Category Archives: verbal intimidation

Call for Clarification of Bouncer Laws at Inquest into the Phil Hughes Death

Daniel Brettig,  in ESPNcricinfo, 14 October 2016, with title “Clarify bouncer laws, Phillip Hughes inquest told”  

Definitions of what constitutes “unfair bowling” should be clarified by cricket’s lawmakers, the New South Wales coronial inquest into the death of Phillip Hughes has heard on an emotion-charged final day. Counsel assisting the coroner, Kristina Stern SC, submitted that the inquest should conclude that this was a case of “accidental death”, which was not made more likely by the nature of play on the day of the Sheffield Shield match at the SCG. Hughes was struck in the side of the neck on day one of the match, November 25, 2014, suffering an arterial injury that resulted in his death at St Vincent’s Hospital two days later.hughes_3116917bhughes-and-helmetphil-hughes

Continue reading

3 Comments

Filed under Australia Cricket, Australian cricket, baggy green, confrontations on field, cricket and life, cricketing icons, cricketing rules, Daniel Brettig, performance, politics and cricket, sportsmanship, verbal intimidation, violent intrusions, welfare through sport

Alex Kontouris faces “Chin Music” at the Coronial Inquest into Phil-Hughes’ Death

Michael Roberts 

Alex Kountouris, a Cypriot Australian physiotherapist from Melbourne, was recruited as masseur and physiotherapist for the Sri Lankan cricket team in1995 or so by new coach Dav Whatmore. He rendered yeoman service and was a vital cog in the management programme that enabled Sri Lanka’s cricketers to win the World Cup in 1996. The island repaid him handsomely albeit involuntarily: he married a lass from that land.

aa-alex phil-hughes

He has since moved to higher levels back home in Australia: he became the cricket team’s physiotherapist in 2006. It is in this capacity and because of his experience that he was called as a witness in the coroner’s inquiry in Sydney into the tragic death of Philip Hughes by bouncer-blow on 25th November 2014. As far as I know, he was not present on the ground that day so his testimony could not provide direct evidence.  Continue reading

4 Comments

Filed under Australia Cricket, Australian cricket, cricket and life, cricket governance, cricketing rules, ICC, patriotic excess, politics and cricket, technology and cricket, verbal intimidation, violent intrusions

Coroner’s Inquiry into the Death of Phil Hughes: Serious Questions, Tears & Standard Fare

ABC News Item, 10 October 2016, with title “

Australian cricketer Tom Cooper has told an inquest into the death of Phillip Hughes there was a “noticeable” increase in short-pitched balls during the match. tom-cooper philhughes

Key points:

  • Cricketer Phillip Hughes died after a freak accident during a 2014 cricket match
  • Batting partner Tom Cooper says Hughes was targeted by short-pitched balls but seemed relaxed
  • Cooper and umpire Ash Barrow deny there was sledging from the NSW team

A coronial inquest in Sydney is looking into the manner and cause of the death of 25-year-old Hughes, who was struck on the neck by a cricket ball while batting for South Australia against New South Wales in a Sheffield Shield match at the SCG on November 25, 2014. Hughes died after the injury to his neck caused a haemorrhage: in his brain.

Forensic pathologist Professor Johan Duflou, who carried out the postmortem examination on Hughes, said an artery in his neck had been severed — an injury more commonly seen in single punch attacks. Neurosurgeon Professor Brian Owler told the inquest the force of the ball and the angle at which it struck contributed to the injury, along with the angle at which the cricketer had been holding his head. Continue reading

5 Comments

Filed under Australian cricket, confrontations on field, cricket and life, performance, sportsmanship, technology and cricket, unusual people, verbal intimidation, welfare through sport

Matthew Wade elbows Bowler Abbott and faces Code of Conduct Charge

AAP News Item, 10 October 2016, with title “Proteas v Australia: Matthew Wade faces contrary conduct charge”

Australia’s Matthew Wade is facing a contrary conduct charge after an on-field run-in with South Africa’s Tabraiz Shamsi during Sunday’s fourth one-day international in Port Elizabeth.  The pair had to be spoken to by the umpires after Wade appeared to clip Shamsi with his elbow while taking a run during Australia’s innings in South Africa’s six-wicket victory.

aa-wadeWhile Wade made only minor contact with the Proteas’ spinner both he and Shamsi have been charged with breaching article 2.1.1 of the International Cricket Council’s code of conduct. The article relates to minor acts of “conduct that is contrary to the spirit of the game”. Continue reading

5 Comments

Filed under Australian cricket, confrontations on field, cricket governance, cricketing rules, ICC, patriotic excess, politics and cricket, sportsmanship, verbal intimidation

Warwick Franks dwells in 1999 on Woodward’s Windies and Sri Lankan Crosscurrents by Roberts & James

Warwick Franks, in a dual book review in Spotting Traditions • vol. 15 no. 2 • May 1999 = of Ian Woodward: Aussies versus Windies: A History of Australia-West Indies Cricket. Walla Walla Press, Petersham, 1998. Appendices, illus., scorecards, stats. pp. vii + 260. $29.95…. & Michael Roberts and Alfred James: Crosscurrents: Sri Lanka and Australia at Cricket.Walla Walla Press, Petersham, 1998. Illus., scorecards. pp. $50 hardback, $19.95 paperback…. with footnotes and illustrations inserted here by Cricketique.

Woodward cover Crosscurrents

These two books represent a welcome widening in the perspectives on Australian cricket writing. While the enthusiastic crowd response to the 1998-99 Ashes series underlined the special position of these matches in the ethos of Australian cricket, it is also obvious that there are many ways in which English cricket is increasingly marginal in the development of the world game. Yet such has been the concentration of Australian cricket writing on the Anglo-Australian game that Mike Coward’s Cricket Beyond the Bazaar(1990) has been one of the only books to go beyond the Lord’s-MCG axis. Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Australian cricket, confrontations on field, cricket and life, cricketing icons, cricketing rules, murali, patriotic excess, player selections, politics and cricket, Sri Lanka Cricket, tower of strength, verbal intimidation, West Indian Cricket

Murali Magic. Swashbuckling Lankans. Deflating England’s Arrogance in 1998

Simon Barnes, courtesy of Cricket Monthly, February 2016 and ESPNcricinfo, where the title is “Favourite Moments. The pricking of pomposity”  … Murali’s 16 wickets at The Oval in 1998 were not only match-winning, they were epoch-changing

When it comes to cricket I’ve always been a secret Sri Lankan. The combination of maverick and underdog is irresistible. Besides, I’ve always had a wonderful time in Sri Lanka. The place gave me a great friendship with fellow gonzo journalist Nalin Wijesekera and a close encounter with a blue whale. So I’ve always resented England cricket’s patronising treatment of Sri Lanka. It was all but 20 years before they agreed to play a Test series of more than one match against Sri Lanka. So they had it coming all right. And they got it at The Oval in 1998.

murlia's nine Sixteen and done: Gough b Muralitharan– Pic Getty Images

I’ve also resented the treatment of the great Muttiah Muralitharan. Even after his action was cleared by scientific measurement, there were still plenty of people who knew better. They knew nothing of the science of the thing, of course, but what did that matter? They felt in their water that there was something amiss. And they actually thought that was good enough, and frequently wrote as much, generally in the Australian press.

fans at oval --PA Photos In fine voice: the fans at The Oval give it up for Murali and Co © PA Photos

They were faced with a choice: either this was the most remarkable bowler who had ever taken up the game, or he was a rotten cheat. Too many people went for the second assessment because – well, because it was more their size.

So Sri Lanka came to England in 1998 for their solitary Test match, and someone absent-mindedly prepared a turning wicket at The Oval. Not that England were complaining after Sri Lanka won the toss and put them in to bat and they made 445 runs despite Murali’s seven wickets. Sri Lanka went on to score 591, thanks to a brilliant 213 from Sanath Jayasuriya. And then the fun began.

I have three possibilities for my chosen moment. The first is when Mark Butcher was stumped as he looked to hit Murali out of the attack, the first wicket of the innings. The second is the run-out of Alec Stewart by the substitute Upul Chandana, which probably prevented Murali from taking all 10. But I have chosen the last wicket of the innings, in which the defiant Darren Gough was bowled behind his back by a doosra, giving Murali figures of 9 for 65. Jayasuriya knocked off most of the few remaining runs, whacking a couple of derisive sixes as Sri Lanka hammered England by 10 wickets.

England’s manager, David Lloyd – the delightful Bumble – was in a sour mood afterwards. “I have my opinions that I have made known to the authorities.” There’s still a view in England cricket that this was a result that didn’t count. That the pitch was a freak and the bowler was a cheat. bumble    Not best pleased: David Lloyd on the balcony © PA Photos

And yet the truth is obvious and glorious: that there are times when a single genius, in the company of a skillful and motivated team, can change the course of a cricket match and cricket history. For Murali was the most wonderful bowler. The bouncing run, the wrist rotated with the fantastic delicacy of a classical dancer, the looping flight well above the batsman’s eyeline, and then the guessing game, the three-card trick, what Americans call the Shall Game: Which way will it go? Left or right or straight on?

Murali was a rare kind of cricketer, one who can seize control of an occasion and do so without arrogance or strut or self-consciousness. There were times, very many of them, in which he simply accepted that it was his moment and that he could do nothing other than bowl the opposition out. On occasions he seemed half-embarrassed at having to point out a batsman’s obvious flaws, as if it really wasn’t his fault that batsmen were so incapable of judging the flight and turn of his deliveries.

And at The Oval, those splendid five days, in which he took 16 wickets for 220 runs, were the most glorious up-yours to all England’s snobbery and long-outdated notions of patronising cricketers of the subcontinent.

It was England cricket’s deathbed conversion to the new realities of international cricket. It was an acceptance, however unwilling, that extraordinary cricketing ability was a more widely distributed thing than they had previously considered. It was the most glorious pricking of pomposity.

And for everyone with cricket in the blood, it was an occasion of pure joy. Sporting excellence is a rare thing, the rarest thing of all, and in the end it matters far more than the joys of partisanship or the pleasures of great drama. Here was a genius in his pomp.

Poor Goughie. All that admirable resistance undone in a moment of perfection. It was time for a lot of things to be reassessed. Here was a ball-playing genius on par with Roger Federer and Lionel Messi – players who redefine their own game and go beyond the limits set down by previous generations. Those who fail to cheer such things don’t really understand what sport is for. And don’t deserve to have sport in their lives.

Simon Barnes is a former chief sportswriter of the Times and the author of more than 20 books

© ESPN Sports Media Ltd.

 

Leave a comment

Filed under cricketing icons, cricketing rules, English cricket, performance, Sri Lanka Cricket, tower of strength, unusual people, verbal intimidation

Beating Verbal Intimidation at its Own Game

Mitchell Santner during his test debut against Australia. Photo / Getty
Mitchell Santner during his test debut against Australia. Photo / Getty

They say honesty is the best policy and it proved to be an effective strategy for Black Caps debutant Mitchell Santner. An obvious target for the Australians when he walked out to bat for the first time in the day-night pink ball test in Adelaide, Santner provided the perfect simple response to the inevitable sledging. “(Nathan) Lyon asked straight away, ‘Are you nervous?'” Santner told Radio Sport earlier this week. “I was like, ‘Ah yeah,’ and that stopped the (conversation).”

Santner’s tactics worked perfectly. He went on to be New Zealand’s top run scorer in the match with knocks of 31 and 45. And his response joins the list of memorable comebacks to sledges in world cricket.

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Australian cricket, shane warne, unusual people, verbal intimidation

Kumar: Yesterday, Today & Tomorrow –Q and A with Rex

Rex Clementine in Q and A with Kumar Sangakkara, in The Island, 12 August 2015,where the title is Sanga on cricket and life after cricket”

article_image

The curtains will come down on Kumar Sangakkara’s illustrious Test career following the second Test Match against India at P. Sara Oval. The star batsman is the highest run getter (12,305) among those still playing while his batting average of 58:03 is significantly higher than several modern greats like Sachin Tendulkar (53:78), Brian Lara (52:88), Rahul Dravid (52:31) and Ricky Ponting (51:85). The 37-year-old, who returned home on Friday after his stint with English county Surrey, spoke to journalists here in Galle on the eve of the first Test on a host of subjects.

Question: What’s the reason for you to play only two Test Matches?

Kumar Sangakkara: The reason for the two and two Test split even though it is not ideal was the agreement I had with the previous selection committee when I was discussing my future. I had plans to retire immediately after the World Cup but they wanted me to try and play a bit more Test cricket. This was all I could offer them and I said as long as they were okay and the board was okay, I will be willing to play four more Test matches. They were ok with that and I said if they were not, to tell me that that would be fine. And that I can then retire after the World Cup. That’s why it’s a two and two split. Continue reading

1 Comment

Filed under Australian cricket, cricket and life, cricketing icons, farewell game, Indian cricket, murali, performance, player selections, Rex Clementine, sanath jayasuriya, Sangakkara, sportsmanship, Sri Lanka Cricket, tower of strength, unusual people, verbal intimidation, work ethic

Pissu Percy makes his Peace with Jonty

Courtesy of The Island, 12 June 2015

percy + jonty

In the picture is Sri Lanka’s renowned cheerleader Percy Abeysekera (on right) who met South Africa’s Jonty Rhodes at the R. Premadasa Stadium recently when the latter was here for a short coaching stint with the Sri Lanka National team. At this meeting the legendary player, world famous for his fielding abilities, remembered how he once misfielded a ball during an international match before Percy picked it up away from the boundary line in fine style falling over, even with his National flag in one hand. Then Jonty had commented quickly: ‘Percy, you are a better fielder than me’. Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Ian Botham, performance, Sri Lanka Cricket, tower of strength, unusual people, verbal intimidation, violent intrusions

Male Hormones seek Empowerment in the Women’s World of SLC

Courtesy of ADA DERANA, 20 May 2015, http://www.adaderana.lk/news.php?nid=30942

The committee appointed to probe shocking allegations of the Sri Lanka women’s team management and national selectors seeking sexual bribes from players, today submitted its report to the Minister of Sports.The Committee Report of the three-member committee, headed by Retired Supreme Court Judge Nimal Dissanayake, was handed over to Minister of Tourism and Sports Navin Dissanayake, the ministry said in a statement.

SHENANIGANS Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under six sixes, sportsmanship, Sri Lanka Cricket, taking the mickey, tower of strength, verbal intimidation, welfare through sport