The good old days

Featured in

  • Published 20160119
  • ISBN: 978-1-925240-80-1
  • Extent: 264pp
  • Paperback (234 x 153mm), eBook

IT’S NOT CRICKET. In the old days, sometime in the distant past, cricketers played by the spirit of the game – no sledging, no cheating, no questioning of the umpire’s decision. Now it’s all different: dominated by financial demands, professional in its cynicism. The spirit of the game is endangered.

All that wishful thinking is nostalgic nonsense. Even if the participants then were divided into gentlemen (amateurs) and players (professional), the sport was ‘never a gentlemen’s game’ – to cite the title of Malcolm Knox’s masterful account of international cricket’s first forty years (Hardie Grant, 2012). It was fierce, often ruthless, highly contested, politically riven, with players looking for every advantage and potential pay-off. It is just that we like to think, looking at what we see now, it could once have been somehow different and better.

Already a subscriber? Sign in here

Share article

More from author

More from this edition

Taking credit

GR OnlineIN 2012 I was approached by Egon Zehnder, the world’s most successful privately owned executive-search firm, to write a history of the organisation that...

Beyond the nadir of political leadership

EssaySHORTLY AFTER SEIZING the prime ministership in September 2015, Malcolm Turnbull told reporters covering their third leadership coup against a sitting Australian prime minister...

A half-formed nation

MemoirHAPPY BIRTHDAY OLLIE! I thought I’d drop you a line about life, the state of the planet and the future of our country. Don’t worry,...

Stay up to date with the latest, news, articles and special offers from Griffith Review.