Footing it to the MCG
The best way to understand cricket in Melbourne is to walk to and through its most storied cricket ground

Melbourne is a city made for strolling • Getty Images
Perched at the top of downtown Melbourne on Spring Street, The Cricketers' is an old-fashioned stand-at-the-bar establishment. It's hardly Melbourne's most urbane pub but is a favourable spot from which to make the walk to the G. The atmosphere is often raucous, particularly on a match day, with the sound of nuggety sports-lovers discussing cricket, horses and footy (even at the height of summer). The bar memorabilia includes Bradman's autograph on a bat and Shane Warne's on a red teapot, among photographs of touring sides and old Surridge and Gunn & Moore gear.
The best walk from the Windsor to the MCG leads over Spring Street, through the Treasury Gardens and up the hill along the tree-lined paths of Fitzroy Gardens. This is a time-honoured route, trodden by hordes of eager supporters on match day. In bygone days, cricketers themselves would commute this path and the writer Richard Whittington described Bradman being pursued by a pack of boys before the Treasury building. The route also leads past a statue of the Scottish poet Robert Burns, a marvellous conservatory, and bizarre symbols of Empire in the form of Captain James Cook's reconstructed cottage along with a mock miniature Tudor village.
The mighty MCG looms from the spur of Fitzroy Gardens with the route to the ground leading over a railway into Yarra Park. Saturated in history, some of the parkland's towering eucalypts are scarred from having their bark removed to fashion canoes with by Aboriginals. Here, too, the first games of Australian Rules football were played with the remarkable local sport borne out of massed groups of men playing by regional English rugby rules - or none at all - engaging in extended wrestling bouts.
The greatest wonders lie within the MCG's immense walls and many are housed by the National Sports Museum in the basement of the Olympic Stand. The museum perfectly balances fun and history. Bright, exciting games and interactive exhibits offer children (as well as adults) the opportunity to throw down a wicket, shoot archery, or play Australian football, while quieter rooms hold superb memorabilia to transport any cricket lover. Alongside glitzy enclosures, like a talking hologram of Shane Warne, are rare artefacts from the Melbourne Cricket Club. There are not merely historic bats and balls but toby jugs, fine plateware, placards, papers, paintings and a grand piano. It's a fascinating collection of cricket and, along with exhibits from the 1956 Melbourne Olympics, gives a rich background for visiting the MCG.
Benjamin Golby, a resident of Melbourne, is writing a thesis, "Music about Donald Bradman"