Hero Worship

Obsessions grow fast

On working in a fish-and-chip shop, idolising a coalmine worker


Like poles: Larwood inspired Tyson, oh well © The Cricketer International
 

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I started playing cricket when I was eight or nine years old. I used to work in my uncle's fish-and-chip shop near Liverpool at the time. As I wrapped the food up in newspaper, I used to read headlines about Harold Larwood doing this and that. Gradually, he grew to be a sort of obsession with me - particularly since Don Bradman was dominating the English bowlers and England at that stage were refusing to have Larwood, who had been drummed out of the side after the 1932-33 series. This despite the fact that Larwood had topped the first-class averages for a number of years.

People ask me who I think is the best allrounder that ever played, and I say without a shadow of a doubt: "Keith Miller". Garry Sobers was an absolutely magnificent allrounder and there has never been another like him, but Miller could transform a match in the space of an hour. Larwood had the same ability: he could make a game out of something that looked as if it was dead. That was heroic stuff to me.

As a person, he was very humble. When I met him for the first time, in 1954, I wondered how a man that small could bowl that fast. George Duckworth and I had gone to Larwood's house in Sydney. We took a few bottles of beer along and we chatted about various things. He said one thing I always treasured: that he thought he was very like myself in my attitude towards bowling, which was to try and bowl as fast as you possibly could.

Keith MillerFrank TysonHarold LarwoodEngland

As told to Nagraj Gollapudi