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Michael Parkinson on Cricket (Paperback, New Ed)
Loot Price: R312
Discovery Miles 3 120
You Save: R73
(19%)
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Michael Parkinson on Cricket (Paperback, New Ed)
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List price R385
Loot Price R312
Discovery Miles 3 120
You Save R73 (19%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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From the first section dealing with his own early encounters with
cricket onwards, distinguished sports journalist Parkinson strikes
a nostalgic tone without ever straying into sentimentality.
Throughout the book his love for the game shines through. He puts
forward trenchant opinions with regard to such matters as
administrators or the uncertain fate of small local clubs, but
always a warm humour shines through. This is particularly true when
he discusses Yorkshire cricket and his cricket-obsessed father.
Here we enter a world of awful pitches, cynical old pros, legendary
bats - including one allegedly part-covered with kangaroo skin to
give it a unique extra quality - and umpires appealing on behalf of
bowlers. The pieces cover a whole range of cricketing topics, with
many articles inevitably showing a bias towards the game in
Yorkshire. These provide many amusing anecdotes and stories
concerning the likes of Wilfred Rhodes, Geoffrey Boycott and Dickie
Bird. One of the best describes how a young, bespectacled Boycott
got the last laugh over some grizzled old players who were
barracking him by playing a beautiful back-foot shot that made them
quit their joking and gawp in admiration. Looking beyond Yorkshire
there are pieces covering such matters as fire-and-brimstone fast
bowlers, umpires exacting revenge over mouthy players and short
profiles of cricketers past and present from Keith Miller and
Garfield Sobers to Darren Gough and Shane Warne. This is an ideal
book for dipping into on a rainy afternoon, with something to
entertain all cricket lovers. Whether describing the genius of
Keith Miller and Garfield Sobers or the more contemporary exploits
of Darren Gough and Shane Warne, many of the articles will
transport readers to summer afternoons in far-off pavilions, or to
hard-fought games on rutted old Barnsley pitches. (Kirkus UK)
For most of his professional life Michael Parkinson has been a
highly regarded sports journalist. This consistently entertaining
collection of his best articles reminds us that his first love is
cricket and the people who excel at it. His ambition to play for
England was thwarted, but not before he opened the batting with a
young Dickie Bird at Barnsley. Along with hilarious memories of his
cricket mad father and a lost youth emulating his heroes in street
games, Michael Parkinson has written compelling descriptions of
great players he has known and the moments or matches during which
they became famous. Unsurprisingly, there is an edge to what the
author has to say about cricket administrators and the way the game
is run; the book is a sheer joy to read and written with the
author's easy assurance.
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