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Evita Burned Down Our Pavilion - A Cricket Odyssey through Latin America (Paperback)
Loot Price: R324
Discovery Miles 3 240
You Save: R71
(18%)
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Evita Burned Down Our Pavilion - A Cricket Odyssey through Latin America (Paperback)
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List price R395
Loot Price R324
Discovery Miles 3 240
You Save R71 (18%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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'A highly entertaining read, deftly melding social history with
sporting memoir and travelogue' Mail on Sunday A history of Latin
America through cricket Cricket was the first sport played in
almost every country of the Americas - earlier than football, rugby
or baseball. In 1877, when England and Australia played the
inaugural Test match at the MCG, Uruguay and Argentina were already
ten years into their derby played across the River Plate. The
visionary cricket historian Rowland Bowen said that, during the
highpoint of cricket in South America between the two World Wars,
the continent could have provided the next Test nation. In Buenos
Aires, where British engineers, merchants and meatpackers flocked
to make their fortune, the standard of cricket was high: towering
figures like Lord Hawke and Plum Warner took star-studded teams of
Test cricketers to South America, only to be beaten by Argentina. A
combined Argentine, Brazilian and Chilean team took on the
first-class counties in England in 1932. The notion of Brazilians
and Mexicans playing T20 at the Maracana or the Azteca today is not
as far-fetched as it sounds. But Evita Burned Down Our Pavilion is
also a social history of grit, industry and nation-building in the
New World. West Indian fruit workers battled yellow fever and
brutal management to carve out cricket fields next to the railway
lines in Costa Rica. Cricket was the favoured sport of Chile's
Nitrate King. Emperors in Brazil and Mexico used the game to curry
favour with Europe. The notorious Pablo Escobar even had a shadowy
connection to the game. The fate of cricket in South America was
symbolised by Eva Peron ordering the burning down of the Buenos
Aires Cricket Club pavilion when the club refused to hand over
their premises to her welfare scheme. Cricket journalists Timothy
Abraham and James Coyne take us on a journey to discover this
largely untold story of cricket's fate in the world's most
colourful continent. Fascinating and surprising, Evita Burned Down
Our Pavilion is a valuable addition to cricketing and social
history.
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