There are some sporting rivalries that go beyond the realm
of the sport and the sportsmen. They take a place in posterity.
England-Argentina in soccer, for example. Maradona's one genius head, and one
godly work, gave it an altogether different meaning. Remember Mexico '86?
Then there was Bjorn Borg and McEnroe fighting it out on
French clay and English grass. Fans sighed. The rockstar Borg had females
bating. The headband and sweaty forearms had them swooning all over. McEnroe
had a temper and personality. Contrasting styles, great tennis for fans. The
aficionados called the rivalry 'Fire and Ice'.
India- Pakistan in cricket has had its moments. But, it is
marred by politics. The rivalry, as I see it, is more political than sporting.
For a reason or the other, cricket often takes a backseat. The pressure shows
on players and it affects their performance.
Then there is the mother of them all – The Ashes. Tradition,
stories, enmity, folklore, you name it.
On the eve of the 1992 World Cup final held in Australia, Australian Cricket Board (ACB) threw a dinner party for the finalists England and Pakistan that was also graced by a host of dignitaries other than cricketers. God knows what got into the mind of the organizers as they impersonated the Queen through a renowned Australian comedian Gerry Connolly. In what has become a famous walk out, Ian Botham, arguably England’s greatest cricketer and all-rounder, stormed out of the party, visibly angry and scathing out at the Australian press.
“I’m very proud of my history and culture. You guys wouldn’t
know about it obviously, you’ve none of it,” yelled Beefy. The jibe, directed
to hit where it hurts the most, underscores the intensity of the uneasy
relationship and hardcore rivalry between the two cricketing nations.
There is something there when these two countries meet. On a
first day of the first test at Edgbaston or Brisbane, the atmosphere is
electric, the spectators are charged, the buzz is in the air. Everything else
is secondary; cricket is all that matters. A bouncer is hurled, a hook is
returned, a menacing glare follows. The Barmy army sings ‘The Ashes are coming
home’. The Aussie sledging is raised to a new level.
The coveted tiny urn for which the two countries rough it
out carries the weight of a century and more; of sweat and squabs; of long sea
voyages in the early 20th century; of Bodyline and Jardine; of Bradman and Jim
Laker; of Botham at Headingley and Warne at Old Trafford.
The story goes back a century and a quarter. In a mock
obituary carried by a British newspaper in 1877 after Australia’s victory at
The Oval, it stated that the English cricket died, body will be cremated and
the ashes will be taken to Australia. And the legend of The Ashes was thus
born.
The avowed foes have met in many epic battles since. When
the English steamship docked on Australian shores in the winter of 1932-33, the
press was all over the unstoppable Don Bradman who had averaged 130 in the
previous Ashes. England were under pressure. However, Douglas Jardine, their
captain, born in the British Raj of India had a plan. His tactics included
Larwood, who is said to have never bowled a wide in his career, to bowl fast on
the rib cage, with seven fielders on the leg side. It worked; England regained
The Ashes. Wisden calls it the most unpleasant series. On one occasion,
Australian captain Bill Woodfull was left down on the ground after being struck
just above the heart by a Larwood bouncer. The Australian crowd booed. That
wouldn’t change much in the cold and calculating Jardine. Moments later, he
called out to Larwood - "Well bowled Harold" - and set the fielders
again in the hated Bodyline formation. Police had to be deployed on the
boundary. The Australian captain next day retorted angrily: “There are two
teams out there. One is trying to play cricket and the other is not.”
How zealously the Aussie spectators had started hating
Jardine is underlined by a small incident that happened when the England
captain was at the crease during the fifth test at Sydney, England about to
complete a 4-1 series win. When the play stopped for a drinks break, Australian
captain was about to hand over a bottle of water to Jardine when a spectator
yelled out to him: “Don’t give the bastard a drink. Let him die of thirst.”
Even the stoic Jardine enjoyed that little moment and recalled later that “it
was one of the few humourous remarks which we were privileged to hear on this
tour.”
At the height of Vietnam War in the 60s, a young US marine
James Stockdale was captured by the Viet Cong and sent to the infamous Hanoi
torture centre. He was interrogated, beaten and tortured. Stockdale spent 7
years in the prison. He could have easily avoided abuse by cozying up to his
tormentors somewhat. An occasional anti-American statement and they would have
treated him like any other ordinary inmate. Yet it never crossed his mind. He
willingly gave himself up. As he later explained, it was the only way he could
maintain self-respect. He didn’t do it for the love of his country. Nor was it
about the war. It was purely about not breaking down inside. He did it solely
for himself. Sometimes, I wonder how many English and Australian players
think this way when it comes to Ashes: of not breaking down, for there is so
much at stake for both England and Australia. A part of that credit must also
go to the writers, who have woven remarkable stories around The Ashes. Cricket
is one of those few sports that give scope for prolific writing and the likes
of Neville Cardus, CLR James, Mike Coward, Peter Roebuck have given it a
gourmet treatment for the reading aficionados.
My first brush with The Ashes was in ’93 when Allan Border’s side routed an insipid England led by the Groucho mustachioed Graham Gooch. England, in those days of misery, were used to frequently changing their playing XI (in the previous Ashes of ’89, English selectors led by Ted Dexter had used as many as 29 players throughout the series).
My first brush with The Ashes was in ’93 when Allan Border’s side routed an insipid England led by the Groucho mustachioed Graham Gooch. England, in those days of misery, were used to frequently changing their playing XI (in the previous Ashes of ’89, English selectors led by Ted Dexter had used as many as 29 players throughout the series).
From that bright summer of Kashmir, the romanticism of Ashes
stuck to me forever. With the internet still a good decade away, those days the
only means of keeping track of the series was through Times of India sports
page, which would arrive in the afternoons, and the weekly Sportstar magazine
that I read with great enthusiasm - the tour diaries of Mike Coward in
particular.
In the following winter, with enough time to kill during the winter school break, my cousin brought some VHS cassettes from his Delhi trip for me, sensing my love for the game. Two of those cassettes included ‘That Man Botham’ and ‘Richie Benaud Presents’. One of the most visible memories from it remains Richie Benaud, in his typical soft tone, speaking about the 1974/75 Ashes played in Australia. Those were the times when young people around the world had started experimenting with LSD, free sex and personal freedom. Shackles were breaking. Students rose up in Paris one morning with placards of revolution. Cricket, the game of nobles was finding its hippie fad too, ready to break the norms. Dennis Lillee and Jeff Thomson, when they ran fast, sending bullets down to the batsmen at the other end, were egged on by the aggressive Aussie spectators. Cricket was no more a gentleman’s game! And Australia were led by a certain Ian Chappell who believed in granting the opposition no quarter. He played tough cricket and led from the front.
In the following winter, with enough time to kill during the winter school break, my cousin brought some VHS cassettes from his Delhi trip for me, sensing my love for the game. Two of those cassettes included ‘That Man Botham’ and ‘Richie Benaud Presents’. One of the most visible memories from it remains Richie Benaud, in his typical soft tone, speaking about the 1974/75 Ashes played in Australia. Those were the times when young people around the world had started experimenting with LSD, free sex and personal freedom. Shackles were breaking. Students rose up in Paris one morning with placards of revolution. Cricket, the game of nobles was finding its hippie fad too, ready to break the norms. Dennis Lillee and Jeff Thomson, when they ran fast, sending bullets down to the batsmen at the other end, were egged on by the aggressive Aussie spectators. Cricket was no more a gentleman’s game! And Australia were led by a certain Ian Chappell who believed in granting the opposition no quarter. He played tough cricket and led from the front.
Those days, any footage from Australia used to be a rarity. I remember being totally mesmerized by the whole atmosphere. Sunny Australian summers, sun kissed bodies, bouncy pitches, good coverage and sea gulls, plus some great aggressive cricket.
Tony Greig fends off a Thomson snorter, Gabba 1974 |
John Edrich is brought down by a Lillee bouncer |
BBC correspondent, Christopher Jenkins on 1974/75 Ashes. |
Usually, fast bowling is associated with West Indian quicks of the 70s and the 80s, that famous pace battery. However, the pioneers were Dennis Lillee and Jeff Thomson, and 74/75 Ashes was their baby. Their fast bowling was frighteningly quick and England by the end of it were bruised and battered - both physically and psychologically. Lilliee and Thomson took 25 and 33 wickets respectively. ‘I thought stuff that stiff upper lip crap. Let’s see how stiff it is when it’s split’, Jeff Thomson had said in a post-match press conference. England were so plagued by injuries that they needed reinforcements from England - one of them the 41 year old Colin Cowdrey. In what may be called a futile exercise in the midst of a bloody war, Cowdrey’s inclusion had little impact on the series. Australia trounced England 3-1. Post series, writer and historian Gideon Haigh wrote about the fearsome duo. “Lillee and Thomson remain a combination to conjure with, as sinister in England as Burke and Hare, or Bismarck and Tirpitz.”
With Packer’s circus taking over the game in the late 70s,
cricket in England was losing its popularity, until that man Botham propped up
in one English summer, producing a feat that remains unparalleled. Not
surprisingly, the ’81 Ashes came to be known as the Botham’s Ashes. The ‘81
story is stuff of legends and plots that seems like a carefully crafted Erich
Segal fiction.
England, captained by a young 24-year old Botham, were 1-0
down when the third test at Headingley began. Beefy relinquished his captaincy
after the second test. His form had dropped and according to David Gower when
Beefy was out for naught in the second test at Lord's, almost sealing his fate
as captain, even a hair strand dropping would have broken the silence that
descended in the England dressing room. English cricket had plummeted to a low.
Mike Brearley, the 38-year old professor of philosophy, was appointed
as the captain for the third test. England’s fortunes however didn’t seem to be
turning. They were annihilated in the first innings and asked to follow on. At
130/7 with still some hundred runs short of making Aussies bat again, in a
remarkable turnaround and back to the walls blitzkrieg, Botham and Graham
Dilley added 130 odd for the 8th wicket. Bouncers from Lillee and co.
were smashed by the mercurial Botham to all corners on a cold July English
afternoon with utter disdain. But even after such spectacular display, all
Australia required was 130 to win on the final day. By now clouds had
given way to bright luminous sunshine. When Australia looked well on
course at 56/1, Mike Brearley in one stroke of brilliant astuteness changed Bob
Willis' end and asked him to bowl down the hill. Result: Australia bowled out
for 111. England had fashioned one of the most remarkable come-from-behind
victories in cricketing history.
With the momentum and impetus well rooted with the English,
they went on to win the next test at Edgbaston where Australia, yet again,
failed to chase a low target. For now it was Botham's turn to light up the
magic with the red cherry. In a hostile spell of fast bowling, Beefy returned
with figures of 5 for 1 and England went on to win the test by 29
runs.
In the fifth test at Old Trafford, Botham hit a sparkling
century. Studded with marvelous square drives and swaggered hooks,
the flamboyant all-rounder brought the Manchester crowd to its feet with a
quicker than run-a-ball century. England won the test by 103 runs. The final
test at The Oval was a draw and England regained The Ashes.
The 1981 Ashes gave Britain its first sporting hero since
Bobby Charlton in Ian Terence Botham. Australian captain Kim Hughes’ remarks
post series perhaps described their frustration aptly: “This series will be
remembered in a hundred years. Unfortunately!”
Beefy’s popularity skyrocketed to the extent that he was
called as the fifth Beatle. It wasn’t just his game, but his looks and his
exploits off the field too that often kept him in the news. On one occasion, it
is said that Beefy made such passionate love to a Barbadian Miss World that the
goddamn bed cracked - perhaps, only in some carnal justice. This escapade
became folklore and made its way into many Beefy stories.
In the subsequent years, England maintained its dominance. However, the famous ’89 series when Allan Border’s side, dismissed by the English press as the weakest to have toured England, was to change it. England led by David Gower lost The Ashes 4-0. After the series ended, Allan Border explained how he, very clearly, asked his side not to be friendly with the opposition. Gower called Border’s behaviour strange. They were good friends off the field, however, cometh the test match, at toss, Border would just shake hands with a glum face, without exchanging any pleasantries, and run back to the pavilion. This was a mind game and a preparation to own the rivals and it seemed to work. Such gamesmanship!
Ian Botham on that June 1981 Headingley afternoon. |
Bob Willis hits Rod Marsh on the head, Headingley '81. |
Iconic moment. Mike Brearley tosses the ball to Bob Willis |
In the subsequent years, England maintained its dominance. However, the famous ’89 series when Allan Border’s side, dismissed by the English press as the weakest to have toured England, was to change it. England led by David Gower lost The Ashes 4-0. After the series ended, Allan Border explained how he, very clearly, asked his side not to be friendly with the opposition. Gower called Border’s behaviour strange. They were good friends off the field, however, cometh the test match, at toss, Border would just shake hands with a glum face, without exchanging any pleasantries, and run back to the pavilion. This was a mind game and a preparation to own the rivals and it seemed to work. Such gamesmanship!
While English cricket in the 90s fell from one low to
another, Australia produced some champion players in that era, with Shane
Warne’s first Ashes delivery called as the ball of the century. That classic
leg spinner’s dismissal: ball pitching outside leg and clipping the left bail.
How that ball missed the girth of an oversized Mike Gatting is still beyond me.
But it was another addition to The Ashes tales.
Warne's ball of the century, Old Trafford, 1993. |
In a cutthroat battle like this, very minute details can
catch astronomical proportions. Ask Nasser Hussain. There have been volumes
written on his decision to ask Australia to bat, after winning the toss at
Gabba in 2002. Scorecard at the end of 1st day read: Australia
364/2. Derek Pringle, former England medium pacer and now a well-known
broadcaster wrote: “In earlier times, inserting the opposition and seeing them
finish the day on 364/2 would have been enough for a captain to summon his
faithful hound, light a last cigarette and load a single bullet into the
revolver.”
While there have been a number of Ashes series that are
remembered for the quality of cricket and the intensity with which they were
played, the 2005 Ashes stands out as nothing before or after it – perhaps aptly
viewed as the greatest Ashes of all time. Apart from top notch cricket and
closely fought battles, it was so unpredictable and tense with innumerable
moments of drama and suspense. It was also an anticlimax in that nobody expected
England to even draw the series, let alone win it. England were so used to
humiliation at the hands of the Aussie invincible over the last decade and a
half that nobody in England or Australia, or anywhere else on planet Earth
where The Ashes was followed, gave England any chance. But then, what we
witnessed was an unexpected treat. There is always something special about the
underdog turning the tables on the mightier opposition.
From 1986-87 onwards until this series, England couldn’t
manage a single series win, most of the times rolled over by the Aussie
juggernaut. But not now! A determined England side led by Michael Vaughan was
intent on breaking this long string of defeats and break it did. It was a great
team effort by the English, but two superstars, Kevin Petersen and Andrew
Flintoff shone brighter than the rest and taking the attack to the opposition
beat the mighty Aussies at their own game. The 2005 Ashes changed the
subsequent results that used to be so heavily lopsided in favour of Australia
over the last fifteen years. England went on to win the 2009, 2010-11, 2013 and
2015 Ashes.
The Ashes were coming back after 18 long years. The triumphant English side at The Oval 2005. |
In moments of my procrastination, which by the way are
frequent, I picture my best experiences. A ten-year cruise through Caribbean or
backpacking in the tropical forests of Brazil or drive in a 1965 Chevy through
the ochre landscape of south Spain or an Ashes test at Lord’s. And if a
dazzling fairy like the ones in Aesop fables asks me to choose one from this
wish list, I would hands down choose the last one.
Artists go to Italy to pay homage to the great masters like
Raphael and Michelangelo, as pilgrims go to Jerusalem and Mecca, or students in
the middle ages went to pontiffs and chief seats of learning where science and
philosophy had made a mark. Orientalists in 18th and 19th centuries
travelled far in search of exotic east. I think the romanticism of a puritan
Ashes fan belongs to such mystical realms.