C Ellis: England Cricket Diary (30 May 1998)
SCOTLAND'S loss could be Ayr's gain as Andy Goram waits for the dust to settle following his defection from the World Cup football squad in the United States
30-May-1998
30 May 1998
Cricket Diary
By Clive Ellis
- Goram offered role in attack
SCOTLAND'S loss could be Ayr's gain as Andy Goram waits for the dust
to settle following his defection from the World Cup football squad in
the United States.
Ayr registered Goram at the start of the season in the vague
expectation that he might be able to fit in a couple of National
League games and resume a cricket career put on hold by contractual
small print during his seven-year stay at Rangers.
Now, having left Ibrox, he has the perfect opportunity to rekindle a
lifelong love affair with cricket. He was good enough as a 14-year-old
tyro pace bowler to attract Lancashire's interest when he was growing
up in Oldham and played three times for Scotland.
On leaving Hibernian to join Rangers in 1991 - when the no-cricket
clause was applied - he admitted: "If I thought I could have made the
same money playing cricket, I would have done so."
Kevin Boyd, the Ayr secretary, said: "We haven't heard from Andy yet,
but if he's available we'd like him to play."
"I remember sitting on his knee with my sisters and pulling his
beard," recalled Primrose Worthington, W G's 93-year-old
grand-daughter. "We spent the summer holidays of 1915 with him, were
woken up by zeppelins and he taught us to play bowls and croquet." The
Champion died that same year.
Eight of the family, representing three generations, were at Lord's.
"Graces of a special sort," said the president of MCC, Colin
Ingleby-Mackenzie, in introducing an exhibition of "epic, historical
quality", which will be open all season.
Loans from the family include an 1895 portrait by Ernest Breum and a
watch presented to W G by Gloucestershire in his "Indian summer" year
of 1895. Among a host of items, including bats, menus, pictures, and
snuff-boxes, is the portmanteau which Grace took with him to an
all-night confinement before scoring a double century at Cheltenham.
MCC will also mark the day of W G's birth when they play the Rest of
the World on July 18 at Lord's in aid of the Diana, Princess of Wales,
Memorial Fund.
Aid from Australia has been suspended in protest against the nuclear
tests, it was announced in Melbourne yesterday. Australia are
scheduled to play three Tests and a one-day series in Pakistan from
late September, followed by a mini-World Cup in Bangladesh.
That distinction goes to Australian all-rounder Scott Browne, the
first overseas player to represent Yorkshire side Hornsea. The club's
sponsors are a local shopping and leisure village boasting a
collection of birds of prey, including the owl, which now answers to
the sobriquet Scottie. Any advance?
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)