Starting in the present day, England won the first test against India, and lost the second, after Ben Stokes won the toss and put the visitors in. During the first there was a good deal of harping about the decision until the fifth day win, at which point it ceased. Chastened, the critics were less vocal at Edgbaston. I doubt that the toss decision made any difference to either result other than placing Stokes’ England ready to chase in the fourth innings, as they prefer to do. It rarely does unless the pitch deteriorates significantly, which happens regrettably rarely these days.
If a team
loses having put the opposition in, the decision is often assumed to be a
contributing factor; a defeat after choosing to bat first rarely attracts such
opprobrium. The disparity is historical, a hangover from a time when pitches
often did turn more and more as the game progressed, and when they were
uncovered.
Which brings
us to the first test against Australia in 1975, at Edgbaston, and Mike
Denness’s decision to put Australia in. The basis for this was the overcast
conditions that appeared favourable to England’s wobblers of the seam, Arnold,
Old and the recalled Snow. John Woodcock, in The Times, said that Ian
Chappell would have done the same.
The first
day was pretty even, finishing with Australia on 243 for five. A slogging
Thommo’s 49 next morning stretched the lead to 359 at which point it rained.
Adam Collins
and Geoff Lemon, hosts of the excellent podcast The Final Word, have
been known to ridicule the whole idea of uncovered pitches, and you can see
their point, particularly when, as was the case in 1975, the exposure only
occurred during interruptions in play. Once proceedings were abandoned for the
day the covers were wheeled on. It seems a random way in which to conduct an
international sporting contest. The reason why those of us sufficiently
venerable to have seen it happen regret the passing of uncovered pitches was
that they produced some fascinating cricket, particularly if your team
contained DL Underwood.
Of course,
Denness might have been saved had the weather forecasts been better in 1975. As
it was, the falling rain was a fatal diagnosis for his captaincy. By the end of
Friday England were 83 for seven.
As we have
seen, there was some doubt as to whether this series would be on television at
all. It was, but had to compete for air time with the Open golf at Carnoustie.
The BBC’s on-air team was that with which we were so familiar through the
seventies and early eighties. Peter West presented. Richie Benaud and Jim Laker
were the lead commentators with another voice to provide further analysis. At
Edgbaston that was Ted Dexter.
On the
radio, John Arlott, Brian Johnston and Alan McGilvray were present throughout
the series. As Arlott now only commentated for the first half of the day—officially
to free him to concentrate on his report for The Guardian, but also allowing
him to enjoy without inhibition the several bottles of claret carried in his
briefcase—a fourth ball-by-ball commentator was required. At Edgbaston it was
Don Mosey. For subsequent tests Henry Blofeld, Alan Gibson or Chris
Martin-Jenkins joined the team. Comments and summaries and were provided by
Trevor Bailey and, in his first year as a regular, Fred Trueman. Bill Frindall
was the scorer and published his elegant scoresheets in book form after the
series (I have it, but our books are in boxes in the garage because we have recently
recarpeted; it’s like having your children locked away). Jim Swanton no longer
delivered his Day of Judgement close-of-play summaries having retired from reporting
after the winter tour.
County
cricketer of the week was Malcolm Nash, who took 14 for 137 in Glamorgan’s
defeat of Hampshire, including nine in the first innings. Nash is cursed to be
an eternal quiz question: who did Sobers hit for six sixes at Swansea in 1968? He
deserves rather to be remembered as a top county cricketer, one who would make
an XI of the best uncapped players of his era. Leading the attack in that team
would be Peter Lee of Lancashire, the leading wicket taker at that point of the
season with 60 (Sarfraz Nawaz was second with 55, then Mike Hendrick, 47). There
was no winter tour by MCC in 1975/76. Lee and others who had a good 1975 may therefore
have missed the recognition that they deserved.
The only winter since then without representative cricket overseas was 1988-89 when Graham Gooch’s tour of India was cancelled because of its captain’s South African connections.
In high
summer county cricket spread itself to outgrounds, this week including
Ilkeston, Southport, Bournemouth and Basingstoke. I watched at the latter two
in later years. The cricket reporters enjoyed these outposts, none more so than
Alan Gibson, who was at May’s Bounty, Basingstoke, along with Henry Blofeld.
Readers who think that this whole exercise is no more than a pretext for me to
read Gibson’s accounts once more (reports isn’t quite the word) once more are on to
something. This is how he began on the first day:
The next day
he let us know that headmaster had sought him out to let him that the pupil in
question was not in trouble, but had a dentist’s appointment.
Lancashire led the Championship. Barry Richards and Derek Underwood headed the averages.
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