Reviews ReviewsRSS FeedFeeds
The Wisden Cricketer
 

Gubby Under Pressure: Letters From Australia, New Zealand and Hollywood

Letters from an autocrat

An expertly compiled collection of Allen's letters home from the Ashes tour of 1936-37 does nothing to enhance his reputation

Stephen Fay

April 6, 2008

Text size: A | A

Gubby Under Pressure: Letters From Australia, New Zealand and Hollywood by Brian Rendell
(ACS Publications, 106pp, £12.00)



The letters 'have lasted rather longer than Allen's reputation' © The Cricketer International
Enlarge
 

Gubby Allen, the autocrat of the Lord's Long Room, was known as "Gubby" because his initials were GOB. His family knew him as "Obie"; that is how he signed letters to his mother and father written when he was England captain during the Ashes tour of 1936-37.

That series was won by Australia after they had lost the first two Tests, and it is probably best known for Allen's response when Walter Robins dropped Don Bradman: "It has probably cost us the rubber, but don't give it a thought," he said. If the catch had been dropped in the third Test, Allen's cruel jibe might have been true, but Brian Rendell tells us that the exchange took place in the second Test, which means it had no decisive bearing on the outcome of the series.

But the remark is authentic Allen. Rendell's slim and revealing volume shows Allen as a master of self-pity, quick to complain about having to make too many speeches and not being free to attend parties given by his Australian relations and their posh friends. He was a control freak who insisted that he chose and ran the team and then moaned when they lost. "I think we were a rotten side," he concluded. He seems to have been happiest when he left the team behind and partied with film actors in Hollywood at the end of the tour.

Rendell tells the story of a fascinating and frustrating tour plainly and well, letting details from the letters bolster the narrative. This leads to some duplication but the full text of the letters does Allen's posthumous standing no good. He describes the aboriginals at station stops on the Nullarbor Plain: "They really are a ghastly sight and the sooner they die out the better." They have lasted rather longer than Allen's reputation.

This article was first published in the April 2008 issue of the Wisden Cricketer. Subscribe here

© ESPN EMEA Ltd.

FeedbackTop
Email Feedback Print
Share
E-mail
Feedback
Print
Related Links
Players/Officials: Sir Gubby Allen
Series/Tournaments: England tour of Australia
Teams: England

    The mysterious Mr Narine

Bought as a rookie for an eye-popping fee, Sunil Narine and his knuckle ball have delivered in the IPL. Next up? Watch out, Test cricket. By Nagraj Gollapudi

Young quick with lower back pain?

Bone stress injuries cannot be taken lightly - they have ended many careers and put others on hold, says Andrew Leipus

Someone smiling on Sammy

Mark Nicholas describes how Darren Sammy finally brought up his first Test century

    A pretty good day to be a 'Sam'

Two Chucks: Darren Sammy shuts everyone up, England bowlers look knackered, and what fans think of Nick Knight

Better win than be second favourites

Kimber: WI need to do more than just challenge teams

News | Features Last 7 days

Six Indian IPL players to watch out for

Four young batsmen and two medium-pacers should be on the selectors' radar

Free-spenders can't buy consistency

Despite splashing money this season, Mumbai Indians were rarely at the top of their game and most of their wins came through last-over heists

The madness of benching Morne Morkel

To make up for Irfan Pathan's absence, Delhi Daredevils made two changes, one of which was leaving out Morne Morkel. And that made a significant difference

Narine's remarkable season

Analysis of individual batting and bowling performances in IPL 2012

The best batsman in Twenty20 cricket

Chris Gayle has scored 2591 runs in this format in the last 17 months, at an average of 57 and a strike rate of 170. No other batsman comes close

News | Features Last 7 days
  • Cricinfo Widgets
Sponsored Links

Watch Bollywood movies for free

Transfer Money. Apply Online Now!

Access your Indian Rupee earnings from anywhere in the world.

on registering and transfer of USD 250 and above.

Available now at Cricshop