Cricket at the Crossroads: Class, Colour and Controversy from 1967 to 1977

Cricket at the Crossroads: Class, Colour and Controversy from 1967 to 1977

by Guy Fraser - Sampson (Author)

Synopsis

In a decade spanning the 1960s and 1970s three major crises gripped the world of cricket. The Close Affair in 1967, when Brian Close was relieved of the England captaincy in controversial circumstances, laid bare the ugly class prejudice which had lingered on from the days of Gentlemen and Players. The d'Oliveria Affair saw the selection of an England touring party become a major international incident which divided the nation. And the birth of World Series cricket forced players and establishment alike to confront the very nature of the game, and how it should be played. Torn between the politics of the sport and the shifting social pressures of the day, the venerable institution of cricket found itself caught at a crossroads that would come to define how the game would be played and received for years to come. Based on original research and interviews with key figures of the day, Guy Fraser-Sampson evokes the era of the 1960s and 70s, the attitudes and politics of the time, and tells for the first time the story of the decade that dragged cricket forever into the modern era.Along the way, the book tells the story of some of the cricketing greats, and of their triumphs, disasters, and personal tragedies. Gary Sobers, Colin Cowdrey, Ted Dexter, Ray Illingworth, John Snow, Derek Underwood, Geoff Boycott. The ups, the downs, and the elusive what-ifs.

$4.31

Quantity

1 in stock

More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 288
Publisher: Elliott & Thompson Limited
Published: 22 Sep 2011

ISBN 10: 1907642331
ISBN 13: 9781907642333
Book Overview: * Major examination of the sport, in the vein of Duncan Hamilton's A Last English Summer.; * Includes material from interviews with players, commentators and others involved in cricket's most tumultuous era, as well as previously unpublished material from the archives of the MCC.; * Weaves sporting changes into a wider narrative of the economic and social transformation Britain was undergoing from 1967-77.; * A fascinating examination of cricketing names of legend - Gary Sobers, Geoff Boycott, Ray Illingworth and England's dashing gentleman captain, Colin Cowdrey.

Media Reviews
A fascinating account of a pivotal cricketing decade. --Tony Greig; An important, original and beautifully written book. --Peter Oborne; Guy Fraser-Sampson's 'Cricket at the Crossroads' ... is excellent on the demise of Brian Close as England captain and the betrayal by officialdom of Basil D'Oliveira. --Huw Richards, Guardian
Author Bio
Guy Fraser-Sampson is a well-known best-selling author in other fields, but this is his first book about cricket. He has been a regular attendee at cricket matches since the age of 10, most notably at Lord's, his home ground. He once dropped Brian Bolus at Lord's, but since he was in the upper tier of the grandstand at the time this fortunately had no bearing on the outcome of the match.