Headingley: haven of heroes
Christopher Martin-Jenkins on the modernisation of Yorkshire's home
Christopher Martin-Jenkins
02-Mar-2006
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The row over venues for England's matches in
India, one that generated more heat in Britain
for good reasons than it did in the home country,
demonstrated if nothing else the extraordinary
number of stadia in that vast land that are
apparently suitable stages for international
cricket. England and Wales could mount some
challenge on paper by claiming venues such as
Hove and Northampton given their status as
hosts of World Cup matches but the truth is that
modernising the six older Test grounds and even
developing the purpose-built seventh at Chester-le-
Street has been a tortuous process.
Lord's and Trent Bridge have done it best,
Old Trafford has had the most negative publicity
but nowhere has it been more difficult than
Headingley, now, at last, the legally owned (if
not yet paid for) home of Yorkshire cricket. Only
a Yorkshireman could have written, as their
competent and committed lawyer president Robin
Smith did in his introduction to the late Robert
Mills's excellent Field of Dreams: "If there is a
sporting venue in the world with a greater claim
to fame than Headingley, I am not aware of it."
Lord's? The Oval? The MCG? Eden Gardens?
Wimbledon? Wembley? Twickenham? Madison
Square Garden? The San Siro? Mention these or
others as a rival to the ground that was owned
until a few months ago by the Leeds Cricket,
Football and Athletic Company and you will be
considered as foolish as the southern softy who
tried to argue in a Yorkshire hostelry around
the turn of the 20th century that WG Grace was
worth a place in the best ever England XI.
But Headingley is different, a stage for Tests
since 1899 with enhanced drama in the last 30
years as great batsmen have risen to the challenge
either of uneven bounce or awkward swing on
those many days when clouds billow over the
terraced houses towards the black spire of St
Michael's Church. Like Yorkshire folk generally,
the ground has character and a certain quirkiness.
Fierce stewards, for example, make pedestrians
walk, on pain of death, all the way round the
touchline of the football field as they usher heavy
Bentleys and BMWs on to the middle of the pitch.
Even with recent modernisations to its eastern
and western sides, Headingley has yet to establish
anything like the unity of outward appearance
that it revealed in inner spirit when Yorkshire
members voted by a huge majority last Christmas
Eve to buy the ground for an initial £9 million, backed
by loans from the club's chairman, Colin Graves,
Leeds City Council, HSBC and Sport England.
The alternative (Lancashire take note)
was not attractive. The finances of any newly
developed ground in Yorkshire would no doubt
have been just as complex. There would have
been no certainty of even long-term gain from
the scheme to move to Wakefield and so much
would have been lost. There are history, tradition
and atmosphere to consider as well as the
number of seats and hospitality boxes.
Headingley is the ground where Bradman
twice scored 300 in a Test match, where his
1948 side became the first in Test history to get
more than 400 in the fourth innings to win a
game, where Malcolm Marshall bowled the West
Indies to victory with an arm in plaster in 1984
and Imran Khan had one of his finest bowling
performances three years later. Ian Botham
transformed England's lost cause in 1981 and
Graham Gooch gave arguably the greatest
demonstration of batting against high-class fast
bowling ever seen when he carried his bat for
154 not out against West Indies in 1991.
Those controversial dry pitches have produced
some of the most exciting games ever played and
if, arguably, the last Test to be won there by a
finger spinner was when Derek Underwood took
10 wickets against Australia in 1972, too little
assistance for spinners is a failing of most grounds
in England since the pitches were fully covered.
Steve Waugh's glorious maiden Test century in
1989 and totals in excess of 600 by Australia and
India since prove that Headingley is not just
predictable for its unpredictability. Cricketers
everywhere should rejoice that it will stage
international cricket in England at least until 2019.
Christopher Martin-Jenkins is cricket correspondent
of The Times