Ten-year-old: "Dad, why are those people walking away? The game's still going isn't it?"The doctor herself said that once she knew the cause was lost she started gunning for Freddy to get a 6-fer and "wished he was on our team", which were bold words because she knows me pretty well and I was within biting range.
Dad: "Judge them not harshly, my child [my Dad being… oooh, Gandalf?], it is simply that they have already seen too much, and are protecting what remains of their heathen eyeballs from the retina-searing glare of Mr Flintoff's holiness."
Personally, I had someone bring me the cat to hold and proceeded to sledge Graeme Swann: "Oh my God you have such a BAD HAIRCUT! Not even the BALLS to be a proper MULLET!" I know, harsh.
It's been a really draining game. I'm a wreck. As Mums say, someone's a bit overtired from too many late nights and getting a bit overexcited (ewwww).
Things
Ceci n'est pas une réception
In a game of many catches that weren't, my favourite was Billy Doctrove's non-take of the new ball late on Day 4. Was the problem his use of upwardly cupped hands? Downwardly cupped hands? No: splayed arms as the ball lobbed into the middle of his chest and dropped to the ground. It was like kindy, or, to be honest, a bit like how I might try to catch a ball. And as the SBS Circus people (who have been very kind to me) said, continuing the kindy theme, when Anderson received the now-scuffed object, he looked like "a kid whose new toy is whacked with a mash hammer".
SBS Team Pt 2
When I was really only 10-and-a-half years old, my favourite book ever was The Phantom Tollbooth by Norton Juster, with illustrations by Jules Feiffer. Which is probably why Greg Matthews' craggy raucousness these past couple of days has put me in mind of this:
The figure on the right is the Awful Dynne, and the boyish figure on the left is obviously Damien Martyn, though to be fair Damien has usually looked more entertained than this by goings-on. That he has managed to do so while barely moving his face has become a source of ongoing fascination for me. It's ridiculous to suggest he's been botoxed, but he does manage to channel all the expression in his face through just his eyes, the smallest of changes to his mouth shape and maybe the odd eyebrow lift, leaving vast expanses of facial acreage smooth and pretty and untouched. It's mesmerising.
This leaves Stuart MacGill, whose boxy weirdness, all angles, means he can only be the Dodecahedron (I think I even see some of his bowling action here):
PS.
I'm firmly of the opinion that an against-all-odds result like Cardiff is way more uplifting/downcasting than a straightforward win/loss like Lord's, and that the pressure will now be on England not to get prematurely dizzy and "finish the job", while Australia, and Mitchell Johnson in particular, can take some heart from a good go in the second innings, and let the pissed-offness focus their minds. That's my story anyway.
And is it my imagination, or are Ricky Pontings' fleshier parts (figuratively speaking) taking on a certain Steve Waugh gristle? That's a good thing. Well may everyone bang on about missing Warne and McGrath (and let's be clear, it's US who miss or don't miss Warne and McGrath, not the team, I don't think sportspeople have room for things like "missing"), but the people I wanted to see coming out of the sheds to stare down that second innings were Bevan and Waugh. Yes yes, wrong form of the game for Bevan, but still. Anyhoo, bring on Edgbaston, but not before I get some sleep.
How good was Freddie? I'm sure there were thousands of Australian cricket fans keen to adopt him as one of our own. His Australian size ticker and boyish grins towards our meek batsmen had Australian 70's fast bowler written all over them. Anyone got the number for Brangelina's adoption agent? Maybe we could trade our redhead (Andrew McDonald) for England's?
ReplyDeleteImagine how different things would be with Freddie in the Australian change-room. Mitchell Johnson would have an intimidater at the other end, our entire batting lineup would be confident of leaving the ball without embarrassing themselves and maybe even Andrew Symonds would have a kindred spirit to keep him focused on the game.
I'd love to see a poll of who Australian cricket fans would prefer to have on their side: Kevin Pietersen, Andrew Strauss, James Anderson or Freddie Flintoff?
Hello! Thank you so much for leaving a comment, it's my first one and I'm really tickled.
ReplyDeleteNow... you read the bit about biting, right?
No, no, I can admire Freddy as much as the next person with a pulse and I'm sure you're right about secret bowler-swapping fantasies among the Australian public.
My reservations are both a bit superficial - surely that English rose complexion would just *fry* in our climate! - and rather old-fashioned - no matter how winsome, it is simply FORBIDDEN to covet thy neighbour's bowler.
But, hey, if it brings Andrew Symonds back and raises Mitchell Johnson's intimidation factor, it would be unAustralian NOT to wish him on our team.
Thanks again for your contribution, see you in Edgbaston!
This is GREAT sports writing. Extraordinary amalgum of character, circumstance, incident, weirdness. Batsy, does your cat feel left out when the series is on, or is there a role?
ReplyDeleteWow, that's quite a rap, I may have blushed. Thank you very much....... Mum?
ReplyDeleteAn "extraordinary amalgum of character, circumstance, incident and weirdness" strikes me as a pretty good definition of cricket.
The cat (actually my flatmate's) serves pretty well as a hot-water bottle in the wee small hours of a chilly Ashes night... and I suspect he feels much the same way about me.
Thanks again for your kindness.