Review

A phoenix of anecdotes

Paul Coupar reviews Stiff Upper Lips and Baggy Green Caps


Stiff Upper Lips and Baggy Green Caps: A Sledger's History of the Ashes
by Simon Briggs (Quercus, 280pp) £9.99

Loading ...



"How's your wife and my kids?" asked Rod Marsh from behind the stumps. "The wife's fine," replied the batsman, Ian Botham, "but the kids are retarded."

Ah, sledging and the Ashes - two of our favourite subjects, perhaps too much so. The ground is so heavily trodden that it is hard to find anything fresh, or even alive.

But Simon Briggs, a cricket writer on the Daily Telegraph, pulls it off. His anecdotal history of the Ashes - long on stories, refreshingly short on statistics - is a crackling tale. There are enough fresh insights to hold the interest of the specialist.

Here is Graham Dilley on Botham's rejuvenation after losing the captaincy in 1981: "It was almost as if you'd taken a child, made him an adult for a while, then allowed him to go back to being a child."

The writing is wonderfully crisp. Using vivid snapshots of key players and moments, Briggs rattles through the 123 years with a scriptwriter's feel for pace and detail. He puts in what the scorecards leave out.

What emerges is a snappy, funny, vivid and accurate telling of the Ashes story: the 19th century and the reign of WG ("the perpetual schoolboy"); the golden age of classicism, bookended by two pragmatists, Grace and Warwick Armstrong; the 1920s and Armstrong, "who treated cricket as war"; Bradman ("not a single redeeming defect"); Bodyline (Jardine: "I've got it! Bradman's yellow!"); 1953 ("Wear the buggers down"); the 1970s ("gang warfare"); 1987-2003 (the onslaught of the "Baggy Green Machine"); and finally English catharsis in 2005 (Edgbaston - "the most famous insertion since Brutus did for Caesar").

It is all hurried along by some corking quotes. So, without further ado here are The Best One-Liners in Ashes History -

The Colin Cowdrey award for chivalry: "It doesn't worry me in the slightest to see the batsman hurt, rolling around screaming and blood on the pitch" - Jeff Thomson.

The Sid Vicious award for lèse majesté: "Nice legs for an old Sheila" - Rodney Hogg, while in earshot of the Queen.

The Sydney Hill award for audience participation: "Hey, Warr, you've got as much chance of taking a Test wicket on this tour as I have of pushing a pound of butter up a parrot's arse with a hot needle."

The chances of making an Ashes history sing afresh would seem to be no better. But Briggs's chronicle is a delight.

Graham DilleyIan BothamJeff ThomsonRod MarshRodney HoggAustraliaEnglandEngland tour of Australia

Paul Coupar is assistant editor of The Wisden Cricketer and will be covering the first two Tests for Cricinfo