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'The best book on captaincy, written by an expert' - Mike Atherton
Mike Brearley is one of the most successful cricket captains of all
time, and, in 1981, he captained the England team to the momentous
Ashes series victory against Australia. In The Art of Captaincy,
his study on leadership and motivation, he draws directly on his
experience of man-managing a team, which included a pugnacious Ian
Botham and Geoffrey Boycott, to explain what it takes to be a
leader on and off the field. Giving an insight into both his
tactical understanding of the game, as well as how to get a group
of individuals playing as a team in order to get the best out of
them, The Art of Captaincy is a classic handbook on how to
generate, nurture and inspire success. With a foreword by former
England player and BBC commentator Ed Smith, to celebrate the
thirtieth anniversary of its first publication, and an afterword by
director Sam Mendes, The Art of Captaincy remains urgently relevant
for cricket fans and business leaders alike. Covering the ability
to use intuition, resourcefulness, clear-headedness and the
importance of empathy as a means of achieving shared goals,
Brearley's seminal account of captaincy is both the ultimate
blueprint for creating a winning mind set, but also shows how the
lessons in the sporting arena can be applied to any walk of
personal and professional life.
'If you carry on like this, you'll do nothing but play football and
cricket all your life.' These were the exasperated words of Mike
Brearley's mother, as he once again trod mud into the family home
after a long day playing outdoors. They were also an unwitting but
half-accurate prediction, for Brearley would become one of the most
successful sportsmen of his generation by playing cricket for
Cambridge, Middlesex and then becoming one of England's finest
captains. But for Brearley, cricket wasn't just a physical
activity, it was also an intellectual game, offering the chance to
bring closer together body and mind. When his cricketing career
came to end - during his playing days he had had a hiatus as a
philosophy lecturer - he eschewed sporting commentary for a career
as a psychoanalyst. In Turning Over the Pebbles, which he calls a
'memoir of the mind', Brearley reviews his life with its attendant
emotions, tensions and moves. It is also a book of his second
thoughts and reassessments, allowing him to understand more fully
things that were obscure to him earlier. After all, he says,
'captaining ourselves, like captaining a team, requires a
willingness to allow thoughts and feelings their space'. Deeply
thoughtful, erudite and elegantly framed, this book seamlessly
blends all aspects of Brearley's life into a single integrated
narrative. With wide-ranging meditations on sport, philosophy,
literature, religion, leadership, psychoanalysis, music and more,
Brearley delves into his private passions and candidly examines the
various shifts, conflicts and triumphs of his extraordinary life
and career, both on and off the field.
If someone were to say 'it's not tennis', or 'not football' of
shabby behaviour in any walk of life, he or she would not be
understood. If they said 'it's not cricket', they probably would be
(though less reliably than a century ago). Is there some special
spirit of cricket? The laws of cricket, like the laws of the land,
aim at a sort of justice or balancing between different factions.
The purpose behind cricket's laws, and behind changes in them, is
often to calibrate the balance in the game between batsmen and
bowlers, between attack and defence, between safety and risk.
Cricketing lawmakers are interested in the overall appeal of the
game to players and spectators alike. In Spirit of Cricket, Mike
Brearley alternates between issues and examples within the game -
from 'Mankading' and the 'Sandpaper' affair to sledging, mental
disintegration and racism - as well as broader issues such as the
spirit and letter of the law. Brearley examines the issue of how
far what purports to be justice (in law or in spirit) may or may
not be the expression of the powerful within the activity or within
society. He also contrasts cheating and corruption, and reflects on
the nature of penalties in regard to each. He discusses the
significance of the notion of the spirit of the game for umpires,
groundsmen, administrators, media and spectators - and, of course,
for players. Intelligent and insightful, Spirit of Cricket points
to qualities in cricket that enhance our development as people -
including a sense of fair play, the embracing of striving both for
our team and for ourselves and the important values of playfulness
in life and professional sport.
If someone were to say 'it's not tennis', or 'not football' of
shabby behaviour in any walk of life, he or she would not be
understood. If they said 'it's not cricket', they probably would be
(though less reliably than a century ago). Is there some special
spirit of cricket? The laws of cricket, like the laws of the land,
aim at a sort of justice or balancing between different factions.
The purpose behind cricket's laws, and behind changes in them, is
often to calibrate the balance in the game between batsmen and
bowlers, between attack and defence, between safety and risk.
Cricketing lawmakers are interested in the overall appeal of the
game to players and spectators alike. In Spirit of Cricket, Mike
Brearley alternates between issues and examples within the game -
from 'Mankading' and the 'Sandpaper' affair to sledging, mental
disintegration and racism - as well as broader issues such as the
spirit and letter of the law. Brearley examines the issue of how
far what purports to be justice (in law or in spirit) may or may
not be the expression of the powerful within the activity or within
society. He also contrasts cheating and corruption, and reflects on
the nature of penalties in regard to each. He discusses the
significance of the notion of the spirit of the game for umpires,
groundsmen, administrators, media and spectators - and, of course,
for players. Intelligent and insightful, Spirit of Cricket points
to qualities in cricket that enhance our development as people -
including a sense of fair play, the embracing of striving both for
our team and for ourselves and the important values of playfulness
in life and professional sport.
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On Cricket (Hardcover)
Mike Brearley
1
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R631
R523
Discovery Miles 5 230
Save R108 (17%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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A TIMES SPORTS BOOK OF THE YEAR 'A treasure of recollections and
reactions, talking heroes, controversies and big themes' i paper
'Brearley is at his best in these quirky, delightful essays when he
is exploring the human qualities of humbler players . . .
Brearley's admiration for his friends' decency, craftsmanship and
modesty seems to recall a golden age of country cricket' The Times
'Brearley has a knack for paying respect to the past without
denigrating the present and for calmly considering the future' Mail
on Sunday Mike Brearley was arguably one of England's finest
cricket captains; not just for his outstanding record leading his
country but also for the way he orchestrated, during the 1981 Ashes
series, one of the most extraordinary reversals in sporting
history. In this collection of sparkling essays, Brearley reflects
on the game he has come to know so well. He ranges from the
personal - the influence of his Yorkshire father and the idols of
his youth - to controversial aspects of the professional game,
including cheating, corruption, and innovation, the latter often
being on a borderline between genius and rebellion. Brearley also
evaluates his heroes (amongst them Viv Richards, Bishan Bedi and
Dennis Lillee), the game changers, the outstanding wicketkeepers,
the 'Indian-ness' of four generations of Indian batsmen and the
important commentators (including Harold Pinter, John Arlott and
Ian Chappell). The Ashes, the most sustained love-hate relationship
in the history of sport and key to Brearley's test-playing career,
are raked over. Central to the book is an important section on race
and cricket, and the legacy of C. L. R. James. Insightful and
humorous, On Cricket is an intelligent exposition of the game's
idiosyncratic culture and its enduring appeal.
'If you go on like this, you'll do nothing but play cricket all
your life.' These were the exasperated words of Mike Brearley's
mother, as he once again tracked mud into the house after a long
day playing outdoors. They were also an unknowing prediction, for
Brearley's is a life that has always been closely intertwined with
cricket. One of England's finest cricket captains, Mike Brearley
looks back on a lifetime of the sport, from joyful childhood games
to his captaincy in the 1981 Ashes home series, leading England to
one of their most famous victories. A trained psychoanalyst,
Brearley seamlessly blends reflection on his sporting life with
introspections on literature, religion and leadership, reflecting
on his experiences both on and off the field. Intelligent and
insightful, Turning Over the Pebbles is a memoir brimming with
Brearley's private passions, as he reflects on an extraordinary
life and career. 'Brearley has a gentle, measured intellect that is
warming and intriguing rather than intimidating or irritating . . .
Brearley has a rare ability to read the game and its participants
with delicacy and precision, like a tailor unpicking a collection
of knotted threads' Wisden Cricket Monthly
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On Cricket (Paperback)
Mike Brearley
1
|
R393
R321
Discovery Miles 3 210
Save R72 (18%)
|
Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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'A treasure of recollections and reactions, talking heroes,
controversies and big themes' i paper 'Brearley is at his best in
these quirky, delightful essays when he is exploring the human
qualities of humbler players . . . Brearley's admiration for his
friends' decency, craftsmanship and modesty seems to recall a
golden age of country cricket' The Times 'Brearley has a knack for
paying respect to the past without denigrating the present and for
calmly considering the future' Mail on Sunday Mike Brearley was
arguably one of England's finest cricket captains; not just for his
outstanding record leading his country but also for the way he
orchestrated, during the 1981 Ashes series, one of the most
extraordinary reversals in sporting history. In this collection of
sparkling essays, Brearley reflects on the game he has come to know
so well. He ranges from the personal - the influence of his
Yorkshire father and the idols of his youth - to controversial
aspects of the professional game, including cheating, corruption,
and innovation, the latter often being on a borderline between
genius and rebellion. Brearley also evaluates his heroes (amongst
them Viv Richards, Bishan Bedi and Dennis Lillee), the game
changers, the outstanding wicketkeepers, the 'Indian-ness' of four
generations of Indian batsmen and the important commentators
(including Harold Pinter, John Arlott and Ian Chappell). The Ashes,
the most sustained love-hate relationship in the history of sport
and key to Brearley's test-playing career, are raked over. Central
to the book is an important section on race and cricket, and the
legacy of C. L. R. James. Insightful and humorous, On Cricket is an
intelligent exposition of the game's idiosyncratic culture and its
enduring appeal.
THE TIMES BOOK OF THE YEAR DAILY TELEGRAPH SPORTS BOOKS OF THE YEAR
LONGLISTED FOR THE WILLIAM HILL SPORTS BOOK OF THE YEAR 2017 What
is being on form? How does it relate to feeling 'in the zone'? Are
these states in the lap of the gods, a matter of which side of the
bed we got out of that morning? Or is there anything we can do to
make their arrival more likely? In this fascinating book, former
England cricket captain and psychoanalyst Mike Brearley draws on
his own experiences, both on and off the field, and examines many
of the elements of being in and out of form across a number of
different disciplines - not only in cricket and psychoanalysis but
also in finance, music, philosophy, medicine, teaching, tree
surgery and drama. Perceptive and engaging, On Form is an
exploration of the benefits and risks of being on form and can help
us all reflect on the range of conditions that block or liberate
us.
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