Touhy W: USA View of Cricket (19Aug1993)
Sticky wicket for Britain's cricket fans By William Tuohy Americans just don't get it
19-Aug-1993
Sticky wicket for Britain's cricket fans
By William Tuohy
Americans just don't get it. But Australians do. So do Indians
and Pakistanis and even Sri Lankans. And in this summer of their
discontent, that's what's causing the English what they might
call "a spot of bother."
"It" is the sport of cricket.
Did we say "sport"? Sorry, old chap, make that "institution."
Generations of Englishmen -- yes, women do play but only the
men's game gets national attention -- have looked on cricket as
an essential part of the national identity, a mirror of English
ideals and virtues and a precious piece of the rural heritage
that every Englishman claims.
Cricket, broadcaster Michael Parkinson says, "is a part of the
English pastoral scene. It represents Englishness. It's a unique,
very psychological, physical, complex and beautiful game, aesthetically and hugely pleasing."
Cricket holds such pride of place in British life that it has
been absorbed into the language. The phrase "It's not cricket"
condemns violations of an unwritten code of upright behavior,
gentlemanly fair play and team spirit. Bernard Law Montgomery,
the World War II British general, spoke of beating Field Marshal
Erwin Rommel and the Afrika Korps as hitting the Germans "for
six" --cricket's equivalent of a home run. And a "sticky wicket"
connotes a tricky, unpredictable and dangerous situation.
Which is where some English cricket fans believe that their
favorite sport now finds itself.
Cricket in England is undergoing a crisis, and there's no end
in sight; English cricketers and their fervent supporters are
enduring a long period of humiliation.
Last winter, the English national team lost a series of disastrous international matches -- "Tests," as they are called --
against India, Pakistan and even lowly Sri Lanka.
Now they have lost the six-match biennial Test series with Australia being played here, suffering four defeats and one draw.
(Even though England has already lost the series, the remaining
match will still be played later this month, according to cricketing custom.)
England has suffered defeats in seven successive international
series. It has not beaten Australia, its traditional rival, in
15 matches.
Imagine how American baseball fans would feel if, year after
year, teams of Canadians, Japanese, Venezuelans and Cubans beat
the best U.S. players that could be assembled.
George Orwell, writing in a gentler time, believed that the
English could keep a stiff upper lip about such setbacks.
"Cricket," he wrote, "gives expression to a well-marked trait in
the English character, the tendency to value 'form' and 'style'
more highly than success."
Poppycock!
English cricket pundits are not taking the current lack of
success that well. Acres of print in the sports pages have been
devoted to analyzing the decline of the national game. In other
parts of the media, social commentators have been busy making
dire pronouncements that its sorry state may mark the end of
civilization as the English know it.
It seems symptomatic to some critics, political as well as cricketing, that Prime Minister John Major, perhaps the country's
premier fan of the sport, jokes through English defeats at the
very time that his standing in opinion polls is at an all-time
low.
"There's no doubt that the current run of defeats represents a
crisis of serious proportions," cricket writer Richard Williams
says, "calling into question the game's standing in national
life."
And social historian Martin Jacques comments: "There is no getting away from the fact that there is a connection between sport
and nation. It has a palpable effect on national morale."
In short, cricket is to England what American historian Jacques
Barzun suggested baseball is to America when he wrote: "Whoever
would know the heart and mind of America had better learn baseball."
The two sports do have superficial similarities. For instance,
both are bat-and-ball games, in which the ball is hard and leather-covered, the bats traditionally made of wood. But the
rules are very different, and so is the pace: Matches can last
up to five days, with breaks for lunch and afternoon tea.
To be sure, even in England there are denigrators aplenty of
the cricket's leisurely pace. William Temple, Archbishop of
Canterbury from 1942-44, commented that cricket seemed to him
like "organized loafing." And a member of the House of Lords
once described the game as something "which the English, not
being a spiritual people, have invented in order to give themselves some conception of eternity."
Cricket has been played since the 16th Century: The name is
thought to stem from the Anglo-Saxon word "cricc," a staff used
by shepherds who played an early version in England.
As long ago as 1787, the Marylebone Cricket Club was established in London to draw up rules for the 11-player teams.
Today the club's headquarters at Lord's cricket ground in north
central London is also considered the sport's head-quarters and
spiritual home.
As Britain's empire builders spread over the world in the 18th
and 19th centuries, its soldiers, administrators and educators
taught both the game and its ethos.
In 1984, four years after achieving hard-won independence from
the descendants of colonialists, Zimbabwe's prime minister,
Robert Mugabe, showed how thoroughly he had been indoctrinated
with cricket's values, even so far from Britain's shores:
"Cricket civilizes people and creates good gentlemen," he
declared. "I want everyone to play cricket in Zimbabwe. I want
ours to be a nation of gentlemen."
Beyond personal qualities, cricket was also thought to be a
democratizing influence.
"If the French noblesse had been capable of playing cricket
with their peasants, their chateaux would never have been
burnt," the British historian G.M. Trevelyan once observed.
In the game itself, the Empire soon struck back. Australians
quickly became the most serious rivals to the mother country,
winning its first Test series on English soil in 1882. In the
1960s, West Indian cricketers became a force to reckon with,
and soon after, teams from India and Pakistan, South Africa and
Sri Lanka also proved themselves capable of regularly defeating
the English.
English cricket writers are agreed on where the blame lies for
this state of affairs. The bedrock of cricket is at the school
and village level, and it is there that English cricket is
withering, they say.
The village game is cricket at its most idealized, reinforcing
England's self-image that it is essentially a rural society:
white-clad figures contrasted against a field of green in
summer sunlight, the gentle "thonk" of bat on ball occasionally
augmented by a burst of cheering and polite applause, spectators sipping warm beer at the door of the local pub or lolling
in canvas deck chairs.
Even allowing for the mercurial weather of the English summer,
the reality is likely to be different. Fewer and fewer villages can afford to keep up the local green to the standards English players are used to.
Similarly, few elementary and secondary schools have the funds
to maintain cricket fields and thereby to encourage the sport
among students.
"Cricket grounds are hard to maintain," observes one West
Indies cricket player. "So kids don't grow up playing cricket
from a young age as they used to -- and still do in India,
Pakistan and the West Indies." In those places, young players
learn the game under harsher conditions, making do with matting
or compacted dirt rather than grass.
A long step above the amateur schools and village game is the
county league, in which 18 professional British county teams
play through the summer, and a good cricketer can earn about
$35,000 a season.
From the county teams, selectors -- the group of senior members
of the Test and County Cricket Board (TCCB) -- choose players
to represent the national side, competing in Test matches at
home in the summer and abroad in winter. Test players make
about $75,000, major stars $150,000 or more.
However, the county league teams now see a shrinking of the
pool of young cricketers that should be their great natural
resource. And while the major international matches in England
still draw sellout crowds, the matches at county and lower
levels are usually ill-attended.
Martin Kettle, an expert on cricket, says he believes "that
English society no longer produces cricketers in enough numbers,
quality or depth to sustain a seriously competitive national
side."
Add to this a cricket establishment that is widely regarded as
infirm and inefficient, handicapped by inept managers and a
flawed Test selection process, based on the whims of a few
senior officials, and you have a prescription for cricket chaos,
the critics say.
They cite the omission of David Gower, a charismatic player who
has captained England's team in the past, from the current
Tests against Australia. Rigid-minded selectors were believed
to have found that his attitude was too casual.
"Flair and individuality in cricket," wrote author Graeme
Wright in his book "Betrayal: The Struggle for Cricket's Soul,"
"came to be seen as a threat to success and were cast aside in
favor of the new conformity based on team commitment."
Wright also complained that the very nature of cricket is changing:
"Shorn of spectators, because its spectator appeal was limited,
cricket turned in time to sponsorship for survival, and, appropriately enough in a materialistic age, while the body lived on,
the spirit passed away."
Indeed, the pristine white uniforms have been replaced at the
county level by colored sweatsuits; in Test matches, players
wear brewery logos on their jerseys; the grounds have been
papered with advertising, and the financial health of the game
depends on sponsorships of various kinds.
Cricket's gentlemanly spirit also seems to be growing obsolete.
The sport is increasingly characterized by bullying, intimidating behavior on the field. Batters who once donned only leg
pads now also wear hard helmets with visors to protect themselves against vicious bowling (pitching) aimed at the head.
Can cricket keep its soul? Can the game in England be saved?
For all their carping, the critics offer no solutions.
Die-hard fans seem to believe that no apologies are necessary.
They still find the game mesmerizing.
"Cricket can appeal to the athlete and aesthete alike," says
Matthew Engel, the new editor of Wisden, the Bible of the sport.
"It can veer between lyric poetry, differential calculus and
Thai kick-boxing. No game has such range, such depth."
For critics such as Anne Boston, editor at Country Living magazine, however, the sport carries its rot in its very bones:
"Cricket is an exquisite paradox of British hypocrisy," Boston
says. "It embodies that most English of vices, nostalgia, as no
other game does. It is at once the laziest game ever invented,
viciously competitive, and riddled with class, racial and
sexual prejudice. It represents in its most extreme form the
Englishmen's capacity for self-delusion and his desire to present himself as he would like to be seen, rather than how he
really is."
Social historian Jacques offers little hope of a revival:
"Cricket is indelibly linked with a failed Establishment," he
says, "with obsolete values, and with the Empire that was. The
game is shrinking on the vine, with falling gates and fewer and
fewer people playing it."
Explaining Cricket -- Not!
No, we can't explain how it works. A small British boy once
tried. Here's his effort:
"It's quite simple; you have two sides, one out in the field,
one in. Each man on the side that's in goes out, and when he's
out he comes in and the next man goes in until he's out. When
they're all out, the side that's been out in the field comes in,
and the side that's been in goes out and tries to get out those
coming in. If the side that's in declares, you get men still in
not out. Then when both sides have been in and out including not
outs, twice, that's the end of the match. Now do you see?"
Frankly, we don't. But here's some lingo we picked up:
Silly mid-on: fielding position.
Wicket: Three wooden stumps.
Bails: Two sticks that rest on the wicket.
Bowler: Player who pitches (bowls) the ball toward the wicket.
Striker: Batter.
Leg bye: A run scored when the ball hits the striker anywhere
except on the hands.
Sources: British English, A to Zed; World Book Encyclopedia
(Thanks Los Angeles Times (World Affairs/Culture page)
Posted by Vicky on r.s.c.