More Than A Game. The Story Of Cricket's Early Years
Major John
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Cover Type: Hardcover
Book Condition: Fine
Jacket Condition: Very Good
Publisher: Harper Press
Publisher Place: London
Publisher Year: 2007
Edition: First Edition
Description: 433 pages. Jacket is in Very good condition throughout. Book appears to have hardly been read and is in Fine condition throughout.
Publishers Description: The former Prime Minister examines the early history of one of the great loves of his life in a book that sheds new light on the summer games social origins. All his life John Major has loved cricket. In More Than a Game he examines it from its origins up to the coming of the First World War. Along the way he considers the crucial role of the wealthy patrons who gambled huge sums on early matches; the truth behind the legends that have grown up around the famous Hambledon Club; changes in rules and techniques, including the transition from underarm to overarm bowling; the long-standing, but often blurred, distinction between gentlemen and players; the coming of the MCC and its role as the supreme arbiter of the game; the spread of cricket throughout the British Empire; and the emergence of the county game and international competition. It is a story rich in anecdote and colourful characters. Many of the great names from the Golden Age of cricket C.B. Fry, Ranjitsinhji, Demon Spofforth and of course the towering figure of W.G. Grace are still well-known today. But long before then the game already had its men like the Kentish innkeepers son Lumpy Stevens, who played at the highest level until he was nearly sixty; Silver Billy Beldham, who was taught how to play by a gingerbread baker; the notoriously avaricious and ill-tempered Lord Frederic Beauclerk, a direct descendant of Charles II and Nell Gwynne; and the mighty Lion of Kent Alfred Mynn.
ISBN: 9780007183647
(217588)