Saturday 11, April 1998
A meeting with Keith Miller
by Channa Gunasekera
A recent visit to Australia gave me the opportunity of catching
up with an old cricketing adversary, none other than the
legendary Keith Miller.
Rumours were afloat that he was rather reclusive and withdrawn,
so it was not without some apprehension that I considered trying
to set up a meeting with him. But my anxiety, I must say was
totally misplaced for he fairly jumped at the idea of meeting
friends from good old Ceylon, for that is how he and the older
generation Aussies like to remember that exotic Pearl of the
Indian Ocean. And, I also realised that he loves Ceylon and has
a soft spot for the Ceylonese. So I got hold of two of my old
school buddies, Geoff Wiemman that brilliant international of
Rugby fame and my old teammate Gamini Goonesena, the first Asian
to captain either Cambridge or Oxford as well as score a double
hundred in the Varsity match. I appeared to be the odd man out
in this galaxy.
On a bright Saturday morning the three of us motored down to 47,
Nullabarra Road, Newport Beach, 20 or 30 kilometres to the North
of Sydney and by Jove wasn't he glad to see us?
Joyous conversationalist
Far from being retired and withdrawn he was a joyous
conversationalist. He may not be in the very best of health, for
he is a little frail compared to his more active days and has to
rely on a 'walker' for mobility. Yet, you could see him visibly
brightening up and he was beside himself recalling stories of
his great cricketing days (not so much of himself), but his
contemporaries, equals and peers, Don Bradman, Bert Oldfield,
Bill O'Reilly, Stan McCabe, Arthur Morris, Neil Harvey, his old
partner in crime Ray Lindwall, and others. Anecdote after
anecdote of those palmier days tumbled one upon the other and we
could see the glint in his eye as he unfolded stories of those
great days. And we sat there enthralled.
He spoke of O'Reilly the bowler, who he says was the very best
and Oldfield, perhaps the finest keeper of all and believe it or
not, he gave us the impression that there was no animosity
whatever between him and Bradman, but only a difference of
opinion on how they played the game. He has a lot of regard and
admiration for the Don as a player and says that for his age he
is as fit as a fiddle playing if possible 2 or 3 days of golf a
week.
The Ikin catch
He spoke of the famous Ikin catch when Bradman was 28 and then
going on to a big hundred in his comeback Test. He says that he
was padded up nervously to play his first Test innings and when
it happened he quickly picked up his bat and gloves and was
walking out when he realised that the Don was still at the
crease and therefore he had to resume his seat. There was also
the famous incident of him bowling a bouncer at Bradman at his
benefit match which did not amuse Bradman and the belief was
that being the greatest all-rounder in the world at that time he
failed to gain selection to the team for South Africa on account
of that incident. Bradman was a selector.
His wife Peggy
His wife Peggy to whom he has been married for over fifty years
is an amazing lady. Being American, it has been a great
partnership to have lived with an Australian cricketing legend,
for I believe she still does not know much about this weird game
leave alone much less having even watched it, though she is much
Australian now. They live very happily and have four sons and
many grandchildren. Having been treated most hospitably we were
invited to partake of some lunch, but had to decline as we were
running late. So after nearly three delightful hours we took our
leave, he meanwhile getting us to promise that we come again.
True to our word, the Saturday before I left Gamini and I, this
time joined by my son paid him another visit. When we arrived
Peggy told us that Keith was not feeling too well that morning
and when he came out he greeted us in the normal Aussie style of
enquiring how we were getting on and then bending down he
whispered in my ear "I'll give you one bit of advice, don't get
old!"
Favourite topic
Having settled down and getting back to our favourite topic we
asked him about the game today. He said that he does not watch
much cricket now because he does not think much about the
behaviour of the players these days. He gave us the impression
that though he considers Shane Warne to be a good bowler he was
displeased to see him put on the same pedestal as O'Rielly. He
says that most top batsmen have worked him out and he does not
bowl the googly as well as he did. I think he was not a little
amused when one of his sons had rung him that morning and told
him of the mauling he had got from Tendulkar in the first match
of the Indian tour. More dignity
He says that during his day cricketers behaved with more dignity
and poise and a gentle handshake or a congratulatory pat on the
back was all that was necessary to acknowledge a good feat. He
spoke about the great Sathasivam, and the former umpire H. E. W.
de Zylwa and asked about Harold Andrado and of course Iverse
Gunasekera whom he remembers beating him to a scorching century
when they were batting together for a Commonwealth team against
the NCC in 1952. he said that he had not seen a batsman who hit
the ball so hard and he had played against Everton Weekes and
Clyde Walcott.
Again, he said he could not recall hitting me on my cloth hat
(for that is all we wore against international fast bowlers on
the green top Oval wickets of those days) when ducking into a
ball that did not bounce, on my way to becoming the highest
scorer at that time for Sri Lanka (then Ceylon) in these
contests. But more modestly he said that many batsmen have
scored good runs against him many times.
After another couple of hours of swapping yarns and another
couple more of the favourite Aussie brew we rose to take our
leave. He has only two cricketing photographs in his sitting
room, one of which is the famous square cut off Doug Wright,
which Sir Robert Menzies had said should be sculptured and put
on public display as an example of Australian athleticism (or
some such sentiment) and the other a 4ft by 3ft enlargement of
Bradman scoring his hundredth run of his hundredth century at
the Sydney Cricket Ground.
Just before we took our leave he stood before this picture and
told us that there was a story behind this. He said that he
could have made himself famous (not that he needed to). When we
asked him what it was about he said "You know, I was batting
with him at the other end and when he was on 99 he pushed a ball
from Kishenchand the Indian bowler, just wide of mid-on and
coming down the wicket shouted in his squeaky voice (imitating)
'come on Nugget'. Had I stayed put and shouted back 'no Don get
back' he would have been run out by the length of the pitch on
99 going for his hundredth century and I would have got into the
Guiness Book of Records!" he chuckled. "However, I was the first
to congratulate him". Apparently he loved telling this story
over and over again and we parted on this note. Family friends
Initially, I also had the pleasure of meeting Ruth Oldfield, the
nonagenarian widow of that 'gentleman keeper' Bert Oldfield, a
contemporary of my father nearly 60 years ago and firm family
friends ever since. It has been said that he only appealed if he
thought that a batsman was genuinely out and that too very
apologetically as if saying "chum, I hate doing this but it is
my job you know" - a far cry from today's raucous vulgarity. He
would even give a sympathetic pat on the back of the poor
retiring victim on his way back. In the result very few appeals
from him were turned down, such was the trust that international
umpires had in him. Can we ever hope to achieve such Entopian
state today?
Mrs. Oldfield presented me with a book of newspaper cuttings of
the 1934 Australian tour of England, carefully preserved and put
together by Bert himself with comments written in his own hand.
At this distance of time it must border on a 'collector's item'.
Source :: Daily News (https://www.lanka.net)