The Revised & Expanded Sledger's Handbook Quotes
The Revised & Expanded Sledger's Handbook
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Liam McCann84 ratings, 3.64 average rating, 5 reviews
The Revised & Expanded Sledger's Handbook Quotes
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“A cricket tour in Australia would be a delightful period in one’s life, if one was deaf.”
― The Revised & Expanded Sledger's Handbook
― The Revised & Expanded Sledger's Handbook
“Although sledging was not considered gentlemanly at the time and seemed, temporarily perhaps, to die out after WG’s retirement from first class cricket in 1908, there had always been an undercurrent of hostility between the English and Australian players. Lord Harris’s 1878-79 tour to Australia set the trend for many of the ill-tempered Ashes clashes to follow, although the urn itself was not at stake. The home side hammered the English in the first Test in Melbourne, with the tourists’ captain so disappointed in his own performance that he hurled his bat across the pavilion. The bad feelings rolled over to the Sydney Test, and when Australian umpire George Coulthard adjudged local hero Billy Murdoch run out, two thousand spectators invaded the pitch and began attacking the English players. Lord Harris was beaten with a whip, Albert Hornby had his shirt ripped off and six English players were forced to defend themselves with stumps. In retaliation, many English clubs refused to play the touring Australians when they visited the following year.”
― The Revised & Expanded Sledger's Handbook
― The Revised & Expanded Sledger's Handbook
