ‘A’ grade ton in Adelaide club cricket, had just entered the 80s when the second new ball was taken. Immediately pulling Sheffield Shield paceman Alan Hitchcox for 4, he said with typical Chappell scorn, ‘Fancy you playing for South Australia.’ 1 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 1 2/07/14 1:58 PM FAVOURITE CRICKET YARNS Hitchcox extended his run and tried to knock Chappell’s block off only to watch his next three balls clatter into the fence at backward square. The shorter he bowled, the harder Chappell hooked. In four balls, Chappell’s score advanced from 84 to 100. Within a week he’d been chosen by his state. Years ago, flighting one of my loopy leg breaks at the MCG, I had David Hookes caught on the boundary from a steepling hit which would have surely gone over the old Southern Stand had it still been standing, a strong southerly bringing the ball back into the arena for cricket administrator David Richards to take a lovely outfield catch just metres from Bay 13. Hookes and I were in at a radio studio years later and he signed a copy of his autobiography for me: To Ken . . . Remember when: Hookes, c. Richards, b. Piesse. Best wishes, David Hookes Having a Test player sign one of his books for me has always been a thrill. At the Centenary Test match, armed with four newly acquired Percy Fender tour books, I approached Percy, then eighty-four and in a wheelchair, and asked if he would mind signing them. He was all but blind and had brought his teenage grandson with him to be his eyes. ‘I’d be glad to,’ he said. And in tiny writing he wrote his name on each one. Keith Miller was the most vibrant of souls. We lived in adjoining suburbs. One morning I dropped in for a cuppa and he was in tears. ‘You know I should have captained Australia,’ he said. ‘Don Bradman ruined my life . . . and you can quote me, Ken.’ ‘Of course you should have captained, Nugget,’ I said, ‘but so should’ve Shane Warne. You two had a bit extra happening in your lives . . . and didn’t you bowl a bouncer which almost poleaxed the Don in his testimonial match?’ Within minutes Nugget was laughing again. He respected 2 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 2 2/07/14 1:58 PM AUTHOR’S INTRODUCTION Bradman’s talents but they were poles apart personality-wise. Keith liked to win, but not at all costs like the Don. Another morning Nugget rang. He’d just been watching Andrew Denton’s Enough Rope. His mate Michael Parkinson had been the interviewee, rather than the interviewer. ‘And guess what, Ken,’ he said, ‘guess what Parky said last night?’ ‘I’ve got no idea Nugget, what did he say?’ ‘Out of all the actors, the actresses, the heads of state, the really important people . . . guess who Parky said was his all-time hero?’ ‘I’ve got no idea, Nug. Who did he say?’ ‘Me,’ he said. ‘Me . . . little old Nugget!’ � I’ve been fortunate to see cricket from Bridgetown to Bellerive, Johannesburg to Cardiff and St John’s to Sydney. My fiftieth birthday in 2005 coincided with Day 4 of the fabulous Edgbaston Test, where Australia edged within a boundary of a Boys’ Own annual victory in the most dramatic Ashes Test of them all. Each time our Australian Cricket Society tours for the Ashes, we fixture at least one game in England – just to say we’ve played there. From historic Bath to tiny Meopham and its triangular-shaped village green with pubs on two of the corners, it has been a wonderful journey. While never more than a club-standard cricketer, I’ve also played at some of the major Australian capital city venues from the Melbourne Cricket Ground, the Gabba and the Adelaide Oval through to Arundel and one particularly memorable afternoon at Royal Ascot, where we opposed the Thames Valley Gents, including their Aussie ring-ins Steve Waugh, Dave Gilbert and Brad McNamara. The spread at lunch was so enormous and quality wines so abundant that the main interval went for an hour and a half. I was bowling in tandem with Paul Jackson, who was 3 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 3 2/07/14 1:58 PM FAVOURITE CRICKET YARNS Victoria’s spinner before Shane Warne. ‘Jacko’ ribbed me before lunch for not shining the ball. He bowled the first over after the break, another maiden and tossing it to me said, ‘Try and keep it nice.’ Waugh was on strike and struck my six balls, all same-paced leggies, for 6 4 6 4 6 6 . . . 32 for the over. The first only just cleared mid-on’s head. The rest were straight out of the screws. Halfway through the over, Nigel Murch at short cover started laughing, ‘I’ve never seen anything like this before.’ You can imagine the state of the ball after that. Just a few days earlier at his host club Amersham, Jacko and I had shared a 30-run last-wicket stand which had taken us across the line. Their No. 4 was a girl who played beautifully. She drove my very first ball straight back at me so hard that my fingers were still tingling two overs later. While she made only a dozen or so, it was all with classical, copybook stroke play. After the game, still on a high, I approached her and said, ‘You know, you are very good. You should really try and make something of yourself.’ Our wicketkeeper Mark Foster was within earshot. ‘Piessey, you bloody idiot,’ he said. ‘That’s Jan Brittin. She opens for England!’ Despite the Waugh mauling and being hit just below the breastbone by a Merv Hughes bouncer in the MCG indoor one day after Dean Jones called, ‘Six to win!’, it wasn’t until I passed fifty years of age that I seriously discounted my chances of wearing the baggy green. Until then I lived Bert Ironmonger’s dream. First selected at forty-six, he played through until he was fifty. My best cricket had been played in the subbies at Port Melbourne, famous for its wide, white wicket and scones, jam and cream at tea breaks. An extra plateful would always be saved for our opening bowler, VFA footy legend Vic ‘Stretch’ Aanensen, who despite his intimidating physique bowled slowish, into-the-wind outies off a dainty nine-pace run-up. Whenever he conceded his first 4, I’d start warming-up. I was always on from his end. 4 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 4 2/07/14 1:58 PM AUTHOR’S INTRODUCTION HARD NUTS: Port Melbourne CC, 1986–87 subbie premiers. Back row, left to right: Gary Phillips, Peter Vesty (scorer), Lew Coyle, myself, Vic Aanensen, Robert Bevilacqua, Sheik Bogdanovic, Jimmy Earle (secretary/barman); sitting: Shane Davidson, Robert Tinsley, Graeme Anderson (vice-captain), Bob Allen (president), Phil OMeara (captain), Paul Crocker, Darren Duscher, Teddy Wale (12th man) Trying to bowl competitive leggies while juggling a career as a sportswriter and commentator wasn’t easy. One Sunday, still with my make-up on, I dashed straight to Williamstown from the Channel 7 television studios in Dorcas Street where I’d been presenting the cricket segment on World of Sport. ‘You bloody poofta sportswriting prick,’ was the general consensus. Our wicketkeeper Ken Spicer was the only one who didn’t drink. Once on tour, our bus was stopped by the boys-inblue and ‘Spice’, who always drove, was asked when he’d last had a drink. ‘Twenty-two . . . maybe twenty-three years ago,’ he said. The Port boys played hard on and off the field. They were great family men, but Saturdays were ‘play’ days – rain, hail or shine. All-day card schools were the norm once play was abandoned, a common occurrence most October Saturdays in the late ’80s. On Thursday nights, the wharfies would come in for a drink with all sorts of contraband straight off the docks. 5 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 5 2/07/14 1:58 PM FAVOURITE CRICKET YARNS For years I did my Christmas shopping at Port, from belowcost wrist watches and perfume to remote-control cars. A bloke named Barry would come in, remove his jacket to reveal six or seven watches all strapped to his wrist and forearm. ‘Which one do you like, Guru?’ he’d ask. Because I hailed from blue-blood Beaumaris, a Liberalloving affluent area half an hour south, the boys reckoned I had money to burn and for larks would throw lit fifty-dollar bills out the car window on the way down to our Thursday night pizza stop, Topolinos in Fitzroy Street. They loved it whenever I happened to be bowling and a tailender walked in with one of those big Stuart Surridge Jumbo bats. Once a leftie hit me over the small scoreboard at Port and I snarled down the wicket, ‘That’s just a slog pal!’ ‘Hang on a minute, Guru,’ said Stretch from slip. ‘Have a look how far it’s gone!’ Our opening bat ‘Macca’ was camped under a skier right on the pickets at square leg one day. He had the safest pair of hands and I’d put it down as a wicket when somehow not only did he manage to miss it, but it also donged him on the shoulder and bounced over the fence for 6. There were twenty-eight teams in Subbies, the championship being decided between the two top-ranked teams from East Group and West Group. We beat Preston and Sunshine on consecutive weekends to enter the championship final. Sunshine lasted only until 2 p.m. on the Sunday, and the boys went troppo, as if we’d just won the premiership. ‘One more to go boys,’ I said, cautioning them. ‘Let’s hold the celebrations for next week.’ ‘No, Guru,’ they said, ‘it’s the Grand Final! We’ve won it!’ That afternoon I made the mistake of trying to go pot-forpot with Stretch and pulled out after ten. Stretch was downing them like they were waters, while I was seeing double. Having reluctantly switched clubs, closer to home, I played against my old mates at Port. I batted three and was bounced first, second and third ball and run out at the other end having failed to score. ‘Serves you right you poofta %#*&ing 6 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 6 2/07/14 1:58 PM AUTHOR’S INTRODUCTION sportswriter,’ said Stretch, walking back with me almost all the way to the dugout. I’ve always been in the company of cricketers, ever since I started scoring for the Beaumaris first XI at the age of nine. The captain John Chambers lived up the road and would pick me up. So keen was I that once I decided to have four different colours for the 1s, 2s, 3s and 4s. Our book that day looked like a colour-in and Mr Chambers politely asked me to just stick to the lead pencil. If I wasn’t good enough to play cricket with the best, I wanted to still be there around them. Writing and commentating provided that opportunity. A young Shane Warne was making heads turn in Melbourne and I bowled down to a second XI game at the Albert to do a story. It was right on lunchtime and Shane obligingly agreed to bowl a few leg breaks in the centre for my newspaper the Sunday Press. I acted as the wicketkeeper at the other end and the ball hummed at me, veering in midcourse and spinning violently sideways like it had hit a redback. I took it over the stumps in my bare hands and can still recall the stinging sensation in my fingers. One year I was assisting Shane’s coach Terry Jenner with his autobiography, TJ Over the Top: Prison, Cricket & Warnie. At midnight on the first night, talking about his shame of going to jail, T J broke down and started blubbing like a baby. His partner Ann said, ‘Terry, just tell Ken like you told me . . . don’t leave anything out.’ The three chapters we did on Terry’s experiences in the Big House were truly compelling and helped to make the book a bestseller. Shane, Terry’s star pupil, kindly provided the foreword. Around that time my own leg break had so lost its fizz, I was struggling to even dismiss the ageing practice captain at Frankston. Out of desperation, I emailed T J. Within twentyfour hours came the reply: ‘Master,’ he wrote, ‘have you considered retiring?’ 7 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 7 2/07/14 1:58 PM FAVOURITE CRICKET YARNS � I’m still in the subbies, but these days exclusively playing thirds beside my old captain from Port, Phil O’Meara. He comes in at No. 4 and despite being in his sixties, is still our champion bat. One recent late summer’s Saturday at Oakleigh, we elected to bat on what I thought was a hard, flat wicket but turned out to be a bouncy, spiteful thing. Phil and I had worked out that we’d see out their opening bowler, a leftie who swung it in at pace and we did. But their first change, another leftie, turned out to be faster again and as challenging as anything either of us had faced in twenty years. Phil got a first-baller and I never even saw the hat-trick ball, which whizzed past the off stump at high speed. Apparently the kid was coming back from injury and just testing himself in the lower grades. It was like a dodgem alley there for a while and at each change of overs, grateful to have survived, I met my partner, smiled and said, ‘I’m still alive.’ One final yarn from me before we start with a whole array of my particular favourites, old and new. We were playing Essendon thirds at Adrian Butler Oval one year and one kid, their opener, scratched and edged his way to a most unsatisfactory 50. As his mates were applauding, I walked past and told him he had nothing to be proud of – ‘it’s probably the worst %#*&ing 50 in the history of the game!’ When he reached three figures, to more rapturous cheering, he acknowledged me at mid-on, saying without my help, he could never have done it. He went straight into the seconds, made another ton and was playing firsts by the season-end. Amazing – and true! Ken Piesse Mt Eliza 8 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 8 2/07/14 1:58 PM 1 Amazing & Mostly True � P Enter the Babe erth Scorcher Craig Simmons was the ‘Babe Ruth’ of Big Bash III in Australia in 2013–14 with some extraordinary smiting, including the fastest century in Big Bash League (BBL) history, from just thirty-nine balls. The generously proportioned opener was unstoppable, like Victor Trumper, Viv Richards and Chris Gayle rolled into one. However, during the sudden-death semifinal back in his original hometown Sydney, Simmons, 5 from fourteen balls, was struggling to hit anything in the middle. So out of sorts was he that Sydney Sixers wicketkeeper Daniel Smith strolled past and quipped he was heading for ‘the double’: the slowest 50 to go with the fastest 100 in BBL history! Reviving remarkably, thirty-nine balls and a record-equalling eleven 6s later, Simmons was 102 not out. As a teenager, the Sydney-born-and-bred lefthander was a member of Australian’s Under 19 World Cup winning team in New Zealand (2001–02), alongside the likes of Cameron White, George Bailey, Xavier Doherty and Shaun Marsh, before his career meandered. BIG-HITTER: Craig Simmons 9 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 9 2/07/14 1:58 PM FAVOURITE CRICKET YARNS � S A second chance aturday, 28 May 2011, central London: Cricket journeyman Chris Rogers was stunned. He’d just been told his contract was being discontinued. It wasn’t about his runs. It was purely an age thing. Victoria was desperate to develop a new batch of Test cricketers. Rising thirty-four, his best was behind him. Life membership of Australia’s One-Test Club seemed a gilt-edged guarantee. He wheeled from a Saturday brunch meeting with Victoria’s selection chairman John MacWhirter in an absolute daze. It felt like he’d been on an all-night bender. ‘It’s not a nice feeling being told you’re not wanted anymore,’ Rogers said. ‘I couldn’t believe what I was hearing. I was gob smacked actually. I was told someone had to go. I was the oldest so I was the first one out the back door.’ The future, MacWhirter had told him, was all about young sters like Peter Handscomb, Glenn Maxwell and project player Alex Keath, the lofty teenager from the Goulburn Valley who’d chosen cricket ahead of AFL. There was considerable heat from the national selectors to go with the young ones. A rookie kid from the southern suburbs by the name of Agar was also considered particularly promising. Despite the credits Rogers had built in Victoria’s enviable run of silverware, he was told negotiation was pointless. An arthroscopy operation had cut his appearances by more than half in the season just gone. The decision had been made. He wasn’t part of the first tranche of major contracts. And in all likelihood, he was warned, he may not be part of the squad at all. As he waited for a tube connection at Paddington, Rogers rehashed the painful conversation word for word, shaking his head in disbelief. Rogers didn’t blame MacWhirter or coach Greg Shipperd who’d been so welcoming and supportive since his move from the West in 2008. It was the system. ‘I couldn’t understand why they were wanting to get rid of the senior 10 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 10 2/07/14 1:58 PM AMAZING & MOSTLY TRUE players who were creating the standard in the competition,’ he said. ‘Young guys who hadn’t achieved anything in grade yet alone state cricket were on a better retainer than I was. In England if you are the best player, you get paid the best. Age is irrelevant. It was very disheartening. I still felt I was one of the better players in the state competition. There were good young players around but I was in the XI and still doing a good job.’ Finishing the 2011 English county season at Middlesex with another 1000-run haul, Rogers toyed with the prospect of spending the southern summer in either South Africa or New Zealand. ‘But neither were particularly great options,’ he said. ‘I was even thinking of getting into management. I’d done a negotiation course. I was seriously thinking about life after cricket.’ Then, totally out of the blue, came a phone call. Ashton Agar had been lured to Western Australia. Suddenly there was a place open. Agar’s place. Did he want it? ‘It was the last spot in the squad and I was on the minimum contract,’ Rogers said. ‘Once I got that contract I think I was still one of the first players picked. Nothing changed there. It was another season playing cricket. And that’s still the ultimate for me. I was still extremely grateful to have got that last-minute opportunity. I treated it as a bonus. I tried to maintain my standards, keep fighting and do better than everybody else. That’s what drives most sportsmen to out-perform other guys. That’s what I wanted to do, show them that I deserved that contract.’ Twelve months later, Chris Rogers joined Victoria’s standin captain Andrew McDonald and his Bushranger teammates at the luggage carousel at Perth airport – the Sheffield Shield schedule having started a fortnight early to accommodate the Big Bash. He was thinking only of the match ahead . . . and hopefully inflicting a little more pain on his old state. Since shifting, he’d averaged 70 against the West with three of his four centuries coming at the WACA Ground. 11 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 11 2/07/14 1:59 PM FAVOURITE CRICKET YARNS While some around him may have pigeonholed him as purely a state-level player, he’d never conceded, even when he missed selection for Australia ‘A’, one of the few opportunities for fringe players to oppose the visiting internationals. His rocksolid technique and focus were rivalled by few, but he simply wasn’t on the national radar and knew it. He started the domestic season modestly before finding some of his renowned touch in mid-summer, scoring three centuries in four games, all in first innings. But the Vics lost four of their last five games to fall out of the Sheffield Shield final that had seemed theirs until the crucial final fortnight. Having played most of the Ryobi Cup one-dayers, Rogers missed a place in the final against Queensland. The consummate tradesman, he’d again aggregated nearly 1000 runs, including 700-plus in the Shield. At national level, after a mixed home season, the Australians were tumbling to an embarrassing 4–0 defeat in India on cratered, brown pitches that looked like moonscapes. Offfield tensions were high, especially after coach Mickey Arthur insisted on the suspension of four leading players in mid-series. With their own inner communication crumbling, the Australians were fast becoming a laughing stock. Rogers was preparing for another UK stint, his tenth, when he fielded another life-changing phone call. It was Australia’s selection chairman John Inverarity. He’d been chosen in Australia’s Ashes XVI, alongside fellow openers David Warner and Ed Cowan, who’d averaged 45 in the extended summer. Phil Hughes and Shane Watson, who’d started the season late with injury, were also being named. Far from looking upon the selection of a veteran as muchdeserved superannuation for services rendered, Inverarity considered Rogers’ experience and ability to bat time against Jimmy Anderson and co. an invaluable asset, especially in con ditions so familiar to him. After all, he’d been spending his offseasons in England since 2004. Australia had been humbled 3–1 in the Ashes battle last time around. He had a key role to play. 12 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 12 2/07/14 1:59 PM AMAZING & MOSTLY TRUE Rogers couldn’t help but grin. Six or so months earlier he’d been told he was not to be re-contracted at domestic level. It had taken a national calamity in India and at home for the selectors to look past the younger ones. Rogers unpacked his one-andonly baggy green and prepared for the totally unexpected new chapter of his cricketing life. Three days into the tour, in late June, Arthur was sacked, having just told Rogers he was going to open in the first Test. ‘I thought, here we go,’ Rogers said. ‘Here’s another opportunity to miss out.’ Australia had named an immediate replacement in Darren Lehmann. Other than being left-handers, Rogers couldn’t see any other similarities between himself and Australia’s new leader. Rogers was compact, gritty and workmanlike. Lehmann had been a gifted shotmaker with more skill than just about anybody Rogers had ever opposed. He wasn’t sure if Lehmann truly rated him . . . or more importantly, even wanted him. ‘We got down to Somerset and Darren came up to me room and told me I wasn’t playing in that game, but I was going to open in the Test [alongside Shane Watson],’ said Rogers. ‘It was an amazing feeling. The Test was still two weeks away. I was so nervous and a bit scared about what was going to happen. But I was so happy to know that I was going to be given the opportunity I’d wanted for so long.’ A change at the top had been necessary; David Warner was not in immediate contention, having partied too long after the first of three ill-fated one-dayers several weeks earlier. Lehmann needed batsmen to bat time. After Rogers and Watson, Ed Cowan was to go in at No. 3. They wanted to wear down Anderson, Stuart Broad and co. and make it easier for the strokemakers coming in mid-list. Rogers had the opportunity and it was up to him how many more Tests he played: one, two or all five. Not only did he play all five, he broke through for his first Test century – and in all made four Test 100s in the extended summer of his life. It was a magnificent bonus for someone who 13 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 13 2/07/14 1:59 PM FAVOURITE CRICKET YARNS just eighteen months earlier had been told he was no longer wanted . . . See also: A long time coming, page 271 � B Sorry, what was that . . . atsmen didn’t need reminding they were in a high-stakes cricket match when opposed to the one-Test Australian off spinner Dan ‘Fiery’ Cullen. In Malaysia during an International Cricket Council (ICC) Champions Trophy game against the West Indies, Brian Lara was on strike and after a flashy shot and just-as-flashy smile back down the wicket, Cullen exploded, ‘You cocky prick!’ The rest of his over went for 6 4 4 4 4 – 22 in all. � M Pleasant interlude ike Hussey loved batting with Ricky Ponting. Invariably he’d make it look so easy. In Adelaide during the Test in which England made 6-551, declared and lost, the pair were batting when, at a drink’s break, Ponting motioned to Hussey to look back to the scoreboard end where a well-endowed young lady was on the shoulders of a man, with the crowd all around her urging her to whip her top off. She did, revealing another top and then another top and another. Everyone was laughing, particularly Mike and Ricky. � A Not-so-super Sachin ustralia had just beaten India in a one-dayer at the Sydney Cricket Ground (SCG) and as the players shook hands at the end, Michael Clarke noticed that Sachin Tendulkar was absent . . . and not for the first time. 14 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 14 2/07/14 1:59 PM AMAZING & MOSTLY TRUE Racing up the steps to the Indian dressing-room, he found Tendulkar packing his kit at the back of the room and asked if he was going to shake hands with the Australians. Tendulkar said sorry, he’d forgotten . . . Clarke had made his point. � F You choose, Symo . . . ew were more credulous – or as good company – as Queensland and Australian all-rounder Andrew ‘Roy’ Symonds. ‘Symo’ believed just about everything ever said to him. Teammates loved spinning him the tallest of stories and watching him react. The Queenslanders were in Adelaide and after training, Symonds and his roomie, Scott Prestwidge, opted to put their feet up and watch one of their hotel’s in-house movies. Symonds was entrusted with the task of selection while Prestwidge cleaned up. But upon hearing a number of groans and carry-on from Symo, Prestwidge re-emerged. ‘What’s up?’ he asked. ‘Oh mate,’ said Symonds. ‘There are some sick people out there. You press ten and get comedies. Press twenty and get action movies. Press thirty and get thrillers. Forty is family movies, but then listen to this – you press fifty and you get “disabled” adult movies . . . who the hell watches that sort of stuff ?!’ HEART OF GOLD: Andrew Symonds 15 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 15 2/07/14 1:59 PM FAVOURITE CRICKET YARNS � M You have to love him . . . ike Hussey and Symo were in the Hay Street Mall in Perth when they passed a lady selling raffle tickets. ‘What’s the first prize?’ asked Symo. ‘One thousand dollars cash.’ ‘Okay, I’ll be in that,’ he said, reaching for his wallet. The pair walked off again before Symo stopped and went back to the lady. ‘When’s it drawn?’ ‘On the thirty-first of the month.’ ‘Right,’ said Symo, ‘I’ll be ex pecting a call on the thirty-second.’ � S One-line magic everal of Symo’s one-liners have stood the test of time, his MR CRICKET: Mike Hussey old teammates particularly loving these three: • ‘Kasper, what’s the RSPCA on your wedding again?’ • ‘What’s that movie with Jerry Maguire called again?’ • ‘What’s your mother’s maiden name, Roy?’ ‘It’s Barbara.’ � A It’s true (1) couple of players were looking at Symo’s favourite Gray Nicolls bat and asked him what the initials ‘S W ’ stood for on the shoulder of the bat. ‘Swing Hard,’ said Symo. See also: Giving it some Larry Dooley, page 202 16 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 16 2/07/14 1:59 PM AMAZING & MOSTLY TRUE � It’s true (2) T he Queenslanders were playing a one-dayer at the Gabba and the team was asked if it was okay if a player from the local Deaf Cricket Association could come in and meet the team. ‘Yeah, no problems at all,’ said Symo, ‘so long as he brings that ball along with him that rattles!’ � Party town I t was Shane Watson’s twenty-fourth birthday at Cardiff, the ultimate party town where the hens’ nights out are even more riotous than the mens’. Symo had stayed out longer than the rest and reported for duty the following morning against Bangladesh looking dishevelled and feeling even shabbier. The team did a casual lap and some stretches, Symonds leaning on a wheelie bin on an incline and putting his head down. It went into immediate motion and Symo kept hanging onto it, head down, oblivious to the smirks from teammates. Captain Ricky Ponting and coach John Buchanan were unimpressed though. Symonds was dropped and the Australians were beaten in one of the great upsets. � A It could only happen in Ireland . . . fter a year as a guest professional at the local cricket club in tiny Ferguslie, Mike Hussey told his affable Irish hosts that he’d loved his time, apologised for not making as many runs as everyone had wanted and said that err . . . sorry . . . he wouldn’t be returning. ‘That’s all right,’ chorused the Ferguslie head honcho. ‘We’re after a fast bowler anyway next year.’ Hussey immediately recommended West Australian squad 17 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 17 2/07/14 1:59 PM FAVOURITE CRICKET YARNS teammate Mark Atkinson, a strapping six-foot-plus all-rounder who could really let them fly. Everyone shook hands and Hussey left them to do the fine-tuning. Six months later, a proud-as-punch Ferguslie deputation gathered at Glasgow airport to welcome Mark Atkinson and were amazed when a diminutive figure, no more than 165 centimetres (five foot five), walked through the transit lounge carrying, among many things, his wicketkeeping gear! ‘Hi,’ he said. ‘I’m Mark Atkinson.’ The boys from Ferguslie had been negotiating with an outside agent and between them all, they’d recruited the Tasmanian Mark Atkinson! Amazing . . . and true! The smaller Atkinson was to have a fine year, averaging 66 and scoring two 100s – an improvement on the previous professional! He also kept wickets and bowled a bit. � S Rapid rise o unknown was Jason Gillespie when chosen as a replace ment for Craig McDermott at the 1996 World Cup on the Subcontinent that Australian coach Bobby Simpson and manager Col Egar went out to the airport to pick him up, armed with a photograph of him, just to make sure they collected the right person! � M One to remember atthew Nicholson, the 24-year-old paceman, was sitting on a plane waiting for take-off from Perth to his home town Sydney for Christmas when a hostess approached and told him he needed to get off . . . ‘You have a cricket match to play in.’ Nicholson immediately thought it was a one-day game 18 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 18 2/07/14 1:59 PM AMAZING & MOSTLY TRUE for Western Australia – a match he may have inadvertently forgotten when planning his mid-summer holidays. ‘I borrowed a mobile from the bloke sitting next to me, rang the WACA and spoke with [secretary] Jane Parsons and she confirmed, yes, there was a game I was required for . . . I’d been included in the Australian team for the Christmas Test in Melbourne!’ he said. ‘Jason Gillespie had dropped out and I was to be his replacement. At that stage I’d played only eight or nine first-class games and had only just got back into cricket after a lay-off [with chronic fatigue syndrome].’ Nicholson took four wickets on debut, a match memorable for England’s fighting 12-run win in just three playing days. It was to be his one and only Australian appearance – but as he said, ‘If you only ever get to play one game, it’s hard to go past Melbourne and the Boxing Day Test. Given the history of my health, it was particularly special.’ � S Fancy a beer, sir? o humid and sticky was it in Chandigarh one Test match morning that waiters balancing large trays of ice-cold, frothing beers awaited the arrival of the English press contingent. Wishing not to upset their hosts, every glass was emptied . . . � U Gen ‘Y’ boy nimpressed by the smell of Australia’s dressing-room in Antigua one World Cup, Shane Watson lit a scented candle and was ribbed about it for the rest of the campaign. Further questions were asked when Watson dared have his hair done before one Allan Border Medal count. 19 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 19 2/07/14 1:59 PM FAVOURITE CRICKET YARNS � I The greatest catch of all n the pantheon of cricket’s finest outfield catches, one stands supreme for me – Steve Waugh’s incredible one-hander behind the MCG members’ sightscreen during a day-night international in the New Year of 1989. With the West Indies chasing hard for a victory in a World Series Cup international, Roger Harper lofted a Craig McDermott slower ball unbelievably high and straight back over the umpire’s head. It was disappearing over the sightscreen – then a part of the field – as Steve Waugh sprinted from deep mid-off to within a step or two of the pickets and gathered it at full tilt . . . a miraculous piece of judgment and athleticism. The 66 000 fans present roared like it was a football grand final as Waugh re-emerged on the other side holding the ball triumphantly aloft. Len King, one of the officiating umpires, said once he saw Waugh disappear from the field of play, it should have been a call of ‘6’. But then he saw Waugh re-emerge from around the back of the sightscreen and did a quick re-think. ‘I wasn’t game to give it not out,’ he said. ‘I would have been lynched.’ Waugh hadn’t dared to initially track the skier, instead sprinting towards the sightscreen. Looking up instinctively, just at the right moment, there it was, the white ball against the black sky, dropping over the screen straight into his outstretched right hand! ‘Only then did I realise how close I was to running into the sightscreen or worse still, into Merv Hughes who had also been running for the ball from the other direction,’ he said. ‘It was the best single feeling I ever experienced in cricket.’ Waugh’s catch-of-a-lifetime turned the match, the Australians winning the game by 8 runs, their first win in fourteen matches at the MCG against the long-time world champions. 20 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 20 2/07/14 1:59 PM AMAZING & MOSTLY TRUE � Scary times days before the Australian team was due to depart to the JustSubcontinent for the 1987 World Cup, frontline all-rounder Simon ‘Scuba’ O’Donnell discovered a large lump on his rib cage. He immediately thought it could be a cancer. It was sore, but he had no intention of withdrawing from the squad. ‘I made some doctors do some horrible things to ensure I got to India,’ he told my colleague Jon Anderson. ‘I got an X-ray that showed I was missing a rib. The doctor was worried about it, but I was on a plane to India three days later. ‘But just two days into India not only did the big lump come back but it had a couple of partners. That’s when I thought I was in real strife.’ He still refused to confide in the Australian team doctor and it was only after the Australians won their semi that he dared tell coach Bobby Simpson. ‘It was pure selfishness, wanting to play,’ O’Donnell said. ‘I knew I was within a week of going home to find out what was wrong and it really frightened me. I had to talk to someone.’ O’Donnell had been ‘fined’ by playful teammates for not fully involving himself in the celebrations after the semifinal victory against Pakistan He duly appeared in the final, Australia won and within twenty-four hours of the plane landing in Melbourne, he was on the operating table. ‘As soon as I awoke, the surgeon John Bartlett was sitting on the end of my bed to tell me the bi-op was malignant. I was twenty-four and I had lymphoma. John found it hard to tell me and I found it hard to accept. ‘I had to ring Mum and Dad in Deniliquin to tell them there was some bad news. Somehow you float through it even though you are scared shitless.’ 21 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 21 2/07/14 1:59 PM FAVOURITE CRICKET YARNS O’Donnell recovered and was a fine and explosive all-rounder and leader for Victoria and played a total of eighty-seven One Day Internationals (ODIs) for Australia. � S Not quite a fairytale cuba O’Donnell had played the first of his six Tests two years earlier at Leeds. His parents had arrived from border town Deniliquin on the morning of the game and hightailed it to Headingley just as O’Donnell was walking in at No. 7. Thrilled to be there, they settled down to watch their son’s first innings in Test cricket. He was out first ball. In the second innings he took forty minutes to score his first run, but shared an 80-run stand with Wayne Phillips, making the O’Donnells’ forty-hour flight from ‘Deni’ a tad more rewarding . . . � A Wait your turn n exhausted and severely dehydrated Dean Jones was taken to a Madras hospital after his epic 210 in the first Test of 1986. Ferried straight to the emergency ward, Jones was shocked to see a man arrive, obviously seriously injured, and covered only by a cotton sheet which was drenched in blood. ‘What happened to ’im?’ ‘Oh, he just got hit by a lorry. He’s got two broken legs.’ ‘That guy looks worse than me,’ said Deano, ‘maybe you should treat him first . . .’ ‘No, no, you’re the cricketer.’ And the badly injured man had to wait. See also: Merv broke the mould, page 137 22 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 22 2/07/14 1:59 PM AMAZING & MOSTLY TRUE A HAPPIER TIME: Dean Jones in the Caribbean in 1984 Ray Titus M � Hero-worshipping ike Hussey was a right-hander until he turned seven and witnessed the epic Allan Border–Jeff Thomson lastwicket stand from Melbourne one Christmas. ‘A B’ was his new hero and he wanted to be a leftie just like him. The backyard battles with his brother Dave were always enthusiastic and ultra-competitive, but as long as M Hussey was allowed to be A B he was happy. � I Hard of hearing t was the Adelaide club derby: East Torrens v. West Torrens at Campbelltown. Westies’ skipper Andrew Sincock called correctly and said, ‘You can bat . . . after we’ve finished.’ The home captain didn’t hear the second part of it and when 23 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 23 2/07/14 1:59 PM FAVOURITE CRICKET YARNS the umpire walked into the rooms five minutes before the start, there were two sets of opening batsmen ready to walk out. � King Viv K nighted for his services to cricket and one of the five Wisden Cricketers of the Century, Viv Richards is heroworshipped everywhere he goes in Antigua. He has an amazing common touch, at Test match week mingling and chatting with all those barbecuing their flying fish at the back of the stands at St John’s, as though they are family. King Viv, Andy Roberts and Richie Richardson remain CARIBBEAN CONQUEROR: ‘King’ Viv Richards – the West Indies’ ultimate cricket hero 24 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 24 2/07/14 1:59 PM AMAZING & MOSTLY TRUE national heroes on the tiny island which is only 100 square miles with a population of just 80 000. So loved and revered is Viv that his entire marriage ceremony to his sweetheart Miriam was broadcast live on national radio. � K Shots of the season ing Viv was on his way to 150-plus in a one-dayer at the MCG one memorable Sunday and struck Dennis Lillee with such ferocity hard and flat over the top of mid-off that it bounced just once before skidding into the steel pickets in front of Bay 13. ‘Faaaaak!’ exclaimed non-striker Desmond Haynes. At Old Trafford in a one-day international, Richards made a then record 189 not out, including 93 of a tenth-wicket stand of 106 with Michael Holding, who contributed 12. There were fifteen overs to go when Holding entered to a reassuring, ‘Don’t worry, just hold on,’ from Richards. ‘For the few deliveries that he allowed me to face,’ Holding said, ‘I managed to follow his instructions. In the meantime, he fashioned an astonishing innings, even by his standards. When his adrenalin was pumping, he was capable of anything . . . a couple of his five 6s were the biggest I have ever seen, the shots of the season. ‘For one he simply put his left foot forward and swung his hefty bat through the line of a ball from Derek Pringle, the medium-pacer. It just kept going and going, clearing the stand at long-on and landing well beyond. It must have carried a good 120 yards. The second also cleared the stands and almost dropped onto the tracks of the nearby Warwick Street rail station . . . I cannot conceive any batsman of any era playing an innings of quite the same ferocious power and self-confidence as Richards did that day. England’s bowlers were powerless to stop him.’ See also: ‘Hold on for Viv’, page 76 25 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 25 2/07/14 1:59 PM FAVOURITE CRICKET YARNS � D An absolute one-off erek Randall had the sunniest of all personalities. From exuberant on-field handstands to doffing his cap midpitch having been sconed by Dennis Lillee, he was forever smiling. Impish, inventive, scatterbrained and highly strung, Randall was an absolute one-off, forever jumping around and playing to the crowd. One of the little-known stories behind his Ashes-winning 150 in 38-degree-Celcius heat in Sydney was how he went for a walk the night before, forgot the name of his hotel and where it was and didn’t lob back until 4 a.m! So grateful was he on his return that he insisted on making his roomie Ian Botham a cuppa and turning on the radio and TV as loud as he could – all the time singing at the top of his voice. Neither made it back to bed until dawn! � A ‘I’m fine lads, thanks’ shley Mallett was by far the clumsiest first-class cricketer of his era. Whether or not it had something to do with one leg being half an inch longer than the other, he was never sure, but he was a constant source of entertainment for his teammates. ‘One evening when a few of us were sitting around our lounge-room,’ said Ian Chappell, ‘Ashley knocked a few things over – as he usually does – dropped his cigarette a couple of times and was talking on the telephone as the rest of us left. ‘We were no sooner outside the door than there was a most alarming crash. Ash had slipped from his stool and managed to bring down two tables with him, both loaded with glasses which smashed all over the place. We dashed back into the room to find Ash sprawled under the couch, where the fall had deposited him, still chatting away on the telephone as though nothing had happened.’ 26 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 26 2/07/14 1:59 PM AMAZING & MOSTLY TRUE � M ‘Shut up, you rowdy bastard!’ allett was universally known as ‘Rowdy’, thanks to his old state captain Barry Jarman. Mallett was South Australia’s twelfth man and having poured the drinks after play, went and sat on a bench by himself and, as was his habit, said nothing. Jarman walked back and forth holding court and suddenly stopped and looked at Mallett: ‘Shut up, you rowdy bastard!’ The nickname stuck. � K No Hector erry O’Keeffe once walked out to face Bankstown’s tearaway Jeff Thomson without a ‘Hector Protector’ . . . ‘and lived to tell the tale’, said O’Keeffe before breaking into trademark gusts of laughter. � M Accidental hero any of swing king Bob Massie’s fairytale sixteen wickets on debut were taken from around the wicket, a revolu tionary move hailed as ‘genius’ by several of the Fleet Street press corp. Truth be known, Massie had only ever practised the move once, a fortnight earlier at Old Trafford, purely because the run-ups from his normal angle of over the wicket were substandard. With two ‘eight-fors’ at the home of cricket, Massie was hailed as cricket’s new sensation. Only once before had he produced a finer analysis, at Mt Lawley High when he took nine wickets in an innings against Kent Street, an opposition that included a teenage Rod Marsh. See also: Thirsty business, page 81 27 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 27 2/07/14 1:59 PM FAVOURITE CRICKET YARNS � A Brittle body lan Ward was briefly billed as England’s ’70s answer to legendary expressman Frank ‘Typhoon’ Tyson. However, injuries were to restrict Ward’s international career to just a handful of Tests and he exited his one-and-only Australian tour in 1970–71 prematurely after only a few weeks. As a teenager he told one interviewer, ‘I’ve pulled practically every muscle in my body. You name a muscle and I’ve pulled it. My back, my shoulders, my arms, my legs. The lot. For two years I had so many strains and injuries I hardly played at all.’ � K A Bradman bat for a fiver im Hughes bought his first cricket bat at the age of nine with money made by selling empty soft-drink bottles to the local general store in Pinjarra. ‘I still remember riding out on my bike, with my packed lunch, collecting the returnable bottles so I would have enough money to buy my first bat,’ he said. ‘It cost two pounds, ten shillings, the equivalent of five dollars today and I was thrilled. It was a Slazenger Don Bradman autographed bat and was the most treasured personal belonging I had . . . Wish I knew where it was now.’ � W Swallow dive est Australian John Inverarity had his wicket dislodged by Greg Chappell in a Shield game at the Adelaide Oval in 1969–70, after the delivery struck a low-flying swallow and deflected onto his stumps. Inverarity, who hadn’t scored, was almost off the ground when the umpires recalled him, saying his 28 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 28 2/07/14 1:59 PM AMAZING & MOSTLY TRUE dismissal was ‘not in the best interests of cricket’. He returned to the wicket and made 89. � E A tough nut ric ‘Fritz’ Freeman is still adamant he should have been included in the official Test records for an ‘assist’. In Melbourne during the Christmas Test of 1968–69, West Indian Seymour Nurse pulled a short delivery from John Gleeson straight at Freeman at short leg. He ducked, the ball ricocheting from his unprotected head at a 45-degree angle down to deep backward square and into the safe hands of Keith Stackpole. Other than a tender spot on his skull, Freeman was perfectly okay. His teammates were amazed he hadn’t suffered a serious injury. � I Having faith n times of stress during the volatile ’65 tour of the West Indies, devout Christian Brian Booth would repeat reassuring passages of scripture from Philippians 4:13: ‘I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me.’ Sometimes, though, his faith wasn’t enough, especially when big Charlie Griffith was zeroing in from wide of the sightscreens and chucking them at close to 160 kilometres per hour . . . � A It’s too early for a nightie . . . century at Lord’s is every young cricketer’s ambition. Barry Jarman still had his wicketkeeping pads on at the home of cricket in ’64 when Australia’s captain Bobby Simpson was castled third ball by the Marylebone Cricket Club’s (MCC’s) 29 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 29 2/07/14 1:59 PM FAVOURITE CRICKET YARNS David Brown. Next-man-in Ian Redpath was in the toilet, so Jarman went in – and made 105! ‘I was sitting having a cigarette,’ said Jarman. ‘I hadn’t taken off my pads. There was an enormous roar and “Simmo” was walking off. I went to see Redders and he was in the toilet only with a jock strap on. “Yeah you’d better go out,” said a few of the boys and I passed Simmo on the stairs in the Long Room. ‘Seeing me he said, “It’s too early for a night watchman.” ‘The next day at lunch I was 50-odd not out and I said to Simmo, “I didn’t have any trouble with David Brown . . . what was your problem?” ‘The boys including Simmo got a hell of a laugh out of that.’ Fifteen minutes after the break, Jarman had his coveted 100 and his first outside Australia. He’d added 42 including backto-back 6s from the leg spin of Robin Hobbs. One writer called Jarman’s post-lunch assault ‘blazing and brutal’. It remained a career highlight for the future one-time Test captain. The Lord’s fixture had been played the day after the fifth and final Test, in which Australia had forced a draw to retain the Ashes. There had been a rollicking celebration the night before and for the only time in his career, Simpson made a pair. Having won the toss and batted on the first morning, Simpson said to his partner Bill Lawry that ‘there were a few sore heads back in the rooms so we’d better really try and do all right’. Lawry couldn’t contain his mirth when Simpson was out straight away. ‘Good to see you trying,’ he said as his mate trudged past him back down the wicket to the pavilion. � I Regrets, thirty years on . . . an Redpath had just twenty minutes to prepare when told by captain Bobby Simpson he’d be making his Test debut – and opening the batting with fellow Victorian Bill Lawry in front of his hometown Melbourne crowd. 30 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 30 2/07/14 1:59 PM AMAZING & MOSTLY TRUE Frontline pair Norm O’Neill and Brian Booth had withdrawn from the XII with hand injuries, two Victorians in Redpath and Jack Potter taking their place. As a specialist opener, Redpath felt his chances of playing in the Test were slim given the formidable pairing at the head of the order of captain Simpson with Bill Lawry. ‘But Bobby said I was in and that I’d be opening up with Bill and he’d be dropping down to three,’ said Redpath. ‘I didn’t have a lot of time to think about it which was probably good. It helped to have “Phanto” [Lawry] out there with me. He was at his peak in those days and was a marvellous player.’ The pair added 219 for the first wicket, Redpath’s share 97. He admits he was fortunate early, as South African express Peter Pollock tested him with some short-pitched deliveries straight at his breastbone, one of which he lobbed to short leg where the world’s No. 1 fieldsman Colin Bland had just been stationed. ‘Unbelievably though, the ball went straight through his elbows. He didn’t even touch the ball. I would have been only 5 or 6 at the time. ‘I thought, I’m going to cop a few here. It’s either him or me. He bowled me another bouncer and I instinctively hooked it. I was never a hooker and it landed one bounce into the fence at backward square leg. I shook my head in surprise and while he bowled a few more short ones, he wasn’t into me to the same extent.’ Redpath said he would have been rapt to have made even 20 on his debut. ‘It wasn’t so painful then [to miss out on a century]. I think I was more disappointed thirty years on than I was at the time. With a little more patience, I might [have got there]. I was well in and seeing them well too.’ Despite his near-century, Redpath was Australia’s twelfth man in the next two Tests and dropped altogether from the fifth Test squad. 31 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 31 2/07/14 1:59 PM FAVOURITE CRICKET YARNS � R Impeccable timing ichie Benaud’s touring Australians were at the London Palladium and being announced to the patrons one-byone, Richie leading the way by standing and bowing with great dignity. Everything was going swimmingly as tour manager, the very august Mr Sydney Webb, QC, beaming with delight, was also acknowledged. He stood up, nodding his appreciation while Bill Lawry deftly parked a fart cushion on his seat . . . Down Syd sat to a huge #@@@TTTTT. The entire audience broke up, especially Bill. Syd lost count of the times talcum powder found its way into the insides of his pride-and-joy suede shoes. Another of the team’s funsters Frank Misson once hoisted his beloved briefcase via a rope onto a roof rafter and poor Syd spent almost an hour on a trestle table on his tippy-toes trying to knock it down with a broom. The more he repeated, ‘I’ll kill you Misson,’ the more the Australian players laughed, until everyone had tears in their eyes. Once the team was invited to a reception at Clarence House, home of the Queen Mother. It was a select group: the two teams, immediate management, the Queen, the Queen Mother, Prince Philip, Princes Margaret, Lord Snowdon and only one or two others. As always, Webb was revelling in all the pomp and pageantry and the ever-alert Misson managed to surreptitiously plant several of the Queen Mother’s silver spoons into the pocket of Webb’s dinner suit jacket. The team was lined up ready to say their goodbyes when Misson started apologising to the Queen Mother saying, ‘Sorry ma’am, but our manager Mr Webb . . . he has . . . err . . . he has this unfortunate habit at official occasions . . . of . . .’ ‘Really?’ she asked. Webb was bringing up the rear and as Misson and the others graciously thanked their hosts, Webb was re-buttoning his 32 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 32 2/07/14 1:59 PM AMAZING & MOSTLY TRUE ASHES TOURISTS: The 1961 team. Back row, left to right: A James (physiotherapist), Bob Simpson, Lindsay Kline, Ron Gaunt, Frank Misson, Bill Lawry, Ian Quick, Graham McKenzie, Peter Burge, Norman O’Neill, Barry Jarman, J Cameron (scorer); front: Brian Booth, Wally Grout, Alan Davidson, R Steele (treasurer), Richie Benaud (captain), S Webb (manager), Neil Harvey (vice-captain), Colin McDonald and Ken Mackay jacket and in QC-speak preparing a fitting farewell speech, talking about how the night SIGNING SHEET: had been one of the most memorable he Autographs from could recall. the ’61 Ashes team The Queen Mother was affably shaking including manager his hand when one of the team members Syd Webb, QC (top left) deliberately bumped Webb and the silver spoons tinkled. ‘What’s that you’ve got in there, Syd?’ asked the player. Syd buried his hand in his pocket and out came his ill-gotten gains. He turned purple with embarrassment. Ah, it was a most satisfying night for the mischief-makers . . . � A Fun-lover sked the secret of Hampshire’s 1961 championship success, fun-loving captain Colin Ingleby-Mackenzie quipped, ‘Wine, women and song.’ Further quizzed by the 33 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 33 2/07/14 1:59 PM FAVOURITE CRICKET YARNS earnest cub reporter, he agreed that the team did have rules, ‘I absolutely insist that all my boys should be in bed by breakfast.’ � S Fast-tracked o impressive was eighteen-yearold wrist spinner David Sincock NO CURFEWS: Hampshire in the Adelaide nets against Frank captain Colin InglebyWorrell’s touring West Indians that Mackenzie Worrell declared him Australia’s most outstanding teenage spin bowling prospect. A week later he was making his first-class debut in Adelaide and with his third ball dismissed Australian captain-to-be Brian Booth lbw on his way to a fairytale six for 52 and nine wickets for the game. In his first three Shield matches Sincock amassed twentyseven wickets at nine a match and was soon to represent Australia. � H Good sport aving become Freddie Trueman’s 300th Test victim, Neil Hawke shook Fred’s hand, congratulated him on his milestone and only then walked back to the Oval dressing-rooms. � O Out of the ground ne of Ian Meckiff ’s enduring memories of the epic Calypso summer of 1960–61 was bowling to the great Garry Sobers during the Sydney Test. ‘The Windies did things no other batsmen ever tried,’ he said. ‘In Sydney I was bowling 34 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 34 2/07/14 1:59 PM AMAZING & MOSTLY TRUE to Sobers. He played back, saw it was a slower ball, changed his mind and hit me out of the ground over long-on. It was one hell of a donk.’ A similar back-foot lift against Alan Davidson during his monumental 251 against New South Wales the following summer landed on the Hill in front of the old scoreboard. He was a truly remarkable talent. � B Banging ’em efore becoming secretary at the Melbourne Cricket Club, John Lill was an assured and confident opening batsman good enough to gain selection with an Australian ‘B’ team to New Zealand. He made a habit of amassing big scores for his Adelaide club team Sturt, especially against his ‘favourite’ teams like West Torrens. Invariably one of the ‘casualties’ was West’s slow leg spinner Brian Flaherty, who found that the ground was simply not long enough to keep Lill’s straight hits in the park. Once at Adelaide’s Thebarton Oval, when the football goal posts were still in place, Lill was in particularly destructive form and lifted Flaherty straight back over his head for six 6s. ‘I love playing against you “Banger” [Flaherty],’ said Lill afterwards. ‘Oh . . . but you didn’t do so well today,’ came the reply. ‘What do you mean?’ ‘Well, you only got one goal five!’ � N Different strokes . . . o-one had told the touring Fijians that the lower point of the cycle track at St George’s Hurstville Oval doubled as the boundary edge, so during the two-day January friendly against a NSW XI captained by Arthur Morris, many of the outfielders, most barefooted, slid across the concrete without 35 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 35 2/07/14 1:59 PM FAVOURITE CRICKET YARNS fear of injury. They were all very keen and wide-eyed playing on such wide open and beautifully manicured cricket grounds. Afterwards as a few cold longnecks were being shared, one of the Fijian players ripped off the bottle top with his teeth. � M Out twice in a minute iddlesex was playing at the Parks and the buccaneering Bill Edrich waltzed down the wicket to the gentle leftarm of Oxford’s Roy Woodcock only to miss and be neatly stumped. Wicketkeeper Michael Scott looked triumphantly towards square leg for confirmation as Edrich began to walk off. ‘Hang on a minute Bill, he’s not there,’ said Scott. Sure enough the square leg umpire, Denis Hendren, Patsy’s brother, had momentarily gone off for a wee. He soon hurried back on, the game resumed and Edrich again advanced, deliberately missed the ball and was stumped for a second time in a minute. � W A little gamesmanship orcestershire was in Kuwait for some end-of-season friendlies. Guest wicketkeeper Godfrey Evans somehow convinced captain Tom Graveney of the merits of giving him a bowl. The opposition were 7 down and there was just one over to go, so Graveney relented. To call Evans a leg spinner would be an exaggeration, but somehow he got a couple on line and from the fifth ball Ron Headley took a skier, and to the sixth the No. 10 somehow didn’t pick one which held its line and popped up a catch to short leg. The umpire made a movement to take the bails off, game over, before Evans interrupted. ‘Hang on, don’t forget the noball I bowled first-up. You called it but didn’t signal it. There’s still one to go . . .’ 36 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 36 2/07/14 1:59 PM AMAZING & MOSTLY TRUE ‘So there is,’ said the umpire, not wishing to upset one of England’s most celebrated and popular internationals. Calling to the scorers, the umpire said, ‘The first was a noball. There’s still one ball to be bowled.’ In came Evans, looking in the best leg-spinning traditions to curve it in and spin it away and maybe have the No. 11 caught at slip. Instead it was another ‘nudie’ – nothing on it whatsoever – and obligingly full, and the No. 11 sent it into orbit higher than it was long . . . straight to the safe hands of the awaiting Headley in the deep. Evans had three from three, his one and only hattrick in any class of cricket – and Worcestershire had its win. � G Cricketing royalty eorge Tribe loved to encourage young cricketers. During his time playing in the Lancashire League, one teenage leg spinner took his fancy and to encourage him, George presented him with his Australian cap. The boy’s name? Bob Barber, who a decade later was to make 185 in a Sydney Test. ‘I should have asked for it back then,’ quipped George. One Saturday at my club Frankston Peninsula Cricket Club, George came down to visit us and willingly accepted an invitation to speak to my third XI lads during the tea break. So engaging was he that we all lost track of the time, the tea break extending through to 25 minutes with the umpires and the two opposing batsmen patiently waiting in the middle for the match to resume. Nobody minded. To us all, George was cricketing royalty. See also: A last hurrah, page 224 � I He bowled without socks an Johnson was so used to walking around without socks during his time with the RAAF, that he played his entire 37 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 37 2/07/14 1:59 PM FAVOURITE CRICKET YARNS maiden Test series in Australia in 1946–47 without them. ‘In the islands and New Guinea foot ailments like tinea were a continual problem. Wearing socks in that climate tended to make your feet sweaty, so I learnt to do without them,’ he said. ‘When I returned home to play cricket I was still used to not putting on socks. It was quite comfortable just going around in boots and I didn’t change the habit until I went to England in 1948 where it was much, much colder.’ The first time he bowled for Australia, on Day 1 of an Ashes Test, in Sydney in 1946–47, a sockless Johnson took a ‘six-for’. � R Running into form on Hamence was having a horror start to a year and the two fast bowlers at South Australian training were giving him a real going over on an underprepared greentop. He kept nicking them behind or missing them altogether. Nothing was hitting the middle and Hamence was becoming more and more disconsolate. South Australia’s captain Phil Ridings stopped practice and called, ‘Who are the two worst bowlers out here?’ ‘Noisy Harris for sure, Phil,’ came the reply. ‘Okay, he’s one . . .’ Someone else said he couldn’t bowl so he, too, was enlisted, Ridings telling them to keep pitching the ball up. Hamence was soon playing shots with his renowned flair. Next time in with SA he made 170. � F Ball of the season rom the time he amassed fourteen wickets in the opening Coronation Year Test at Trent Bridge, Alec Bedser was unstoppable. 38 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 38 2/07/14 1:59 PM AMAZING & MOSTLY TRUE On the way to ‘seven-for’ in the first innings, his spells with each of the three new balls were one for 7, two for 5 and four for 2. The delivery which castled Lindsay Hassett, Australia’s captain, swung in, pitched middle and leg and hit the top of the bails off . . . the ball of the season. ‘I must be a pretty good player,’ Hassett said afterwards. ‘I went to play three different shots to that ball, changed my mind twice and was still good enough to get an edge.’ � T Has it started yet? he rules of cricket were being explained to Groucho Marx at Lord’s one day: ‘Six balls are bowled from this end; then as you see, the fieldsmen change over and six balls are bowled from the other end and so on . . .’ Groucho listened politely and kept watching the game. ‘Okay, I see,’ he said. ‘Six balls from this end, six from the other. Yes, I see . . . and the batsman hits the ball and they run up and down – one, two, three. Yes, I think I’ve got it.’ He watched again intently for four or five minutes and then asked, ‘Say . . . when do they begin?’ � D Late . . . again enis Compton made a habit of being late for appointments and functions – and occasionally even for the cricket. He was driving to the Oval when he flicked on the radio and heard John Arlott say that Bill Edrich was out and that ‘Denis Compton would be coming in next’. Given Compton was halfway across Vauxhall Bridge at the time – and still in his civvies – he would have needed to be Superman to get there on time. He’d forgotten that play started half an hour early on the final days of Tests. 39 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 39 2/07/14 1:59 PM FAVOURITE CRICKET YARNS � B Yes, I did bowl the Don one day . . . ill Andrews was a long-time trundler at Somerset whose 1973 memoirs were entitled The Hand that Bowled Bradman. And how many did the Don make that auspicious day? Only 202! � S Now you see him, now you don’t . . . ir Charles Aubrey ‘Round the Corner’ Smith’s nickname emanated from his eccentric run-up which started anywhere forward of extra cover and often saw him veer behind the umpire before suddenly jumping back into sight and delivering the ball as fast as he could. He remains the only English cricket captain to also appear in a motion movie with Elizabeth Taylor: the 1949 remake of Little Women. Smith was the driving force behind the establishment of the Hollywood CC in 1933. He enlisted actors and their friends to train and play, including a young Laurence Olivier, Boris Karloff, who was a capable wicketkeeper, David Niven, Errol Flynn and P G Wodehouse. He continued to represent the Hollywood XI into his seventies. His knighthood, in 1944, came through improving AngloAmerican relations. � W Classic Arlott hen embarking on a post-war tour of South Africa, John Arlott was asked by an Afrikaner to specify his race. There were four choices: White, Indian, Coloured or Black. Arlott wrote ‘Human’. See also: Cricketing royal, page 103 40 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 40 2/07/14 1:59 PM AMAZING & MOSTLY TRUE � A The best laid plans . . . teenage Tom Brooks was in his first month of first-grade cricket with Waverley. He’d just taken a five-for in his second match and was feeling pretty confident. The Waves were drawn away at Mosman, home of the legendary Stan McCabe, scorer of three of the finest Test centuries of all. So keen were the Waverley lads to dismiss the revered Test champion that they went out to Mosman Oval midweek to discuss how to do it. The plan was hatched. Brooks would bowl a bouncer second ball as fast as he could and hope that McCabe would sky one to fine leg. Match day came and sure enough, McCabe opened up. From a lengthy run-up, Brooks bowled his first at pedestrian pace, just above medium. The second he delivered with all his strength and McCabe hooked, as high as it was long, straight to fine-leg fielder Mick Alterator . . . only for Mick to put it down. In the next two hours, McCabe made 127 with twelve 4s and six 6s. He and Keith Carmody (70) started with 150 for the first wicket. It was a memorable day for Mosman, as the club’s new pavilion was opened on the same afternoon by Percy Spender, a Federal MP, whose speech was several times interrupted by the applause for McCabe’s pyrotechnics. The Sydney Morning Herald commented, ‘McCabe’s innings was one of rare charm, and spectators, appreciating his brilliant stroke play, considered themselves fortunate that McCabe was missed at leg before he had scored.’ � C Hundreds at practice ricket was an expensive pastime in the Depression years with one in four out of work. Many dropped out, unable to afford club subscriptions. Thanks to Don Bradman and his thrilling record-breaking ways, the interest in the game 41 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 41 2/07/14 1:59 PM FAVOURITE CRICKET YARNS remained high, however, and at Waverley CC, for example, practice sessions would often be witnessed by large crowds of unemployed folk who’d spent the day at nearby Bondi Beach before walking up to the ground to play cards in the pavilion or simply watch the likes of Alan Kippax and rising young star Jack Fingleton for an hour or two. At the height of the Depression, only four in Waverley’s first-grade team had jobs. Two had cars. For ‘away’ games, those with jobs took the train while the drivers would pick the rest up, as they couldn’t afford the train fare. The cricket cost one shilling for the ground fee and three pence for the scorer weekly, plus the annual subscription to help fund the kit and match-day balls. Some of the more promising juniors such as Fingleton had their subs of ten shillings and sixpence paid by local philanthropist and cricket-loving businessman Ernie Williams, who for years was a patron saint in keeping the club financial. � M Ginger Meggs and his mates aster caricaturist J M ‘Jim’ Bancks, creator of the little Aussie extrovert Ginger Meggs, was a keen cricket fan often seen at Waverley Oval in the ’20s and ’30s. He took particular interest in the activities of two of his best mates, Test batsman Alan ‘Kippie’ Kippax and giant fast bowler, the forever sunburnt ‘Dinny’ Kelly. Bancks also became friendly with many others in Waverley’s first XI including spinners ‘Oakie’ O’Connor and Horace ‘Ocker’ Stevens, noted for bounding into bowl at practice before abruptly coming to a full stop at the popping crease and not always getting his leg breaks and wrong-uns on line. Explaining his occasional waywardness, Ocker liked to blame the commotion in the club’s pavilion, a favourite Thursday night rendezvous for young lovers who would often be sprung by 42 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 42 2/07/14 1:59 PM AMAZING & MOSTLY TRUE irate fathers, the boys jumping the fence and running to evade further inquisition. Bancks loved the whole vibe at Waverley, the characters, their personalities, their mannerisms and nicknames and made several of them central characters in his popular Ginger Meggs cartoons. Kelly was ‘Tiger Kelly’ the bully. The iconic Kippax was ‘Coogan’, always up for a game. O’Connor was ‘Oakey’ and Stevens ‘Ocker’. For thirty years or more the boys never grew up, experiencing the joys of cricket and football, wangling ice-creams out of Italian shopkeepers, trying to explain to policemen about the latest broken window and always carrying an extra tomato or two just in case they could ping Tiger Kelly before running for their lives. Thanks in no small way to the fun-loving, ever-imaginative Bancks, the nicknames ‘Ginger’ and ‘Ocker’ became part of the Aussie vernacular. � D Brotherly battles inny Kelly had a brother Harry, who called everyone ‘Brud’ to alleviate the need to remember names. Harry was a determined batsman noted in the Waverley nets for always putting two florins on the stumps as an encouragement to Dinny to bowl flat out and try and knock them over. They’d forever be arguing about a nick dropping short or an lbw Harry insisted was going down leg. Afterwards, having battled until it was almost too dark to see any more, they would race around the oval, Harry on foot and Dinny on a very wobbly bike. To roars of encouragement from their teammates and onlookers, Dinny would invariably lead before slowing down on the always-boggy wing at Waverley and Harry would charge past, whooping with delight, having cut as many corners as possible! 43 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 43 2/07/14 1:59 PM FAVOURITE CRICKET YARNS � O Amazing energy n Parkinson one night, Jack Fingleton was telling stories about some of his favourites from yesteryear and jokingly said that Dr Reg Bettington, his first NSW Shield captain, had once swam from Crete to Alexandria with a set of golf clubs between his teeth. Encouraged by Michael Parkinson’s look of astonishment, Fingleton said Bettington was a man of boundless energy and skill and in one 24-hour period in between seasons in England, he played cricket, getting wickets and runs, then rugby in the lengthy twilight before going to a ball into the wee hours. The following morning he was up early to do an operation before giving several pints of blood! � T THE OLD MASTER: Even into his forties, Jack Hobbs made a habit of destroying bowlers of all sorts, at all levels Time flies he great Jack Hobbs was in rare touch and shortly before 12.20 p.m. lifted Yorkshireman Alonzo Drake so high towards the pavilion clock that it was almost disappearing when someone shouted, ‘Look . . . it’s hit the clock and knocked the clock on to twenty past four.’ ‘Pity it didn’t knock the bastard forward to half past six,’ said Drake. � C A comic’s hero omic actor Charlie Chaplin’s all-time hero as a child was . . . cricketer Tom Hayward. 44 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 44 2/07/14 1:59 PM AMAZING & MOSTLY TRUE � George, George, George G eorge Gunn loved to be different. A genius when it suited, he turned fifty when he shared a Test triple-century stand for the first wicket with Andy Sandham at Kingston. It was during this MCC tour of the Caribbean in 1929–30 that George camped under a steepling big hit on the legside boundary. Taking off the pith helmet he was wearing, he held it in one hand and nonchalantly caught the ball with the other. ‘Ay,’ said the bowler Wilfred Rhodes, who never would have allowed himself such flippancy, ‘a grand catch George, but thee shouldn’t have done that!’ Gunn scored 276 runs at almost 35 in the four Tests and amassed more than 700 runs for the tour overall. The series was drawn 1–1, the fourth timeless Test in Jamaica ending in a draw after nine days, the MCC team having to catch their boat home. � U A Christmas hangover to remember ntil the advent of the Boxing Day Test match, Victoria v. New South Wales, Australian cricket’s ‘Grand Final’ event, was a perennial fixture over Christmas week in Melbourne. For years play would continue even on Christmas Day, most famously in 1928–29 when Alan Kippax and NSW’s No. 11 Hal Hooker added 307 for the tenth wicket against a champion Victorian attack. The crowd of 200 became 10 000 by mid-afternoon with news that the pair were still batting, Kippax so cornering the strike that he was 221 not out at stumps with Hooker 51. Their epic stand lasted into a fifth session the following morning, guaranteeing NSW the first innings points and giving the Victorians a Christmas hangover to remember. 45 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 45 2/07/14 1:59 PM FAVOURITE CRICKET YARNS � G ‘It’s mine!’ olden Age entertainer, the very eccentric Sammy Woods was a wonderful, larger-than-life all-sportsman and yarnspinner who represented both Australia and England in Tests. Some regarded him as big an early cricketing personality as Alfred Mynn and even W G Grace himself. There was no argument in the south-west, where Woods was a folk hero unparalleled, his feats with Somerset CC including ten wickets in an innings and a career-high 215. He always played to win. ‘Draws?’ Sammy would say. ‘They’re only for bathing in.’ Totally unconventional at the selection table, he was known to invite strangers to complete his XI if he happened to be short, even for championship games. Once he got talking on the train with a man who said he’d made big scores in club cricket. ‘Right,’ said Sammy, ‘You’re in.’ ‘But I haven’t got any gear . . .’ ‘That’s okay. We’ll find you some.’ The ring-in made a pair. It turned out he hadn’t played since he was ten and had been curious about the standard of county cricket. Woods, as always, had the last word. ‘He was a very good whist player,’ he said. A lover of champagne and lobster, sometimes even at break fast, Woods was a champion athlete in his prime. He boxed, represented England at rugby and could run like the wind. Once he claimed a catch from a towering hit from his own bowling just five yards from the pavilion steps. ‘I just called “mine” and went for it,’ he said. The batsmen had run 2 and were returning for 3 when he completed the catch. Later, as Somerset’s coach, he liked to sit behind the nets in a wicker chair with a bottle of whisky and a cheroot, encouraging the batsmen to hit the ball as hard and often as they could. More often than not he’d doze off in the sun. But he was still much loved and admired. 46 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 46 2/07/14 1:59 PM AMAZING & MOSTLY TRUE � S An early exit ammy was playing in a club match at Wiveliscombe and it looked like being an early finish after the visiting team slumped to 8-40 chasing 200-plus. Out came the oppos ing captain and immediately complained that the wicket was too short. A tape measure was called for and after several re-measurings the wicket was found to be eighteen inches (forty-six centimetres) too long. The game was restarted and the opposition outed for 35, ensuring an early exit to the local inn. � W Eagle-eyed ilfred Rhodes excelled in telling stories about the Indian Prince K S Ranjitsinhji, a wizard of the willow whose wristy, carefree flicks were truly bewitching. ‘In the days when I went in first with Jack [Hobbs],’ said Rhodes, ‘they reckoned I could make out the seam on the ball. Well, they should have watched Ranji. He could see each and every stitch.’ � S No-nonsense Sammy ammy Carter insisted on high standards, whether he was playing first grade at Waverley, Sheffield Shield for NSW or Test cricket for Australia. One club Saturday, he became increasingly disenchanted by the returns from several of his XI, particularly debutant Mick Alterator. In between overs, he motioned Alterator to the wicket. ‘Yes, Mr Carter?’ said Alterator, thinking he might be about to get a bowl. ‘Son,’ said Sam, ‘if you can’t throw in better returns than 47 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 47 2/07/14 1:59 PM FAVOURITE CRICKET YARNS you’ve been doing, you’d better buzz off and sit in the pavilion and I’ll play on with ten!’ Alterator later became club captain and still holds the record for most club runs at Waverley CC: 11 000-plus. He played for thirty-one seasons. � E Spun out H ‘Patsy’ Hendren was in domin eering form before finally being castled by the West Indian finger spinner Ellis Achong, of Chinese descent, during the MCC’s 1929–30 Caribbean tour. Patsy was completely fooled when Achong rolled a wrist spinner out of the back of his hand. ‘Fancy being bowled by a bloody Chinaman,’ he said. � P FUN-LOVING: Patsy Hendren Whoops atsy was an inveterate yarn-teller, the taller the better. He loved Australia and Australians loved him. One of his favourites came in the late ’20s when he had a match off and took himself off into the bush. On a high plateau, he came across a cricket game about to start. He was sitting down to watch when one of the fielding team approached and said they were one short. Would he like to fill in? ‘Yeah, sure cobber,’ said Patsy in his best Anglo-Australian. No-one recognised him and Patsy was motioned to field behind the bowler’s arm at the bottom of the plateau. ‘Stay down there for both ends,’ he was told. So low was he that he could only occasionally see pieces of the play. From time to time, however, he’d field a ball and throw it back. 48 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 48 2/07/14 1:59 PM AMAZING & MOSTLY TRUE After an hour or two of doing this, a ball came soaring over the top of the hill high in the air. Patsy positioned himself perfectly and took the catch easily and rushing up the hill, held the ball aloft triumphantly. ‘I’ve caught it, I’ve caught it,’ he called. The entire fielding side erupted in laughter, but those back on the sidelines weren’t as impressed. ‘You bloody fool,’ said one. ‘You’ve caught our opening batsman! We’re batting now!’ See also: Gotcha, page 177 � E Not so Gracious ven in semi-retirement, W G Grace was quite the martinet. Young Surrey hopeful W C ‘Razor’ Smith had been told he would most likely be needed by his county on the following day. He was playing in a match at Crystal Palace and he told ‘the Grand Old Man’ who had organised the fixture that he wanted to get away quickly if possible so he could get a good night’s rest and catch the early train the following day. ‘All right, Smith,’ said the Doctor. ‘We’ll see what can be done.’ Smith happened to be playing against Grace on this occasion and was bowling to Grace when he deceived him with a slower delivery which Grace gently lobbed straight back to the bowler. Just as Razor was shaping to take the catch, Grace called down the wicket, ‘Smith, if you catch me, you won’t catch that early train.’ � W Musical interludes G was breakfasting with Gloucestershire first-timer A C M ‘Crumbo’ Croome before a game at Bristol. ‘Young man, if I win the toss, you’ll come in at No. 7,’ said W G. ‘Do you have you a box?’ Croome stammered a ‘no’ and W G declared it would be 49 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 49 2/07/14 1:59 PM FAVOURITE CRICKET YARNS foolish to face the likes of Tom Richardson without one and told him to go and purchase one. Croome did what as was told, found a cricket outfitter nearby and to his embarrassment, saw that a girl was serving. ‘Ummm, err, excuse me, miss . . . umm . . . do you have one of those pro . . . protective devices for cric-ckkettt,’ he asked. ‘What size?’ queried the girl before calling for her father from down in the cellar. ‘The man wants a box, Dad,’ said the girl. ‘We don’t have a call for them much in these parts,’ said her father, ‘but follow me.’ Croome went with him, and the man rustled about, finally coming up with something the right shape and size made of wire netting. Gloucester batted first on a seaming wicket and W G was still batting when young Croome emerged at No. 7. He started assuredly on the difficult wicket before being beaten by one which broke back sharply and veered straight into his new purchase. With a loud ‘pang’, the ball bounced back towards the bowler. This exercise was repeated two or three times in the next hour, each time a loud ‘pang’ being heard. Finally, W G had had enough. Down the wicket he marched. ‘Young man, I told you to get a box, not a musical box.’ Incidentally, Croome suffered a terrible accident while fielding for Gloucester at Old Trafford one day. Attempting to stop a boundary hit, he impaled himself on the spike of the railings, the spike entering his neck, and it was first thought that the injury would prove fatal. However, he made a full recovery. Later he became a noted cricket writer for The Times. 50 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 50 2/07/14 1:59 PM 2 Bad Boys � I Lawn bowls anyone? t was six years between internationals for buccaneering batsman Brad Hodge, recalled in the 2014 New Year for a weekend of Twenty20 cricket with the frontliners absent in South Africa. The 39-year-old had been rated Victoria’s finest interstate cricketer, ahead of even Shane Warne, by long-time coach Greg Shipperd, who like everyone else was mystified by Hodge’s long-time exclusion from national teams. During his prolonged absence – Andrew Hilditch was selec tion chairman for much of the time – Hodge said he had more chance of representing Australia at lawn bowls than cricket. On his return at his beloved MCG, he opened Australia’s bowling, figured in two dismissals in the field – and didn’t bat, before he and 43-year-old Brad Hogg were chosen for some Twenty20s in South Africa and the ICC World Twenty20 tournament in Bangladesh. � S Icebreaker ometimes even the happiest of families have their differences and there was quite a commotion when Simon ‘Kato’ Katich headlocked Michael Clarke in a dressing-room argee bargee after Australia’s only victory of the South African leg of the 2008–09 Test summer in Sydney. 51 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 51 2/07/14 1:59 PM FAVOURITE CRICKET YARNS Unhappy at the delay in the singing of Australia’s victory song, ‘Under the Southern Cross I Stand’, and having made plans for the Australians to gather with loved ones at a nearby bar, Clarke asked Australia’s team manager Steve Bernard to try and hurry it all along. Despite Bernard’s approaches, Mike Hussey, the leader of the song, was in no hurry and Clarke was becoming increasingly fidgety, leading to a tangle with Simon Katich, Hussey’s closest mate. Clarke left immediately with the song still unsung and emotions high. Katich went around the room apologising to all and sundry, particularly the two new boys, Andrew McDonald and Doug Bollinger. ‘I’m really sorry,’ Kato said to the pair. ‘I don’t want to ruin your first Test match.’ ‘Don’t worry mate,’ said McDonald, ‘this happens all the time in Victoria.’ � A Cat tales sked why he’d become a slow bowler, Phil Tufnell replied, ‘You can’t smoke twenty fags a day and bowl fast!’ Nicknamed ‘Cat’ after partying too hard and sleeping rather than fulfilling his twelfth-man duties one day at Headingley, Tufnell was a fun-loving rebel with a ponytail who admitted to being arrested and spending a night in the cells at least three times that he could remember, as well as being hit over the head with a half-brick by an angry father, who believed Tufnell had mistreated his daughter. A matchwinner in his day, Tufnell had a quirky run-up that consisted of a kick of the back leg, a skip and a jump. Even 1000 first-class wickets, however, didn’t guarantee great levels of self-confidence. Watching Shane Warne bamboozle the English top-order one day, he said, ‘This bloke is making me look like crap.’ 52 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 52 2/07/14 1:59 PM BAD BOYS � A Expensive one-liners fter England’s final loss of the one-sided 1994–95 summer in Sydney, a cricket bat was passed around for the players to sign. Phil Tufnell scribbled ‘Mickey Mouse’ and twelfth man Phil DeFreitas signed ‘Sod Off ’. It cost the culprits 3000 pounds (then 5000 Australian dollars) in fines, some of which went to the handwriting expert who had narrowed the signatures down to the Terrible Two. � Those magnificent men in their flying machines A s pranks go, it was a ripper, but almost caused Ashes icon David Gower to be sent home mid-tour. The 1990–91 Englishmen were in Queensland playing an inconsequential mid-tour game in between Tests at Carrara, home at the time to AFL football in Queensland. Across the road was a small airport set up for joy-riding holidaymakers who zipped around in Tiger Moths, enjoying unparalleled 360-degree aerial views of the magnificent Gold Coast. As England headed for what proved to be its only first-class win of the tour, Gower, no longer shackled with the duties of leadership, thought in the best traditions of ‘r and r’ in a nonTest week that he, too, should sample some of the thrillseeking high life and turn aviator . . . even if it was for only twenty minutes. He asked tour vice-captain Allan Lamb to advance him the 240 ‘Oxford scholars’ and told him why. Lamb thought it quite a lark and agreed it was probably better not to involve captain Graham Gooch. Teammate John Morris overheard their conversation and asked if he could go too. Gower’s curly blond hair and ready smile had been a regular 53 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 53 2/07/14 1:59 PM FAVOURITE CRICKET YARNS part of Australia’s cricket landscape since the late ’70s and he was immediately recognised. The pair strapped themselves in, pretending they were Biggles embarking on a daring raid. Up they went, the pilot even dipping low over the cricket ground in between the football light towers, Lamb and his batting partner Robin Smith pretending from mid-pitch to shoot the pair down with their bats. Unfortunately for the two merrymakers, the pilot had alerted the local newspaper to the identity of his famous passengers and noted travelling photographer Adrian Murrell had his long lens at just the right angle to capture the happy pair, complete with leather helmets and goggles, smiling, waving and enjoying the moment. Back on terra firma, they landed to a welcoming committee of journalists and photographers. The cat was out of the bag. Back at the ground, Gooch asked suspiciously, ‘That wasn’t you up there by any chance “Lubo” was it?’ ‘Who me? Heavens no,’ said Gower giving his captain his best choirboy look. English management was soon informed of the prank and went into meltdown mode; Gower and Morris were fined the maximum allowed penalty of 1000 pounds (2500 Australian dollars at the time). If England hadn’t have been going so badly, he and Morris most certainly would have been sent home. Ironically the borrowed cash Gower accessed had come courtesy of team manager Peter Lush. It was Lush who eventually had to play headmaster and inform Gower of his penalty. Coming in to bat a few days later in the Adelaide Test, Gower was welcomed with a chorus of ‘Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines’. Even Gooch had to smile at that one. 54 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 54 2/07/14 1:59 PM BAD BOYS � A Stitched up llan Lamb was king of the mischief-makers. Eighteenyear-old South African Dale Benkenstein was at Northants for experience and very late one night was enlisted as twelfth man for the first XI for the following day’s match at Oxford University. He drove to Oxford with no kit and slept in his car. In Northants’ second innings, Lamb said he was changing the order and Benkenstein was to go in at No. 3. ‘I’ve spoken to the umpires,’ he said. ‘Don’t worry. You’ll be fine.’ A wicket fell in the second over and Benkenstein got halfway to the middle when he was stopped by one of the umpires. ‘What are you doing?’ ‘Lambie said I could bat.’ ‘Piss off,’ he said, ‘this is a first-class match.’ A red-faced Benkenstein had to march straight back to the pavilion. Gotcha son. � F Half decent or all his huff and puff and on-field histrionics, Lenny Pascoe was a pretty decent chap. After Sandeep Patil, the Indian virtuoso, had squirted three attempted cover drives over the top of second slip’s head in Sydney early one afternoon, Lenny erupted. ‘You’re nothing but a mongrel son-of-a-bitch,’ he said (or something like that). And, pointing to his forehead, he added, ‘And the next one is going straight here.’ Charging in, Pascoe did bowl it short and it veered straight in and glanced off a retreating Patil’s head. Only a few players wore helmets back then, and the Indian went down like a sack of spuds. Lenny was horrified. Patil hadn’t moved. ‘You don’t think I’ve killed the poor bastard do you?’ he asked one of his teammates. 55 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 55 2/07/14 1:59 PM FAVOURITE CRICKET YARNS Patil was helped off, with a cut to the side of his head but was okay and batted in the second innings. Three weeks later in the next Test in Adelaide, he made one of the classic centuries of all. � I Unimpressed n preparing for his first tour of India in 1979, Rodney Hogg packed individual ‘survival’ packs of his favourite foods including cans of spaghetti and baked beans plus several jars of Vegemite. ‘They’re my Test match rations,’ he proudly declared. Refusing to touch anything on the local menu, he found his staples had long disappeared before the start of the Tests, as did his personal can of Aerogard which lasted two days rather than the intended two months. His own performances, consistently dazzling only months earlier against Mike Brearley’s Englishmen, also fell away. He bowled the majority of Australia’s forty no-balls in the opening two Tests and at Bangalore became so frustrated at overstepping, he kicked a stump down in fury. ‘I bowled pies,’ he said. ‘I couldn’t get my run-up right and was called countless times for no-balls. I lost my cool. I lost everything. If there’s a record for the number of no-balls in a Test series, I reckon I broke it that trip.’ � ‘H A one-off oggy’ was opening the bowling with Dennis Lillee in a Test in Sydney and at each change of ends, Dennis grew increasingly angrier at the rapidly declining condition of the ball. Finally ‘DK’ exclaimed to Hoggy, ‘Why don’t you shine it?’ ‘I can’t.’ ‘Why not?’ ‘I’m not wearing the right sort of pants!’ He was a one-off, was Rodney Malcolm Hogg. 56 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 56 2/07/14 1:59 PM BAD BOYS ONE OF A KIND: Rodney Hogg WARNIE: Lots of verbals � S Tit for tat o distraught was the proud South African Daryll Cullinan at his inability to master the mesmerising wizardry of Shane Warne that he sought psychiatric help. Next time they met, elephant-memory Warne was straight onto the front foot with the verbals. ‘Hey Daryll,’ he called, ‘I’m going to send you straight back onto that leather couch . . . I’ve waited for this moment for two years.’ ‘Looks like you spent the two years eating,’ replied Cullinan. Cullinan’s average against Warnie and the Aussies was under 5. Overall it was 44. 57 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 57 2/07/14 1:59 PM FAVOURITE CRICKET YARNS � T Fireworks he call of nature waits for no man, even if he has pads on. At Mt Smart, the World Series Australians were playing on an aluminium wicket covered by coir matting and next-manin Ian Davis suddenly had to excuse himself. ‘It’s hard going to the toilet when you’ve got all your gear on,’ he said. ‘Next minute “Solo” [Mick] Malone stuck a heap of penny bungers under the door and basically blew up the whole cubicle. My nerves were gone and my pads were ruined. The boys loved it.’ � I A narrow escape t was a greentop in Sydney and Sarfraz Nawaz, the tall Pakistani medium-pacer, made one stand-up to Dennis Lillee which he only just evaded. Glaring at Sarfraz down the wicket, Lillee snarled, ‘Don’t forget we’re bowling next.’ It was the last bouncer he received. The following day, Lillee happened to be bowling when Sarfraz came in. He knew he was in for it. Lillee lengthened his run-up and paused at the top, adding to the theatre. His back was sore but he intended to bowl the fastest bouncer he could. Just as he reached the delivery crease, he groaned and the intended fast bouncer became a half-pace-long hop which Sarfraz gratefully lapped to the backward square boundary. With a huge grin on his face he even told the umpire Jack Collins that it wasn’t that fast. Lillee overheard the remark and said, ‘Wait for the %#*&ing next one.’ This time, he really let it go and it veered in straight at a retreating Sarfraz. It just flicked his nose on the way through to keeper Rod Marsh. Lillee followed through almost to where Sarfraz stood. ‘Missed!’ he said. 58 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 58 2/07/14 1:59 PM BAD BOYS Sarfraz, never the bravest of batsmen, was quickly out at the other end to the far more sedate mediums of Greg Chappell. � T A win-win he World Series Cricket Australians were in the West Indies, enjoying the blue skies, the beaches, the Red Stripe beers and other assorted Caribbean delights. It was a non-compulsory practice day and reserve speedster Len Pascoe was heading for the beach with his closest mate Jeff Thomson who’d been given the morning off. They were walking through the lobby when they saw the team bus, still in the car park with everyone aboard. Captain Ian Chappell was at the side of the bus waiting for Lenny. Lenny immediately ducked around the back of the hotel and hid in some bushes. Chappell might have wanted him to come and bowl, but no way was he going to do it. Why couldn’t he also have the day off ? Chappell sighted Thomson and asked where his big mate was. ‘He was upstairs before,’ said Thommo. Chappell went off a-hunting and returned without Lenny. Off the bus went. Lenny re-emerged and was beachward bound when Greg Chappell, who also had a leave pass, saw him and said the bus had gone and he’d better get a taxi down to the ground. Lenny was ropable and on arrival was generally abusive to everyone and bowled mainly bouncers especially to Chappell – which was exactly the practice he wanted, given where they were and who they were playing against! Pascoe made the next ‘Supertest’ and Chappell scored runs in each innings. It was a ‘win-win’ for both. 59 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 59 2/07/14 1:59 PM FAVOURITE CRICKET YARNS � F Ashley’s fright, Doug’s delight un-loving Dougie Walters loved to store away all sorts of useless information, especially when it came to the phobias and superstitions of teammates. Ashley ‘Rowdy’ Mallett let it drop one night how scared he was of the following, in no particular order: (a)heights (b)underground caves (c)spiders. Weeks later, one lazy Test-eve afternoon, Doug was mooching around a novelty shop, saw a particularly menacing-looking imitation spider and, immediately thinking of Mallett, made the purchase. The next day the Australians were in the field, and Doug put the spider in his pocket and kept a keener eye than usual on captain Ian Chappell waiting to hear him tell Mallett to, ‘Warm-up Rowd . . . you’re on next.’ As Mallett paced out his run, Walters made sure he had the ball, stuck some chewing gum, plus the spider on it and with a ‘good luck mate’, calmly handed it to Rowdy ‘spider-up’. Mallett was looking around the field and then began to twist and spin the ball. ‘Oh, oh . . . what’s this?’ Looking down, he glimpsed the big black spider, seemingly the size of the entire cricket ball and threw the ball down YOUNG DOUG: Dougie Walters in consternation. Adding to the in 1965 from the Scanlen’s Chewing Gum set drama of it all – and to Doug’s 60 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 60 2/07/14 1:59 PM BAD BOYS considerable delight – he started backpedalling at record speed. ‘%#*&! What’s going on!’ he exclaimed. Only a considerable deal of coaxing encouraged him to handle the ball again. Ian Chappell looked across at Doug and just shook his head . . . � R A bit of a lunatic ichmond, Victoria and Old Trinity fast bowler John Leehane carried one of the great nicknames: ‘Luna’ – short for lunatic. Leehane had a split personality. Nice as pie off the field, he was responsible for more than thirty ‘direct hits’ on it, thanks to his near-express, change-up bouncer. He was a fast bowler not to be riled, as Tasmania’s Gary Goodman found one day at Launceston in 1978–79, when Leehane dismissed his opening partner Mick Norman early with a ball that ran away and was taken at fourth slip . . . ‘Our manager Sammy Loxton told us they’d nick ’em early and he was right.’ Leehane bowled a half-pace short one at Goodman and he bunted it back just over his head. As he was passing he uttered, ‘Keep bowling that shit to me.’ Three balls later he had his nose broken. Even when Leehane agreed to come out of retirement for Old Trinity in the Melbourne Cricket Club XI ranks, he couldn’t help himself. ‘At Bulleen,’ eyewitness and old teammate Tony Hargreaves said, ‘he took out University’s “Duster” Broad, a quite reasonable second XI all-rounder, after Duster advanced down the track and hit him back over his head. As much as we tried to persuade Luna that he should forget it, he couldn’t, and Duster copped one in the mouth while trying to hook. It wasn’t pretty.’ Leehane said he liked three types of batsmen: ‘those on 61 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 61 2/07/14 1:59 PM FAVOURITE CRICKET YARNS teams that I played for or supported, opposition batsmen that were dismissed and dead batsmen’. ‘Yes, I did like to compete,’ he commented, ‘and in retrospect, maybe the boys were right. I was a bit of a lunatic.’ � S The Ugly Australians ledging and Ian Chappell went hand-in-hand, especially if New Zealander Glenn Turner happened to be in the same time zone. But as Chappell’s teammate and collaborator Ashley Mallett often said, ‘Ian wasn’t always the instigator. But if someone had a go at him, he’d lash back with both barrels.’ One of Chappell’s most infamous run-ins came against the Kiwis, the match at Christchurch in which Turner made twin centuries. The Australians were becoming increasingly agitated as a string of close lbw decisions were all rejected by the NZ umpire Bob Monteith. When Monteith signalled a 6 when the ball had clearly bounced short of the fence, Chappell exploded. ‘Hey Bob,’ he said. ‘Where did that bloody ball bounce?’ Turner had been leaning on his bat at the non-striker’s end. He too had seen the ball bounce over and went to interrupt . . . ‘Shut up, pal,’ said Chappell. ‘It’s none of your business. The umpires make the decisions here, not you.’ Turner wouldn’t back down. Chappell certainly wouldn’t, and eventually he told Turner to ‘%#*& off ’. The language Chappell used, Turner claimed, ‘was as bad as you’d hear anywhere . . . it was unedifying and unpleasant’. Back in the rooms afterwards, Turner demanded an apology, which was not forthcoming. The next day the NZ local press dubbed Chappell’s team ‘The Ugly Australians’. 62 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 62 2/07/14 1:59 PM BAD BOYS � O San Franciscan night n the way to England in 1972, the Australian team landed at San Francisco for refuelling. Paul Sheahan, who’d been overcome by airsickness, retired to a toilet just before landing and fell asleep. An overzealous security guard found the toilet door bolted, broke it down and grabbed the unsuspecting Victorian, accusing him of being a potential hijacker. Only a quick-thinking explanation from Australian team manager Ray Steele saved Sheahan from further embarrassment – and a INCONVENIENCED: night at the local lock-up! Paul Sheahan � B Riot? What riot? ill Lawry’s Australians were steaming towards victory in the first Test in Bombay when Indian tailender Srini Venkataraghavan (or Srini ‘Rentacaravan’, as Billy Birmingham loved to call him) was wrongly given out caught behind. The home crowd was furious and erupted out of control after hearing the local radio commentator proclaim over the public address, ‘Venkat was not out . . . Lawry’s a cheat.’ Bottles rained onto the ground, deckchairs were stacked and set on fire and the riot squad was called. Somehow play continued until stumps when more bottles were thrown at the Australians as they made it to the safety of the dressing-rooms and a bath full of icy cold beers that Doug Walters had expertly organised. Australia’s manager Fred Bennett arrived in the rooms. 63 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 63 2/07/14 1:59 PM FAVOURITE CRICKET YARNS ‘Fellas,’ he said, ‘there are 10 000 people in front of the main grandstand calling for Bill Lawry’s blood.’ ‘Fred,’ Dougie said deadpan from the backroom, ‘let’s give ’em Lawry and let’s get on with the drinking . . .’ � D Bombed out ougie Walters was the ultimate party-animal cricketer – yet he neither smoked nor tasted alcohol until he was almost twenty-one. ‘I tried cigarettes but wouldn’t have gone through even a packet of ten at school,’ Doug said. ‘And in those days you had to be twenty-one to get into the [licensed] clubs. I didn’t know what beer tasted like until I was twenty.’ Doug, the people’s champion, made up for lost time though. During a stint of National Service in the late ’60s, Doug’s army mates nicknamed him ‘Hanoi’ – they reckoned he was always bombed at night. Doug was a great dressing-room character and often pre ferred not to practise on the morning of a match. When he was dropped for the final Test at the Oval in 1972, he told his captain Ian Chappell, ‘Beauty, I won’t have to be up early for nets.’ Chappell loved having Doug around the rooms. He once lightened the atmosphere on the first morning of an important Test by pushing his legs into his shirtsleeves and trying to pull his flannels over his head. ‘Nervous? Who’s nervous? Not me!’ he said. � A Running scared ustralia was playing South Zone at Bangalore in 1969, and was in danger of defeat after a run of lbw decisions, including one or two which may have been close. 64 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 64 2/07/14 1:59 PM BAD BOYS Reserve wicketkeeper Ray Jordon collected a pair and on querying the umpire as he was walking off a second time, was told, ‘Mr Jordon, if you did hit it, you were out caught. If you say you did not hit it, you were out lbw anyway.’ As tailender John Gleeson walked out to bat, he stopped and chatted to the umpire. ‘See this pad?’ asked Gleeson. ‘Yes, Mr Gleeson.’ ‘See this bat?’ ‘Yes, Mr Gleeson.’ ‘If the ball hits that pad and you put your finger up, this bat will get wrapped around your head!’ For the next hour Gleeson calmly padded away ball after ball and finished with 18 not out – not one of the numerous Indian appeals being upheld. And Australia forced a draw. � S Gotcha, skip! urveying the porky figure of young opener Colin Milburn, Northants captain Keith Andrew suggested that Milburn in future consider drinking halves rather than pints. ‘My father drank pints,’ said Milburn, ‘and so do I.’ A few days later Andrews was buying a few drinks for the team after a win. ‘What’ll it be, young Col?’ ‘Two halves thanks, skipper.’ See also: ‘What kept you boys?’, page 156 � I A YOUNG COL: Colin Milburn on his way to heavyweight status From 84 to 100 . . . in four balls t remains one of the most significant of all of Ian Chappell’s centuries. As an eighteen-year-old in his maiden season 65 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 65 2/07/14 1:59 PM FAVOURITE CRICKET YARNS with Glenelg, he scored his breakthrough first ‘A’ grade century against a West Torrens attack, which included South Australia’s Sheffield Shield opening bowlers Alan Hitchcox and Peter Trethewey. The more the pair bounced him, the harder he hit it. The second new ball was taken and after one pulled 4 against Hitchcox, Chappell said, ‘Fancy you opening the bowling for South Australia!’ A fired-up Hitchcox hurled down three consecutive bouncers, all of which were hooked to the backward square boundaries. In four balls Chappell advanced from 84 to 100. ‘It was magnificent cricket,’ said Chappell’s batting partner Des Selby. ‘Here was a young guy who was very special. He was ready to play big cricket.’ Years later, speaking at a birthday party for Trethewey, Chappell thanked the old paceman for his part in helping him advance first to state ranks and on to Test cricket. ‘He then went on to give the guests a blow-by-blow account of his innings that day at Glenelg Oval including every boundary he hit off DISPARAGING: ‘Fancy you opening the bowling for South Australia,’ said a teenage Ian Chappell to Alan Hitchcox 66 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 66 2/07/14 1:59 PM BAD BOYS our bowling,’ said Trethewey. ‘He has a photographic memory. It was one of the best innings that I saw in grade cricket by one of Australia’s most accomplished cricketers. And it was a very significant one for him as it got him into the state team. “Hitch” certainly was upset with him. The shorter he bowled at Ian the harder he got hit.’ � A Both barrels s a fifteen-year-old, Trethewey was chosen by Woodville to debut in its ‘B’ grade team. The captain of the opposition was Ian Chappell’s father Martin, who happened to be on strike when Trethewey bowled his first over in grade cricket. He hit four 4s from it and declared, ‘Keep bowling that crap son and I’ll keep hitting you for 4.’ Trethewey had a second over which again went for 16, all 4s, Chappell repeating the message. Woodville’s captain Jack Causby told Chappell in no uncertain terms ‘to lay off the kid’ and their conversation became quite heated. ‘Needless to say,’ Trethewey said, ‘Chappell kept up the sledging. It must be in the genes!’ � F ‘Are you ready now, Alec?’ ew bowled their overs quicker than the overweight, undertrained and often outspoken county off-breaker B D ‘Bomber’ Wells, who’d wheel in off one or two steps with the quickest possible arm action, often catching the unwary still looking down at their crease while their stumps were lurching drunkenly behind them. It’s reputed that once at Worcester, Wells bowled an entire over while the cathedral clock struck twelve. One day, a rookie fieldsman, totally oblivious of Bomber’s liking to get on with it, was sure Bomber bowled only three 67 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 67 2/07/14 1:59 PM FAVOURITE CRICKET YARNS balls in one over. But he’d actually missed the other three as he’d turned his back to walk back to his position! Umpire Alec Skelding once put his arm out to stop Bomber from bowling at a newcomer, who was looking down at the crease rather than at the other end. Neatly bypassing the roadblock, Bomber jogged to short cover and wheeled back across the pitch to mid wicket, calling, ‘Are you ready now, Alec?’ before proceeding in his circular sweep to mid-on and back to the crease, and then clean bowling the astonished batsman. Bomber was to amass 998 first-class wickets, not that he was ever in serious contention for a Test place given his total lack of batting acumen, his average catching ability, non-existent enthusiasm for chasing balls to the boundary and occasional politically incorrect quips! Representing the Combined Services against the Public Schools at Lord’s, Bomber commented rather savagely on the ability of one schoolboy leg spinner who had resorted to bowling seam-up in mid-over. ‘I thought this clown was supposed to bowl leg breaks,’ said Bomber to no-one in particular on the players’ balcony. ‘I never comment on my son’s ability,’ came a nearby voice, before the speaker went back inside the pavilion. Wells was quickly ushered to a quiet corner by his captain. ‘Bomber, I think your chances of Test cricket began and ended with that remark.’ ‘I’m not with you skipper . . .’ ‘The man who just left was R W V Robins, the Test selector.’ The nervous young leggie was Robins’ son Charles. See also: ‘One of you is out’, page 306 � S Fiery twosome o fiery were West Australian opening bowlers Ron Gaunt and Des Hoare on the pacy-as WACA in the late ’50s that the local press labelled them ‘Haunt and Gore’. 68 THE FIVE MILE PRESS - SAMPLE PAGES Fav Cricket Yarns-text-finalpp_corx.indd 68 2/07/14 1:59 PM