Do They Play Cricket in Ireland?
184 pages
English

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184 pages
English

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Description

Do They Play Cricket in Ireland? is the inside story of a rollercoaster ride that took the Boys in Green from rank amateurs to playing Test matches, and dismissing England for 85. Every stage of the journey is charted by a writer who was at the heart of the action: instrumental in Ed Joyce joining Middlesex and the tactician who helped Ireland win their first global tournament. Read about stunning victories over Pakistan, England and the West Indies, Eoin Morgan's debut at Eton, an annoying redhead's spiky spats with Brian Lara, Kevin Pietersen and the Namibian farming community, the fastest century in World Cup history, a cricket-loving former IRA commander and a six-hitting sheep strangler. As friend and confidant to many of the players and coaches who took Ireland to the top table of world cricket, David Townsend is uniquely placed to tell this remarkable story. Written in diary format, in a chatty, humorous style, the book is part travelogue as it follows the team through more than 20 countries and across five continents.

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Publié par
Date de parution 12 avril 2021
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781785319228
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0500€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

First published by Pitch Publishing, 2021
Pitch Publishing
A2 Yeoman Gate
Yeoman Way
Durrington
BN13 3QZ
www.pitchpublishing.co.uk
David Townsend, 2021
Every effort has been made to trace the copyright.
Any oversight will be rectified in future editions at the earliest opportunity by the publisher.
All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse-engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of the Publisher.
A CIP catalogue record is available for this book from the British Library
Print ISBN 9781785318405
eBook ISBN 9781785319228
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CONTENTS
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Laying the Tracks
1994-1999
The Messiah and a Very Naughty Boy
2000-2004
On the Global Stage
2005-2007
Peerless Among Peers
2008-2010
Trebles All Round
2011-2014
Testing Times
2015-2019
Photos
For John and Stella and my son Danny
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
MY THANKS to the entire Irish cricketing fraternity, even the Mooneys, for your friendship and support over the years.
Particular thanks to Barry Chambers who supplied many of the photos and permissions, along with advice and ideas; Peter Gillespie for planting the idea and Alan Lewis for insisting it must be done ; Mike Hendrick, Paul McCrum and Greg Molins for jogging memories of the early years; my fellow members of the Cricket Writers of Ireland; Stella Downes for her corrections and encouragement; plus editor Richard Whitehead and the team at Pitch.
Finally, a special mention for Derek Scott and John Wright, two fine men who did so much for cricket on the island and began the journey towards that Test match at Lord s.
INTRODUCTION
St John s Wood - Autumn, 1993
IT MIGHT seem a little strange that a 25-year-long odyssey with Ireland cricket should start and finish at Lord s. But all journeys have to begin somewhere, and for me the pistol was fired during a couple of post-season pints with John Carr. Guinness, as it happens. I d introduced the recently retired Middlesex batsman to his lovely wife, Vicky, during my three years working with the county, so maybe karma was at work. What are you doing this winter, DT?
Nothing special. No plans. A few sub-editing shifts to pay for a holiday in Sydney, probably. As you know, I do like a bit of sun on my back. Never been a fan of the English winters. Or regular work patterns, for that matter.
Why don t you come out to Kenya and cover the ICC Trophy, then? The World Cup qualifying tournament was being held in Nairobi and JC was going to coach Argentina.
No one is going to be interested in that.
Ireland are playing in it for the first time - you might get a bit of work reporting their games. Cover your expenses? It should be a good three weeks.
It was a good three weeks - and a fair bit more. A quarter of a century, and counting, watching a team, many of whom I count as friends, venturing forth and taking on the best in the world. From worrying about Gibraltar to worrying Australia. Countless contests in more than 20 countries. Trophies, triumphs, heartbreak, upsets and more. The best of times.
JC was right. It didn t take long to cover my expenses and nudge a good few quid into profit. The Irish border has caused all sorts of problems over the years, but the beauty of partition on the island - from a selfish freelance point of view - is that there are effectively two national broadcasters, RTE and BBC Northern Ireland, and national newspapers on both sides of the border. I was commissioned by both radio stations, plus The Irish Times and the News Letter - just about opposites - plus The Times ; also The Cricketer magazine were interested in a preview and closing report on the tournament and, best of all, I d get to make my debut in Wisden Cricketers Almanack . The Bible.
My knowledge of Irish cricket didn t extend much beyond knowing that they had once bowled out West Indies for 20-something and that Justin Benson, a fringe player at Leicestershire, was in the squad for Kenya. So I dived into the history books for a bit of background.
Ireland s first official match was played in Phoenix Park, south of Dublin, in 1855. So they had been at it some time. Their opponents were the Gentlemen of England, who would surely have struggled to raise a side. Various challenges followed, including a couple of trips across the Atlantic to play Philadelphia, New York and Canada, and an innings victory over Scotland in the inaugural meeting of the teams in 1888.
That was pretty much how it had continued since. All very amateur: regular games against Scotland, the occasional venture overseas and, of course, tourist matches that were seen as light relief by the big beasts involved in Test series on the other side of the Irish Sea. True, West Indies were embarrassed at Sion Mills in 1969, when they were bowled out for 25, but usually it was the home side who left with red faces. Earlier that year, Australian skipper Allan Border had taken a fancy to the off spin of Angus Dunlop and hit him for five consecutive sixes. Dunlop was in the ICC Trophy squad, presumably not as a bowler.
Famous players? Well, not many since Sir Timothy O Brien, the first Irishman to play Test cricket for England, who featured in a handful of matches in the 1880s. O Brien also began the long association between Ireland and Middlesex, which many moons later saw left-arm spinner Dermott Monteith appear for the county. I remember watching Monty bowl at Uxbridge, a big turner of the ball. He was, and still is, Ireland s all-time leading wicket-taker with 326 wickets from only 76 matches, a phenomenal effort. Mark Cohen, who had opened the batting for Middlesex IIs, was in the squad for Kenya. He was dating a former Miss World, which was also a phenomenal effort in my book.
That was about it at the time, yet within the next two decades Ireland would supply England with three full internationals, two of them Test players, and somewhere in north Dublin a future World Cup-winning captain was running around in short trousers.
The Cricketer wanted a preview piece so I found a contact number for captain Stephen Warke and phoned him at home in Belfast. Opening batsman. Nice bloke. Do any of your squad have first-class experience apart from Justin Benson? I wondered.
A pause. We all do.
Ah yes, the annual three-day match against Scotland; the one where off-spinner Garfield Harrison took 9-113 to claim the best first-class bowling figures in the run-drenched summer of 1990. More research was clearly needed but I wasn t alone in my ignorance; The Cricketer illustrated my piece with a picture of all-rounder Junior McBrine, who had last played for Ireland in 1992 and would be spending the tournament at home in Donemana.
Two weeks before leaving, Malachy Logan, the sports editor of The Irish Times , called me. David, I hate to do this to you, but we ve decided to send our own man. Fair enough. It happens. I doubt if there is any freelancer who hasn t lost a commission at the last minute. Few have heard what followed, though: Would you accept half your fee as compensation?
It was my first indication that this lot did things differently.
LAYING THE TRACKS
1994-1999
1994
Nairobi - 12 February
The first Ireland player I met was Alan Lewis, future chairman of selectors and international rugby referee, his megawatt smile illuminating a pre-tournament barbecue when the power failed. Lewie had assumed the captaincy on the eve of Ireland s first game when Stephen Warke ran into a roller during practice, and broke a bone in his elbow. The amateur nature of the set-up was immediately obvious, as was the friendliness of players drawn from all over the island. Lewie was a Dubliner, most of the squad played for clubs in and around Belfast and then there was Desmond Decker Curry from the north-west, who, I was told, strangled sheep for a living.
This was new territory for all of them. After a first capped match during the Crimea War, Ireland had bumbled along playing half a dozen games or so a year without raising the consciousness, even among neighbours, that cricket was played to any great level on the island. Yet it was, and against the odds some decent players were ready to embark on their first global tournament after being elected to Associate membership of the International Cricket Council the year before.
There was ambition among the squad to show what they could do and to measure themselves against the more established Associate sides like the Netherlands, as well as their hosts Kenya who were expected to do well in familiar conditions. The challenge of trying to qualify for the 1996 World Cup was one to be relished, but if there was an enthusiasm to embrace this new world it was in a this is how we do it in Ireland sort of way. They were very much innocents abroad, from the Hon. Sec. of the Irish Cricket Union in his knee-length trench coat and trilby, to journalist Philip Boylan using Perrier water to brush his teeth.
Inexperience and naivety shone through everywhere. Tips, for example. When room service delivered morning tea, we added the equivalent of 20p which seemed about right and were rewarded the following day with a complimentary plate of biscuits. Boylan, meanwhile, tipped his attendant 5 at a more upmarket establishment and the resulting misunderstanding had the poor man returning that evening wearing a pink shirt and a nervous smile.
The Nairobi hotels we encountered were all good, from the top-of-the-range Norfolk to the more basic three-star

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