Saturday, 24 April 2010

If it's Springtime That Must Mean Cricket in England!


Whenever Spring shows through the rain clouds Englishmen will run for the 'white's,' grab a bat and head for the village green! Naturally this is not always easy in large conurbations but somehow there is always an area put aside for men of indeterminate age to waste a few hours throwing a ball at a bat playing cricket. As you are aware the English believe, wrongly, that they invented everything that exists, however when it comes to cricket most peoples will happily allow them to take the blame!  Since it sprang into being in the late seventeen hundreds it has become associated with the spread of the British Empire.(Stand to attention at the back! Salute the flag!) Now nations like India and the West Indian Islands play the game, and naturally they play it so much better than its inventors! Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka are places where the game has an almost religious status. For the poor of course a success at cricket can lead to an escape from a life of toil and sweat and some have become rich beyond their wildest dreams.The latest version of the game '20/20' now has a league in India which offers football player type profits. That appears popular with the players! Those nations with connections to the 'Old Country' also played the game successfully, Australia in particular, while New Zealand played it in between thumping everybody at rugby union. The Canadians tried it but found the ball often got lost in the twenty foot snowdrifts and instead took up Ice Hockey, a derivation of another English game. Being Canadian of course they decided on a version which was deemed pleasantly violent. There again few Canadians ever saw a girls school play hockey! St Trinians anyone?

To normal people, and Americans of course, the laws of cricket are confusing. Having myself idled watched the game via the box in the corner for many years I can assure you that it has a pleasant and enjoyable side. Ask me however where a 'Silly Mid Off' should stand or what the umpire, (that's he in the white coat with several pullovers around his head in the 70% heat) ask what he is doing waving his hand in that peculiar manner and I confess, like an English batsman, I'm stumped! By the way English cricket has improved greatly in recent years notably from the descendants of immigrants from the Indian sub Continent and elsewhere reaching test standard! Quite how the British National Party will cope with that I do not care to answer. 

Watching these chubby, sweating men roll up and throw (sorry, 'bowl') the ball at a gray haired man who's belly desired to break through the restricting belt, I was struck by how sociable the game was. Many of these lads have played enthusiastically for many years, often following in their father's footsteps, especially around here in a small town with lots of villages round about. Some cricket pitches possibly go back over two hundred years or more. Only 'Townies' moving form city to a quite life in the country would ever complain about a ball from such a pitch breaking their window! And would you believe some do! If the game is rained off the players can always socialise in the bar and if not the exercise of standing around in the sun for a few hours, occasionally chasing a ball, incidentally a very hard ball, and batting tsaid ball occasionally then running 22 yards between the wicket to the sound of a lacklustre applaud from a drowsy watcher must be good for them, physically and emotionally. Sociable, healthy exercise with little strain, and a game many play well into their fifties and beyond. Let's face it, we might play football into our thirties, but when we realise, at around eighteen, that we will never make the grade the joy of being kicked around is somewhat lessened. By forty few play football any more. Crickets leisurely pace enables enthusiasts to pull hamstrings and damage the Achilles right up to their pension.  Anyway some say, but whisper this quietly, that in spite of the confusing rules and endless arguments about 'moving feet,' and 'spinners,' and absurd scoring system, some say that this serious cricket business is actually fun!   


5 comments:

Mike Smith said...

The Indian Premier League seems light years away from the traditional village green game...

soubriquet said...

I grew up around cricket, my dad was a lifetime devotee, though he went to test matches, and was involved in the national governing body, the cricket he loved was the cricket of the villages, the cricket where the village butcher, the housepainter, the farmer, the electrician, the accountant, the doctor, all turned out to play and socialise together, the wives and girlfriends chatting on the pavilion verandah, the kids trying to tightrope walk along the fence.
As a kid, that was where we went, every weekend, home games and away games.
I never played, or hardly ever. Yes, at school, where it was compulsory... But at the age kids develope their catching, throwing, and batting skills, I was short-sighted, but undiagnosed. The ball only came into clear focus about a quarter of a second before it hit me. Often time enough to dodge, but rarely time enough to catch. Two broken fingers and a busted tooth were enough.
However, though I'd almost never watch cricket on television, I do love, when I'm out and about in the countryside, stopping to watch a match, with a pint in my hand, (From "The Cricketer's Arms"), it's a gentle way to while away a summer afternoon. About an hour's my limit though.

Relax Max said...

Right.

Martyn said...

Graham a great write up about a game I rate as second to football. Lately the Indian element of the English team has been replaced by South Africans but apart from that your post is spot on and very dry humoured too. Good post.

Adullamite said...

Martyn, I forgot the South Africans name! :)