'Cricket's taken too seriously now'
Michael Parkinson has played and followed cricket for half a century and has interviewed some of the game's finest. "it never was a matter of life and death, it never will be," he tells Cricinfo
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Yes. I was born in Yorkshire where there's a great cricketing tradition, and I've followed cricket all my life. My first cricket started when I was three. I played for Barnsley in the Yorkshire league when I was 15 or 16. I tried becoming a professional and had trials for Hampshire and Yorkshire but wasn't good enough, so became a journalist instead.
Mainly because we had won a Test match in Melbourne [when I was born]. Imagine if we'd won in Adelaide!
A great cricketer is a great athlete, who brings to the game character and charm, a personality and style that very few others have. Sachin Tendulkar and Fred Trueman are great players. Trueman and Dennis Lillee were the two greatest fast bowlers I saw. The greatest cricketer is Sir Garfield Sobers without a single shadow of doubt. The greatest bowler was Shane Warne because he played the game like nobody else ever played it.
Keith was a boyhood hero of mine. When I was a child he was almost a kind of a film-star figure for me because he was so good-looking. He was dashing, hit big sixes, was a big fast bowler, and women adored him. Then when I went down London to Fleet Street in London to work, he was the cricket correspondent for the Daily Express, which I worked for. They had a cricket team and I used to stand at second slip with him at first slip. We became firm friends and were until he died. I treasure that friendship. He was remarkable.
I'm prepared to tell you that cricketers of today are fitter and in many ways overall better than they were in my day. The one thing that's happened in all of sport is that the standards of fitness have lifted the players and the game itself to a different level. Today's teams would murder the teams of my day simply because of their athleticism in the field and the way they chase down balls. In my day the thought of a fast bowler flaying himself around the field was unthinkable.
The one thing that has really fundamentally changed about team ethic is, it's a much more comprehensive unit. In my day teams were generally a collection of gifted individuals. These days guys are assembled like a piece of engineering to become a very, very tight unit | |||
I don't think that's true. The collective team effort nowadays is much more concentrated and important than it ever was. That is one thing that has really fundamentally changed about team ethic - it's a much more comprehensive unit. In my day teams were generally a collection of gifted individuals. These days guys are assembled like a piece of engineering to become a very, very tight unit.
The recent Australian team that had Warne and Glenn McGrath were without a doubt possibly the best team I've ever seen. I did see the Invincibles in 1948. They were a wonderful, glamorous team that played cricket to a very high standard, dominated by the world's greatest batsman ever, Donald Bradman. But the England team they played against was a very, very impoverished collection of players. So you have to actually judge them against that background.
He was very elusive. He used to write me letters, and I've still got four or five authentic Bradman letters. Sadly, the one interview he did do before he died, with Channel 9 in Australia, could not be described as a raging success. Perhaps it was the wrong time for Bradman, who was too old by then. Maybe he never quite got to grips with the medium of television and never quite understood what it was that I wanted.
After I got the knighthood, he called me from South Africa, where he is living now, to check why I got the knighthood and he hadn't. I replied that it was because I'm better looking and I always was a better cricketer.
There used to be a great tradition in Yorkshire - it was about that. We felt about cricket very much like the Indians felt about cricket: it was our sport. You had to be a cricketer in Yorkshire otherwise your father would kick you out of the house. So you grew up playing cricket and every child's ambition was to wear the white rose of Yorkshire before the England cap. And the Yorkshire leagues were very, very high standard indeed.
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I knew him - not very well, but I knew him. He was a strange man, was a very, very fine player. When he was appointed captain of England, he took elocution lessons and it was one of the most mangled versions of Yorkshire and Queen's English you ever heard in your life. He used to place the "h"s in the wrong place.
When I was growing up in the 1940s and 50s, England was a very class-ridden structure. And if you came from a mining community from Yorkshire as a working-class boy, you weren't like these people who'd been to posh schools and things. They talked differently and you were judged by your accent.
Muhammad Ali.
Bradman was the only one. Sobers wasn't a good interview because he couldn't explain to me what he did - because he just did it. He was a genius.
The nice thing about watching sport is, you always feel that at any given moment of time something beautiful or wondrous might happen. Watching Warne bowl at any time was a joy. Recently I saw VVS Laxman score a beautiful innings in Sydney and I was transfixed at every shot of his.
Every game must be played honourably and to not walk is to cheat. Basically, what I believe is, every game belongs to the players. Players themselves must decide what kind of game they want to play.
I've learned about companionship and humour. It's the most beautiful of games, most complex of games. It's a game of many, many facets and that's what fascinates me. And I never met a cricketer I didn't like, actually.
Nagraj Gollapudi is an assistant editor at Cricinfo