Cricket season and cricketers
At this time of the year, cricket and cricketers are normally tasting the first sweet fragrances of the summer while the football season draws towards yet another eventful and enthralling conclusion. It would seem that Arsenal are in the driving seat at the top of the Premier League three points ahead of their now familiar and fierce contenders for the Premier League Manchester City. There are now four crucial and defining games which will determine the destiny of the Premier League winning trophy but this one could go to both the wire and the final day of the season transistor radio broadcast at both the Etihad and Emirates.
But whatever happens on that final day of the League season, the summertime sport of cricket will have already aired its lungs, pulled on its pads, adjusted helmets and then strode confidently towards the crease, arms swinging purposefully, eyes focussed intensely on every over to be bowled and a perfect combination of sixes and fours on their mind. Cricket and its cricketers have always been foremost on the minds of most Englishmen for a number of centuries and the seeds of the game laid down back then are still flourishing.
Cricket was always the game that legendary cricket writer, broadcaster and wine connoisseur John Arlott always went into lyrical raptures about. For Arlott, cricket was the purest art form, the most emotional of all poems, poetry quite literally in motion and a major part of any discussion on the village greens and recreation grounds of Britain. It is a game played with heart and soul, a passion and feeling that can never be truly replicated anywhere else in the world of sport.
Cricket has a very specific identity, a geographical significance and nostalgic longing for decades now long since past when Hambledon in Hampshire became its birthplace and origin. Cricket loves to look back towards its golden ages when Sir Donald Bradman, Len Hutton, Denis Compton, Victor Trumper, Wally Hammond, Lindsay Hassett, Ted Dexter, Ian Botham, Sir Geoff Boycott and Fred Truman once stitched their monumental deeds onto the noble shield of cricket's hall of excellence. Cricket would have been lost without its bowlers, batsmen, its third men on the boundary, the players who breathed invigorating life into the game so many moons ago.
And somehow we wish the game would last forever because it is, quintessentially, the game the conscientious farmers and blacksmiths would just play because it was a joy to behold, leaving behind them their agricultural tasks because all of its rules and regulations were so easy to understand. It was never complicated or rocket science since most of us could instantly relate to its leisurely sedateness, its lazy sunny Sunday afternoon innocence and all of the game's fundamental simplicity, a game that always insisted that cricket should be taken at its own gentle pace, a game to be savoured and relished rather like one of Arlott's extensive wine cellars, a good Chardonnay that had to be matured and then drunk with enormous pleasure.
To those who still find cricket baffling and mysterious, then explanations may be needed and there are those who still find the game to be both painfully slow, unnecessarily long and, perhaps, unforgivably, tedious. They'll tell you that it seems to take several life times to complete the standard number of overs during the match, that there are too many drink breaks for their liking and nobody can quite grasp the steady accumulation of runs by one batsman alone. How long should it take to complete a half century?
And why does a cricket match take five or six days to finish when the boredom threshold may have been broken ages beforehand? But then the traditional lovers of cricket will regard the ones who can't stand the game as philistines or just ignorant. But of course this should never be the case and maybe we should try to sit down for a while and just describe the natural beauties of the game, the thrilling run chases, the one day game in all its intoxicating unpredictability.
The new fangled concept of the T20 Blast and the Hundred has captured the attention of most cricket's fans. Those who regret the cricket of yesteryear will slump into an armchair and simply lose themselves in the literature of Wisden, cricket's Bible. The emergence and astonishing success of the women's game is truly spellbinding. Finally, cricket has woken up to the realisation that women can also crack glorious sixes and fours into the pavilions of the game. And finally equality of the sexes should rightly be celebrated.
So where are we? Nottinghamshire, the county who once gave us the graceful and imposing Harold Larwood back in the early part of the 20th century, are the current champions. Trent Bridge is still the hallowed ground in the once thriving coal lands of DH Lawrence country. But this year the Nottingham Oval will become just one of the three venues for England's Test matches against New Zealand. This season should give us a real indication of where the balance of power lies.
For instance will Surrey and Yorkshire once again dominate proceedings in the County Championship. Yorkshire have always been a force to be reckoned with and Surrey just embrace the Oval with its prominent gas holders? Both Essex, Sussex, Worcestershire, Lancashire, Durham, Glamorgan, Leicestershire and Gloucestershire can normally be relied on to attract cricket's aficionados.
And yet in the apple orchards of Somerset where cider is blissfully supped, the leafy and bucolic country taverns of Hampshire and the shoe manufacturing heartlands of Northamptonshire, they will flock in their thousands. In the early hours of the morning, those two dependable umpires will trot down the pavilion steps, toss a coin in the air and then move towards the wicket like important statesmen about to deliver a rousing speech. So cricket will continue to hold a timeless fascination for those who become addicted to its arts and crafts.
For some of the more neutral observers cricket should always be mentioned in the same breath as the Ashes, that famous confrontation between England and Australia. Bradman became the most majestic batsman Australian have ever produced. Bradman scored hundreds of hundreds and batted for as long as the mood took him. He was powerfully built, with shoulders and arms built for the game and hands that held onto a bat as if his life depended upon it. Bradman, for many years, was the embodiment of cricket, a personification of everything that was right in the game, its most ingenious exponent, a batsman of rare nobility, handsome shots off the back and front foot and a hugely talented technician of the game.
So it is that throughout those lazy, dreamy and contemplative days of summer, cricket will wrap a soothing and comforting arm around the shoulders of people who just adore the game. They will probably give us endless statistics of the collective careers of celebrated players, the bowlers who have taken thousands of wickets and the batsmen who may well have forgotten how many runs they've made. And this is perfectly understandable because cricket, after all, was always the summer game which set remarkable standards and values for the rest of sport to follow. Cricket was the democratic game that everybody could appreciate and rightly so. John Arlott was always right.