Waking up with Freddie
Daniel Brigham meets the presenters of Sky's new Saturday show, Cricket AM
Daniel Brigham
19-May-2006
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Unfortunately, or perhaps
fortunately, it's all in the name of
television. Simon Thomas, formerly
of Blue Peter and currently a Sky
Sports News anchorman, and Anita
Rani, who as well as her Channel
4 stint hosts a radio show on the
BBC Asian network, met each other
and Flintoff, for the first time
while shooting the trailer for Sky's
Cricket AM.
"He was very comfortable,"
says Rani of Flintoff. "And he
gave off a lot of body heat. Very
accommodating." Thomas is slightly
less enthusiastic: "It was such a
surreal experience. It was
the first time I'd met him
and we were in bed
together in our
pyjamas within
five minutes. It was
a super kingsize
bed. It needed to be."
Taking over from the acclaimed
Soccer AM's slot from 9 to 10.30am
for 12 weeks during the summer,
starting on May 20, Cricket AM
promises fun, irreverence and
hopes to entice new fans to the
game. And then, of course, there's
Freddie, who every week will try
out a new sport - from tenpin
bowling to darts.
Other features
include `It's Throw
Time', when
players from a
county introduce
themselves to the
camera (Darren
Gough insists he's
an allrounder) and
then take aim at the stumps with
their wrong arm. Dominic Cork
casts an eye over the best and
worst moments of the week in
`Champagne Cork' and Ian Botham
teaches youngsters new tricks
(cricket tricks, apparently, not
wine-drinking, tache-growing or
sponsored walking). Star guests
will include Kevin Pietersen,
newsreader Sir Trevor McDonald,
indie band Razorlight, England
rugby player Matt Dawson and
celebrity chef Ainsley Harriott, who
used to be the chef at Lord's.
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Sky have been acutely conscious
of the opposition to the new
cricket television deal, so new
shows like Cricket AM ("support
programming" they call it) are
designed to make the sport
accessible to the footy-loving crowd
who lap up Soccer AM. "I think
it's about debunking the myths
around cricket," says Thomas.
"There are an awful lot of phrases
and technical terms and I think
sometimes in the past broadcasters
have assumed that the audience
know what they're talking about.
"If you want to engage other
people in the game and build
on what was achieved last year
during the Ashes you've got
to make it accessible. Sport,
ultimately, is entertainment
and theatre and I think we'll be
putting that across and engaging
with as many current and new
cricket fans as possible."
"We're targeting anyone and
everyone," says Rani, who learnt
to play cricket on the streets
of Bradford with milk crates as
stumps. "I guarantee that people
from right across the board will be
watching. I think the Ashes proved
that there are fans from all walks
of life out there. I'm sure MCC
members will love it."
Thomas says he heard Soccer
AM presenter Tim Lovejoy tell
a producer "the show succeeds
or fails on your presenters".
And he's right. Soccer AM works
because of the chemistry between
Lovejoy and his co-host Helen
Chamberlain. You can't contrive
these things but Thomas and Rani
seem to have it and are already
finishing each other's sentences.
Test Match Special it ain't.
Daniel Brigham is staff writer of The Wisden Cricketer