“And Glenn McGrath dismissed for two, just 98 short of his century.”
Richie Benaud
“And Glenn McGrath dismissed for two, just 98 short of his century.”
Richie Benaud
“Put your brain into gear before opening your mouth.”
Richie Benaud
Richard “Richie” Benaud passed away today aged 84. A life spent playing, promoting, improving and talking about cricket has come to an end. A wonderful innings has has come to close.
Much will be made in the coming days about the legacy of Richie Benaud. The more I think about it the more I keep coming back in my mind to this tenet: there has been no bigger influencer in the game of cricket in Australia than R Benaud.
Many will decry this view and immediately repost with the name Bradman but I implore those who take that position to rethink it. The reasons are simple and obvious but are worth repeating:
All of those factors add up to a lifetime that has lead to Richie Benaud becoming a name that is synonymous with cricket. He has brought cricket into our homes and influenced generations upon generations to pick up a bat or bowl a ball. More than that, Richie Benaud was Australian cricket’s moral compass. There was no issue in the game that Benaud did not provide an opinion on. If you need convincing watch Richie’s reaction to Trevor Chappell’s underarm delivery: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vvGHC7REkdM .
More to all of this is the fact that Richie Benaud was also an Australian cultural icon. The beige jackets, the catch phrases, the hair and the curl of the bottom lip are all parts of the Benaud persona that are firmly ingrained in the psyche of the people of this country.
I concede that Don Bradman was the greatest player to lace a boot, not just for Australia but world around. I also concede that his career post playing was one devoted to the enhancement of the game in Australia, even, in a strange way his conduct in forcing World Series Cricket. His legacy continues to endure and will forever through his average of 99.94.
That said: when was the last time you heard or saw someone trying to imitate Don Bradman? Benaud imitations are a daily, if not hourly, event during cricket season.
We adored Richie Benaud and we revered him. When we reflect on cricket in Australia it may well be judged, for those of the TV era, as having two periods: that with Richie Benaud in the commentators chair and that without him. The game, and our broader community, is surely the worse for his loss.
Vale Richard Benaud. You will be missed.
Just two days after Australia won the 2015 World Cup, thw National Selection Panel has named a number of squads for the winter tours.
The squads are:
Test squad Michael Clarke (capt), Steven Smith (vice-capt), Fawad Ahmed, Brad Haddin, Josh Hazlewood, Ryan Harris (Ashes only), Mitchell Johnson, Nathan Lyon, Mitchell Marsh, Shaun Marsh, Peter Nevill, Chris Rogers, Peter Siddle, Mitchell Starc, Adam Voges, David Warner, Shane Watson.
Australia A four-day squad Usman Khawaja (capt), Matthew Wade (vice-capt), Ashton Agar, Cameron Bancroft, Joe Burns, Pat Cummins, Andrew Fekete, Peter Handscomb, Travis Head, Nic Maddinson, Glenn Maxwell, Steve O’Keefe, Gurinder Sandhu, Marcus Stoinis.
Australia A one-day squad Usman Khawaja (capt), Matthew Wade (vice-capt), Sean Abbott, Ashton Agar, Cameron Boyce, Joe Burns, Nathan Coulter-Nile, Pat Cummins, Callum Ferguson, Peter Handscomb, Travis Head, Chris Lynn, Gurinder Sandhu, Adam Zampa.
Cricket Australia has also named its list contracted players for the 2015/16 season as follows:
George Bailey, Michael Clarke, Pat Cummins, James Faulkner, Aaron Finch, Brad Haddin, Ryan Harris, Josh Hazlewood, Mitchell Johnson, Nathan Lyon, Mitchell Marsh, Shaun Marsh, Glenn Maxwell, James Pattinson, Chris Rogers, Steven Smith, Mitchell Starc, David Warner, Shane Watson.
Regular readers of this blog will have oft read me “go off” about the selection decisions made by the NSP but after the season that was in 2014/15 it is pretty hard to be anything other than complimentary of their work.
The only question mark I will again raise is the fact that the name Chris Hartley is missing from the squad lists. I can not believe that he is considered to be the 5th best wicketkeeper in the country.
The Cricket World Cup has ended with Australia demolishing New Zealand in the final at the Melbourne Cricket Ground overnight.
This has been an amazing tournament replete with quality cricket and fascinating stories. Australia proved worthy favourites with their astonishingly clinical win in the final. The World Cup though was about more than one team winning and with that in mind here are my 5 moments that mattered from Cricket World Cup 2015:
So now we have 4 more years to wait for the next instalment of the Cricket World Cup. Much will happen in the game between now and then and I, for one, can not wait to see where the game is taken by those who play it and administer it.
After 49 games across six weeks the cricket World Cup has come to its end point at the MCG with a final for the ages between the best team in the tournament so far in New Zealand and the tournament favourites in Australia.
These teams faced each other in the pool games in one of the matches of the tournament at Eden Park that saw the Black Caps victorious by the closest of margins. New Zealand rode a wave of crowd support home to best the South Africans in one of the most exciting cricket games in my recent memory to get into the final. Australia dominated an Indian team that they have dominated all season and that, frankly, just gave up in the other semi final.
Here are my 5 keys to victory in the World Cup final:
A fantastic game of cricket awaits us. I have to declare that before the tournament started I had a wager on New Zealand to win the game and my head is still telling me that they should be favourites. My heart though is screaming that this will be Australia’s game!
Bring on Sunday!