| Series | Countries | Live Scores | Fixtures | Results | News |
Features
|
Photos | Blogs | Statistics | Archive | Video & Audio | Games | Mobile | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
Delegates of an international mineral rights workshop got together to play the most southerly game of cricket
January 30, 2010
![]()
|
|||
Twenty-five years ago this month, one of cricket's most unusual - and almost certainly the most southerly - matches took place about 400 miles from the South Pole. The beer froze, the pitch was "rolled" by a plane, and the bails were beer cans. But it was a proper game and those who participated took it seriously enough.
The contest was the brainchild of Sir Arthur Watts, a British diplomat and cricket lover who had been good enough to play for Shropshire in the Minor County Championship in the 1950s.
In late 1984, 60 scientists, environmentalists, administrators and lawyers travelled to Antarctica for an international workshop on mineral rights. Watts, who was leading the UK delegation, spotted an opportunity to make history in between meetings.
With so many of the delegates coming from traditional cricket-playing countries, finding two sides was easy, even if they had to be supplemented with Argentines, Chileans and Americans. Watts then persuaded the New Zealand delegation to fly in a complete set of cricket equipment.
On January 11, 1985 the two teams assembled at a pitch next to a hutted field-camp set up by the United States Antarctic Field Programme on the Bowden Nevé, approximately 84 degrees south amid the Transantarctic Mountains. The pitch was the ski-track of a C130 Hercules aircraft - Watts later told the press the Hercules was "probably the heaviest roller ever used in the game". The bails were cans of beer, balanced on a board on which the stumps were blacked out in ink. Within minutes the beer froze in temperatures of around -12 degrees.
"The venue was chosen to give certain diplomats who were eloquently pontificating in the United Nations a taste of what the Antarctic was really like," recalled Sir Martin Holdgate, the president of the British Zoological Society, who stood in as the umpire. His main gripe was that his own can of beer also froze. A tennis rather than a cricket ball was used as there was a concern a heavier ball would sink into the snow, and traditional whites, aside from being close to camouflage, were eschewed in favour of warmer clothing.
Watts captained the Beardmore Casuals XIV, comprising largely Britons, against the Gondwanaland Occasionals XIV, made up of players from Australia, New Zealand and South Africa.
The Casuals batted first and made 102, the main contribution coming from Roger Wilson of Greenpeace who scored 22, including three sixes. Five of the batsmen were listed as "retired frozen".
Even though there was no issue with the light - Wisden noted play was able to go on until close to midnight in the Antarctic summer - by the time Gondwanaland Occasionals batted the pitch, which had initially taken spin, was misbehaving badly as the surface rutted and then froze.
Although eight of the Occasionals' batsmen also retired because of the cold, they made 129 to win the game. Trevor Hatherton, a New Zealand scientist, clubbed 24, the highest score of the day.
While the event got widespread publicity, there were two frustrations to follow for Watts who believed the game deserved a place in the record books. The first came when the Guinness Book of Records accepted it as the southern-most game ever played, but said that it was "too specialist" for inclusion.
The second was a report in some New Zealand newspapers which asserted that in 1969 former national captain John Reid had played a match actually at the South Pole itself, including a six "hit over the world itself" by Reid.
However, closer examination revealed Reid's game was little more than a knock-about with three colleagues - two other New Zealanders and Rear Admiral Kelly Welch of the US navy. The impromptu jolly ended almost before it started when the cricket ball "buried itself deep in the snow at mid-off".
Watts, a career diplomat whose obituaries almost all referred to his "unfailing courtesy and the warmth of personality" was clearly angered by comparisons to Reid's affair.
"This deplorable attempt to deprive our game of its status as a 'first' wholly ignores the difference between a four-man frolic and an organised match played between two full teams," he noted. "And, of course, we did not use a real cricket ball, since we foresaw what would happen if we did - a lost ball buried deep in the snow, as the four-man frolic quickly discovered."
The British Institute of International and Comparative Law is looking to establish The Watts Fellowship in Sir Arthur Watts' name. Click here for details.
Is there an incident from the past you would like to know more about? Email rewind@cricinfo.com with your comments and suggestions.
Executive editor Martin Williamson joined the Wisden website in its planning stages in 2001 after failing to make his millions in the internet boom when managing editor of Sportal. Before that he was in charge of Sky Sports Online and helped launch and run Sky News Online. With a preference for all things old (except his wife and children), he has recently confounded colleagues by displaying an uncharacteristic fondness for Twenty20 cricket. His enthusiasm for the game is sadly not matched by his ability, but he remains convinced that he might be a late developer and perseveres in the hope of an England call-up with his middle-order batting and non-spinning offbreaks. He is now managing editor of ESPN EMEA Digital Group as well as his Cricinfo responsibilities.

Saad Shafqat: The clean sweep of England is surely their greatest achievement in Test cricket to date
Rob Steen: What cricket can learn from baseball when it comes to rooting out corruption
The whitewashers get whitewashed
The List: Teams that won all their matches in a series, and lost all in the next one
'Probably the greatest bowler of all time'
My XI: Geoff Boycott picks the versatile England bowler Sydney Barnes as the first of his 11 favourite bowlers, in a new series
Pak Spin: a masterclass from Pakistan's unassuming warrior
Dhoni and Sehwag share a moment
ESPNcricinfo presents the Plays of the Day from the second Twenty20 international between Australia and India, in Melbourne
If there is a better man, give him the job - Dhoni
MS Dhoni isn't making any predictions about giving up Test cricket or any other format after 2013. But his matter-of-fact statements are open to interpretation
Swann v Ajmal: clash of the offspinners
They're the two best spinners in Test cricket over the last 30 months, and while their overall stats are similar, the break-ups are quite different
India were on tonight. It was like it was all coming back to someone who had lost his memory in the first half of a Bollywood film. Simple things but somehow forgotten
Similarities with England tour continue
A limited-overs game in which rain plays a part in your defeat. It is all looking awfully familiar for India
Pakistan rewarded for smart rebuilding (137)
After the events of 2010 Pakistan cricket could have withered away, but due to a combination of determination and desire they are now flourishing
The problem's not Test cricket, it's bad Test cricket (125)
It is the product that matters. If the interest in Test cricket is declining, it is because the standard is not all that high
The last we've seen of India's old middle order (123)
Dravid and Laxman will know their time is up. And Tendulkar will go sooner than later too
Pakistan show England how it's done in Asia (107)
Unlike England, Pakistan used their bats instead of their pads. Unlike England, they retained their composure during the inevitable scoreless periods and, unlike England, they played straight until they were well set
India beaten in battle of strategies (101)
The plan to go in with a spin-strong attack is fraught with risk in Australian conditions, as India were made to realise at the MCG
Access your Indian Rupee earnings from anywhere in the world.
ICICI Bank Money2India brings " locked exchange rate" and a free gift
on registering and transfer of USD 250 and above.
FREE copy of Playfair with every Wisden pre-order
At Cricshop.com