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Four Gold Stars
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hmpphhff....i do not hate the koalas...they would have made adequate shield players for the ddders during the bulk of their less than distinguished careers


WA - lost in the desert like burke and (gr)wills
 
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Four Gold Stars
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Gubby Allen in 32/33

Glenn Turner's absence from the New Zealand team for 6 years can't have helped their cause.

Atherton's declaration with Hick on 98*.

If Botham really deliberately run out his captain in NZ in 77/78 this should have been bad for team morale. Probably wasn't though.

I'd like to think that Arthur Gilligan trying to recruit his players to Fascism in 24/25 would have been bad for morale but i think people saw things differently in the 1920s.

Following from this nearly half a century later, the MCC (with Gilligan as president) bowing to SAF pressure not to select D'Oliviera might have upset some England players.
 
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One Gold Star
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Fascism appealed to quite a few who would later have been embarrassed by their flirtation with it, and did so much later than 1924-25, and when its essential character should have been much more obvious.

Does anyone know whether Gilligan recanted? What did he do during WWII?
 
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Three Gold Stars
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quote:
Originally posted by peterg:
Fascism appealed to quite a few who would later have been embarrassed by their flirtation with it, and did so much later than 1924-25, and when its essential character should have been much more obvious.

Does anyone know whether Gilligan recanted? What did he do during WWII?


Aye, it was good enough for the King ...

Wasn't Mosley (? sic) a Lord as well?
 
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One Sparkly Silver Star
Picture of mynah
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quote:
Originally posted by Josh C:
The Indian WK Nayan Mongia was not very popular with many of his team mates.
From what I've heard many Indian players were not sorry to see Ganguly go.
 
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Two Gold Stars
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quote:
Originally posted by mynah:
quote:
Originally posted by Josh C:
The Indian WK Nayan Mongia was not very popular with many of his team mates.
From what I've heard many Indian players were not sorry to see Ganguly go.
That is not true. I have yet to come across an Indian player who has not talked highly about Ganguly's leadership and in particular support for the youngsters. Even the so called "tell all" memoirs of John Wright backs this.

He has had some negative comments from Andrew Flintoff in relation to his County stint though.
 
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Four Gold Stars
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quote:
Originally posted by peterg:
Fascism appealed to quite a few who would later have been embarrassed by their flirtation with it, and did so much later than 1924-25, and when its essential character should have been much more obvious.

Does anyone know whether Gilligan recanted? What did he do during WWII?


He dropped out of the British Fascist party, which fell apart long before Moseley's British Union of Fascists started. He was 44 when the war started so he probably wasn't in active service. He obviously wasn't an active Fascsit at this time or he would have been interned and even the MCC would have been unlikely to accept his as president 20 years later.

Anyway, people shouldn't rest easy. Fascism is alive and well (though never by that name) in plenty of countries around the world and seems to be generally tolerated by many who should know better.
 
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One Gold Star
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Indeed.

The stresses of a globalised economy are a potentially dangerous breeding ground.
 
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One Sparkly Silver Star
Picture of mynah
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Seems a guy only needs to be captain for a reasonable stretch of time to qualify for the team... Ninja
 
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Two Silver Stars
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Johnny Wardle managed to turn the Yorkshire dressing room into a battlefield. He must be worth a mention.
 
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One Silver Star
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From the same era as Wardle: West Indian Roy Gilchrist. He was suspended from a game in England in 1957 for continually acting the fool, a Press man asked why he wasn't playing, the manager said he'd done a hamstring. Unfortunately Gilchrist was listening to every word and he interjected that he;d never dhad hamstring trouble in his life. He was then sent home.

Earlier in the tour, he'd had a run-in with Harry Brand, the groundsman and acknowledged Grand Poo Bah of the day at The Oval. He turned up completely out of the blue, threw a ball at Brind and said something like, 'I'm Roy Gilchrist, you go to nets, this ball, you bowl, I bat.' Brand, well used to dealing with uppity cricketers, replied, 'I'm Harry Brand, you sod off, or this bat, I ram down your neck'.
 
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One Sparkly Silver Star
Picture of mynah
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quote:
Originally posted by Wide Wally:
Johnny Wardle managed to turn the Yorkshire dressing room into a battlefield. He must be worth a mention.
Seems he started off okay, though?
 
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Three Gold Stars
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that link seems to be restricted to registered crapinfo users
 
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One Sparkly Silver Star
Picture of mynah
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quote:
Originally posted by jadeja vu:
that link seems to be restricted to registered crapinfo users
I have no problem with it. Can't remember if I registered, but I didn't pay them...

Here's the article:

CRICKETER OF THE YEAR - 1954

Johnny Wardle

Almanack home
1954 home


To laugh at the hard knocks of life is a characteristic of the North Country miner, and John Henry Wardle, the Yorkshire left-arm slow bowler, born at Ardsley, January 8, 1923, is typical of a calling which would have claimed him had it not been for a great natural aptitude at cricket. His father was a miner.

Humour on the cricket field, especially in a Test Match between England and Australia, is rare. The seriousness of the occasion precludes funniness unless the antics of a number 11 batsman trying to put his bat to a top-class bowler are considered funny.

Yet who could do anything except chuckle--at Lord's of all places--when Johnnie Wardle was hit on the thigh by a Lindwall express and he immediately began to rub his elbow? Or, when the attempted cover-drive soared over the slips, this same player took an imaginary bit of chalk and rubbed his bat, and, on another occasion for the same type of mis-cued stroke, he seriously applauded himself for the four runs which resulted. Most humour comes at the predicament or the expense of a third party. The best humour comes from the man making fun of himself.

As a youngster at the Brampton-Ellis Senior School, Wardle revealed that first that first boy at the school who managed to hit a six on the their spacious playing fields. When hitting, kicking, throwing and bowling, it was apparent that he had a highly developed ball sense.

Mad keen on cricketand all ball games, young Wardle moved to the Wath-on-Dearne Grammar School when he was 11. The seniors at school failed to realise the urge and latent possibilities in the boy who frequented the nets whenever they were at practice. In that hard, practical wayof senior boys they kicked him out unceremoniously.

At 14 he was still considered one of the juniors in the school at Wath, but in the neighbouring village of Brampton, where they had a club playing in the Southern Yorkshire league, there was encouragement and frequent inclusions in the side. By dashing home from school and hurrying to the cricket ground he managed to be on hand whenever the side playing in the Mexborough league were a player short. HIs lively enthsiasm brought him many games with the men.

It was in one of these games that boy John Wardle had his sweetest moment. The school captain came to play for an opposing team and Wardle bowled him for a duck.

His inclusion in the school team came automatically, and at the end of his first season he had scored more runs, taken more wickets and was credited with more catches than any other player in the side. He won a Herbert Sutcliffe bat with a bowling performance of 8 for 4.

At the school prize distribution there were five school crickets caps on the headmasters desk for presentation. Says Johnnie"I expected my name to be called. After four had been given away I was out of my seat and moving along the row to get the fifth, but it wasn't for me; With that capacity to laugh at the knocks, Wardle chuckles, " I did feel a fool, and I never got a school cap.;

He left school at 15 to become an apprentice fitter at the Hickelton Main Collery, and it is worthy of note in his next five seasons - playing for Hickleton, Brampton and Denaby - he won the League junior bowling prize four times. In the 1940 season he made his first century, 104 not out against Mexborough, and a few weeks later he took all ten wickets for 36 runs against Rockingham.

It is worth reporting too, that when was only 17, Major Frank Buckley gave him trials as an inside-forward with the famous Wolverhampton Wanderers football club and desired to sign him. But Wardle decided otherwise because so many of his local cricket clubs were wanting him to turn professional, what with his job and being paid for cricket, he was better off staying in Yorkshire.

In 1943-44, when playing for Denaby in the Yorkshire Councli League, Wardle established a recordby taking 113 wickets in the season. He was known throughout Yorkshire as one of the most promising left-handers in the country and when, after the war, Yorkshire played their first friendly fixture with Lancashire in 1945, Wardle was included in the team for Old Trafford. He did little except note the virtues of length and direction as demonstrated by the veteran left-handed Arthur Booth, who took eight wickets for 54 runs in the second innings.

Booth was chosen as the bowler best suited to fill the gap in the Yorkshire team caused by the loss of Headley Verity, but two swashbuckling innings of 64 and 48 for Yorkshire against Derbyshire at Sheffield a fortnight later served to keep Wardle's name to the fore. He played regularly for the Yorkshire Second XI in 1946, and when Booth fell ill, in the first match of the 1947 season, Wardle was the natural replacement. In all matches he took 86 wickets for 25.64 apiece and averaged 18.18 with the bat. Amoung his performances were 6 wickets for 28 runs against Surrey at Bradford and 7 for 66 in W.E. Bowes' benefit against Middlesexat Leeds. He was chosen to go to the West Indies with G.O. Allen's side.

One of the disappointments of the tour Wardle says, "I was far too inexperienced. I believe that a player should be sent on tour to get added experience. He needs to have plenty before he goes.; However, in the long run the experience was good. From the 1948 season onward Wardle has taken a hundred wickets easily. Yet there is no reason to believe that Wardle has stopped spinning the ball. Returns of 6 for 12 and 6 for 18 against Gloucestershire, 6 for 20 and 6 for 19 against Kent, and 7 for 49 against Middlesex are performances in recent years which give the lie to such a suggestion.

Against Australia at Lord's last season he bowled - in his capacity of stock bowler - 75 overs and took 5 wickets for 188 runs. On a turning pitch in the last test match in Manchester when Australia lost eight wickets for 35 runs, Wardle took 4 victims at a cost of only 7 runs.

Alert and reliable in the field, a harh hitting batsman who vioulated Roses Match tradition by hitting five 6's in an innings of 79 against Lancashire, Wardle in one way or another is always a useful member of a side. He went to the West Indies again last winter, and it was hoped he would reveal that final polish ensuring his selection for Australia and England fight to retain the Ashes this winter.

© John Wisden & Co
 
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Three Gold Stars
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nice article, thanks
 
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