The Ashes, the legendary cricket series between England and Australia, began in 1877 with the first-ever Test match played at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.
The rivalry quickly grew after England lost to Australia on home soil in 1882, prompting a satirical obituary in The Sporting Times declaring that “English cricket had died, and the body will be cremated and the ashes taken to Australia.”
England toured Australia in the summer of 1932/33 to play five Test matches. The tourists won back the Ashes convincingly by four games to one in one of the most acromonious series of all time.
The tour was highly controversial because of the Bodyline bowling tactics used by the English captain Douglas Jardine. The plan hatched in England with the help of Percy Fender and Arthur Carr, was to specifically limit the extraordinary batting skill of Australia's Don Bradman. In the prior 1930 series, Bradman had plundered a record 974 runs off their attack but had shown some tendency to flinch at the fast rising delivery. When Jardine instructed his two fast bowlers Harold Larwood and Bill Voce to bowl Bodyline, it had the effect of lowering Bradman's extraordinary batting to an average of 53 during the series. Gubby Allen, an amateur fast bowler, refused to bowl Bodyline.
Australian skipper Bill Woodfull's physical courage and dignified leadership won him many admirers. He did not employ retaliatory tactics. When the English team manager and former captain Plum Warner visited the Australian dressing room to express his sympathies during the 3rd Test in Adelaide, Woodfull's famous response meant to be private, but leaked to the press was "I don't want to see you, Mr Warner. There are two teams out there, one is playing cricket. The other is making no attempt to do so"
Notable Incidents
1980: Kim Hughes lights up Lords in Centenary Test
Fletcher: Gambhir needs to be more positive (SCG)
around the world |
---|
|
|
|
more... |
CricketCrowd Articles |
---|
|
|
|
more... |