A welcome addition
Rob Smyth reviews the Cricinfo Guide To International Cricket
Cricinfo Guide To International Cricket edited by Steven Lynch (John Wisden & Co Ltd, 256pp) £8.99
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Which is where Cricinfo's new book comes in. The Cricinfo Guide To International Cricket is an obvious companion to those old favourites, the Wisden Cricketers' Almanack and Playfair Cricket Annual. If Wisden is the bible and Playfair the train timetable, this guide is more of an mini-encyclopaedia of the dramatis personae of international cricket.
There are statistics and trainspotter facts for each player featured, but the strength lies in the classily-written profiles of the 200 players most likely to play for their countries next year. They range from the simply biographical to the insightfully psychoanalytical: the Australian and England profiles in particular are of a very high class, with a strong pool of writers who often evoke more in one sentence than other writers could in one chapter: Marcus Trescothick, for example, is "hefty, knock-kneed and genial", Andrew Flintoff "big, northern and proud of it" Adam Gilchrist the "symbolic heart of Australia's steamrolling agenda" and Brett Lee "the 21st century's first designer cricketer". There is also a photo of each player, which is handy if you're trying to tell whether that's Keith Dabengwa or Chamu Chibhabha standing at fine-leg.
There are gripes - there is no colour content, the paper quality is poor, some of the profiles of the lesser-known players are a little dry, and some will find it odd that Michael Yardy gets as much space as Shane Warne - but generally the editorial standards are high, and it successfully fills a considerable gap in the market. The Cricinfo Guide is cheap, cheerful and, like the bulging international calendar, here to stay.
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