Anyone but Little England
The pleasure is deep in seeing the old colonial master lose, says Dileep Premachandran
Dileep Premachandran
20-Feb-2006
The pleasure is deep in seeing the old colonial master lose
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It was many years before I realised that boycott was unrelated to
sporting sanctions and merely a reference to Geoffrey. Years later
he told me his decision to go to South Africa had nothing to do with
politics and everything to do with securing his financial future.
Most Indians did not see it that way and less than four decades on
from independence few could blame them. Having promised Indira
Gandhi, the prime minister, that there would be no rebel tour,
Boycott and his cronies soon changed tune for a few rand more.
Funnily enough, it was the generation before mine that loathed
the English the most. My maternal grandfather had spent almost
three years as a political prisoner of His Majesty's government
during the Quit India struggle but his views on the English
were invariably well-balanced, with acknowledgement of the
infrastructure that had been put in place during two centuries of
colonial rule. My uncles' dislike of the English had less to do with
politics and everything to do with touring cricketers who had made
a career out of whining about the conditions: everything from
the heat and dust to the prawns that we so love. The likes of Fred
Trueman never toured India and that might explain why he, like
Dennis Lillee, is never considered in the same class as Malcolm
Marshall or Michael Holding, who terrorised the surprise World Cup
winners during a 3-0 rout in 1983-84.
Little changed even when we moved to England. When India and
Pakistan toured in the summer of 1982, my mother, who watched
now and then, would often fume at what she saw as condescension on the part of commentators. The BBC's Test Match Special team belonged to the tweed-jacket world, with views that a former boss
of mine - English himself - politely referred to as Little Englander.
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More than any of the Indians, though, it was the magnificent Imran
Khan that quickly became my hero and I was bitterly disappointed
when Pakistan could not at least draw the series. I even took
pleasure in talk of Imran's skirt-chasing antics, though at that age I
had little idea of what it entailed.
That Anyone-but-England mentality was set in stone a few months
later, during the Ashes series of 1982-83. With only highlights on
offer and my mum and sister hogging the TV, watching was an event
in itself. I admired the elegance and artistry of Greg Chappell and
Kim Hughes, the pugnacity of Allan Border and the hair-raising pace
of Thommo. England did have David Gower in the style stakes
but they also had the likes of the insomnia-curing Chris Tavaré and
Willis - wannabe-Afro-haired and robotic next to Thommo's rockstar
aura.
I suffered through the Ashes
debacle of '85. Tanya Aldred
remembered it as The Summer
of Love in an article for The New
Ball. For me it was the summer of pain, watching Andrew Hilditch
being suckered into the hook and AB often standing alone on decks
that burned against English swing-and-seam bowling. There was
Botham too, swaggering around in that ridiculous mullet, and his
enlightened views on the subcontinent.
But while my Indian roots and Australian heroes helped in the
indoctrination of anti-English feeling, affirmation came in that
glorious summer of 1984 when Liverpool FC conquered Rome and
those magnificent men with ebony skin and Bob Marley sweatbands
arrived in England. It being the 1980s, when monkey noises still
greeted black footballers, I had quickly become aware that the
colour of my skin mattered, and nothing gave me as much pleasure
as seeing Viv Richards romp to 189 not out at Old Trafford. Gordon
Greenidge's coruscating 214 at Lord's and the resulting blackwash
were a bonus and years later, when King Viv told me that "it was all
about getting respect", I knew exactly where he was coming from.
The 16 years of Australia's Ashes hegemony which encompassed
my late teens and passage into adulthood felt like a party that would
never end and, when it did last summer at The Oval, I was secretly
sending text messages asking for score updates and blinking back
tears while supposedly watching a Bizet opera with my girlfriend.
Though England had been by far the better side, it sickened me to
admit it and I can hardly wait for Australia to regain the urn.
This article was first published in the March issue of The Wisden Cricketer.
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Dileep Premachandran is features editor of Cricinfo