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Extras and sundries

Giles Clarke could be required to step down from the ECB board in April should new governance rules come in.

Sri Lanka captain Dinesh Chandimal said their Test series victory over Pakistan was helped by a maaniyo, or shaman. Nepal beat India in the Under-19 Asia Cup in Kuala Lumpur, bowling them out for 166 in pursuit of 186.

Mitchell Starc took a hat-trick at the end of both innings for New South Wales against Western Australia.

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The Cricketer Magazine
December 2017
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Altri articoli in questo numero


The Cricketer Magazine
To inform the future, look at the past…
The Ashes is underway. By the time you read this at
The Debate
Can you compare players from difierent eras?
The flashing blade
England captain Joe Root could be wielding a lightsaber
Licence to thrill
ECB have grand plans for the 2019 World Cup, with 007
Australia’s Irish Ashes fix
Warm-up Test could avoid England’s fate, reports Huw
Lumb’s retirement warning to players
Former England opener talks to Sam Morshead about life
Glistening new stadium opens in Rwanda
Rain relents in time for Vaughan, Gibbs and Billings
Bat presented to the Pope, but his side lose
Kennedy scores hundred as Archbishop of Canterbury’s
News agenda
The countdown is on. It’s T-minus 18 months until the
Facing up
Many say Jackie Hendriks was the greatest wicketkeeper West Indies ever produced, and he managed the great teams led by Clive Lloyd and Viv Richards
What if…
England’s 2007 World Cup is better remembered for Andrew Flintoff’s drunken adventure on a pedalo in St Lucia than the on-field setbacks. Richard Hobson thinks results might have been different had he not sailed to sea
The backstop
Last summer my two sons, aged 12 and 10, came back
The Inside track
The summer before last I emerged from a lengthy retirement
The Bouncer
They’re off to Australia again, and it’s not the same.
Partnerships
Somerset have bucked recent history and put faith in spinners Jack Leach and Dom Bess to bowl in tandem
Six of the best
Innuendo, Freudian slips, and the perils of live broadcasting. Cricket commentary’s biggest faux pas by Jacob Savill
The XI
Save Our Series – players parachuted in to a tour
Ask Nasser
Ask the ex-England captain anything. Send questions to magazine@thecricketer.com or tweet @thecricketermag
Freddie’s back
Flintoff takes to the stage in Fat Friends
My Favourite
Peter Cobb was at Lord’s in 1963 to see late-blooming recognition for Hampshire’s great seamer Derek Shackleton
Why I love cricket
Leicester and England full-back Dusty Hare scored a world-record 7,337 first-class points, but left school at 16 to play cricket for Nottinghamshire
The Window
Walter Hammond is the subject of one of cricket’s most
ENGLAND’S
We asked a panel of 27 experts, including five former England captains, to pick their top five… and you can also have your say. By Simon Hughes
GREATEST BAT SMAN
Given that Jack Hobbs scored more firstclass runs (61
So how did we do it?
The Cricketer asked many of the leading observers of the game – newspaper correspondents, commentators, ex-players and statisticians – to name their top five England batsmen of all time. We collated the results and have come up with the following order of merit…
Those who missed out
James Coyne picks out a few of the great batsmen who
England 2017 summer review
When they were good, they were very, very good, but when they were bad they were horrid…
In a good place
Home is where the heart is for Australia, and with Steve Smith and a maturing David Warner on board, England have their work cut out, reckons Jarrod Kimber
A little light reading
Concerned traditionalist David Townsend investigates a day/night Test at the shiny new Adelaide Oval…
The man who put Imran in reverse gear
For our new book, The Cricketer Anthology of the Ashes, editor Simon Hughes picked an all-time XI from the time the magazine was launched in 1921. His pick to open the bowling (and bat at No.10) was the incomparable Dennis Lillee
From The Cricketer Archive
Tony Lewis singles out Dennis Lillee: Lillee is a man
Family feud
There will be a new captain and coach at Hove next year, but how do Sussex become more ruthless on the field without sacrificing the club ethos? Bruce Talbot reports
No case of whispering Bob
Bob Willis was a genuine quick bowler – exactly the kind you need in Australia. He reminisces about Ashes tours good and bad, reports James Coyne
THE COUNTY GAME
100 objects p 82 MCC in County Set p 84 Paul Nixon interview p 88 Alex Gidman on retiring p 90
County cricket in 100 objects
It was telling that when the Brighton paper, The Argus
The county set
Marylebone Cricket Club are effectively the 19th county. The world’s most famous cricket club is profiled by Huw Turbervill
The Badger is_back
Paul Nixon has returned to Leicestershire as head coach, and is promising to take them out of the doldrums
The writing was on the wall
Former Gloucestershire captain Alex Gidman on realising the end of his career was nigh, and how chronicling his feelings helped him cope with the sense of loss
The Internati onal game
World stats p 95 Zimbabwe v West Indies p 96 Women’s Ashes p 97
World stats
Test report
Tactics backfire as West Indies raise their game to
Women’s cricket
Women’s Ashes Test
CRICKET Life
Letters
The Cricketer, 120 New Cavendish Street, London, W1W 6XX email: magazine@thecricketer.com
Social club
Tweet @TheCricketerMag
Club scene
Email your news to magazine@thecricketer.com
The Analyst
Mitchell Starc can do deadly damage with the old ball, especially against England’s tail. This is how…
How to…
Coach cricket to girls by Lydia Greenway
Reviews
Richard Whitehead finds an imbalance of routine match
Obituaries
Mike Vimpany remembers the man who oversaw Hampshire’s
From the archive
Hobbs’ record hundred The Cricketer, Vol VI, No.16 (Aug 1925) and No.18 (Sep 1925)
The global game
Relief for refugees in Sicily but sad news for the Milanese. Tweet @CoyneJames with your stories
Christmas gift guide
This superb anthology showcases a century of peerless
The Googly
Huw Turbervill @huwzat
Tea Break
1 English artist, JMW Turner and Warwickshire’s 17
Whatever happened to…
Fred Rumsey was a left-arm fast bowler who gained five