• Re: Neville Cardus on Woolley

    From DAVID SADLIER@21:1/5 to Uday Rajan on Mon Apr 17 06:14:58 2023
    On Monday, 10 January 1994 at 09:58:27 UTC, Uday Rajan wrote:
    This is a re-post of Cardus' essay on Woolley, first posted about a year
    ago, with apologies to Sadiq for the delay. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- FRANK WOOLLEY, by Neville Cardus
    (from "Good Days", 1934)
    During the quarter of a century that is Woolley's career so
    far, the game has gone through many changes. Bowling has had its
    fashions. Fast break-backs; slow and medium spin, now from the
    off, now from the leg; swerve and googly; this theory and the
    other---Woolley has had acquaintance with the lot of them. And
    while other batsmen have compromised some virtue of their style
    so that they might do the proper and expedient thing, Woolley
    has gone his ways undisturbed, as though unaware of the
    ambuscades about him. Other and more suspicious men have looked
    ahead. `Ah!' they have told themselves, `here are gins and
    snares of a strange new invention. here are googlies and swerves.
    I must borrow the latest specifics. Fatal to trust to the ancient
    counters. The straight bat, the clean drive---why, these would
    lead me to disaster were I to use them to stop the modern
    bowling. I must hold the bat down, watch the ball all the way,
    keep my legs in front. Yes, I must be modern in the presence
    of modern bowling.'
    Since 1919, few batsmen have dared to drive a cricket ball
    hard and straight; fewer still have dared to cut past point. They
    have, most of them, got back on their wickets, watched the spin
    and the swerve to the last fraction of a second. The delayed
    stroke, supposedly safe, is bound to be cribbed and confined,
    unfree and unbeautiful. Even Hobbs has suffered a change in his
    play; his bat no longer moves where the master would have it go;
    it has for years now been weighted by circumspection, a doubting,
    empirical bat. Woolley on the eve of his forty-seventh birthday
    made runs as felicitously as he made them for us nearly thirty
    years ago. Never has he compelled a crowd to ask whether cricket
    is as good as it used to be; never has he made the pavilion clock
    go round with slow, tedious fingers. No other cricketer living
    has served the meadow game as happily and faithfully as Woolley
    has done, summer after summer. No other living cricketer has
    moved cricket crowds to the happiness which has been felt
    whenever and wherever Woolley has batted, north, south, east,
    or west, green and pleasant Mote Park or grim and sulphurous
    Bramall Lane.
    Cricket belongs entirely to summer every time that Woolley
    bats an innings. His cricket is compounded of soft airs and
    fresh flavours. The bloom of the year is on it, making for
    sweetness. And the very brevity of summer is in it too, making
    for loveliness. Woolley, so the statisticians tell us, often
    plays a long innings. But Time's a cheat, as the old song
    sings. Fleeter he seems in his stay than in his flight. The
    brevity in Woolley's batting is a thing of pulse or spirit,
    not to be checked by clocks, but only to be apprehended by
    imagination. He is always about to lose his wicket; his
    runs are thin-spun. His bat is charmed, and most of us, being
    reasonable, do not believe in charms. There is a miracle
    happening on every cricket field when Woolley stays in two or
    three hours; an innings by him is almost too unsubstantial for
    this world. His cricket has no bastions; it is poised
    precariously---at any rate, that is how the rational mind
    perceives it. But, for that matter, all the loveliness of the
    world seems no more lasting than the dew on the grass, seems
    no more than the perfume and suppliance of a minute. Yet the
    miracle of renewal goes on, and all the east winds in the
    world may blow in vain. So with Woolley's cricket; the lease
    of it is in the hands of the special Providence which looks
    after things that do not look after themselves.
    His batsmanship, like all fine art, can be enjoyed by
    everybody, because it is fresh and natural, and, at bottom,
    as simple as it is modest. Other cricketers need
    sophistication to praise them. Their point of view must be
    understood. The state of the game, or the wicket, has to be
    looked into. `I simply must play so-and-so,'`Why, look at
    the bowling!---you simply cannot play a long-lengthed hit
    against that kind of spin.'`The pitch is getting drier; the
    ball's turning.' We have to attend to these esoteric points
    before we can get to the quality of the latest innings by
    Bloggs of Blankshire---one hundred and six in four hours and
    a quarter, without a chance, without a risk. No child,
    knowing nothing of cricket but bat and ball, could understand the
    game as Bloggs plays it. But innocence itself will open eyes of
    understanding when they look upon an innings by Woolley. Here,
    indeed, is true, unspoiled cricket; bat and ball, indeed, and
    little else, save the touch of an artist---a cricketer who is as
    much a weaverof beauty's spells as any Kreisler who ever lived.
    The score-board does not get anywhere near the secret of
    Woolley. It can tell us only about Bloggs; for him runs and
    results are the one justification. To add up the runs made by
    Woolley---why, it is as though you were to add up the crochets
    and quavers written by Mozart. An innings by Woolley begins from
    the raw material of cricket, and goes far beyond. We remember it
    flong after we have forgotten the competitive occasion which
    prompted the making of it; it remains in the mind; an evocative
    memory which stirs in us a sense of a bygone day's poise and
    fragrance, of a mood and a delectable shape seen quickly, but for
    good and all. Some of Woolley's innings stay with us until they
    become like poetry which can be told over again and again; we see
    the shapeliness of his cricket with our minds and we feel its
    beauty with our hearts. I can think of cricket by Woolley which
    has inexplicably found me murmuring to myself (that I might get
    the best out of it)
    Lovely are the curves of the white owl sweeping
    Wavy in the dusk lit by one large star.
    I admit, O reader, that an innings by Woolley has nothing to
    do with owls and dusk and starlight. I am trying to describe an
    experience of the fancy; I am talking of cadences, of dying falls
    common to all the beauty of the world. My argument, in a word, is
    concerned not with Wolley the Kent cricketer, but that essence of
    his batsmanship which will live on, after his cricket is done
    with, after his runs and averages have been totted up and found
    to be much the same as those of many other players. He has made
    music for cricket in all places---muted music, for never is
    Woolley's cricket assertive, strident. He is the soul of
    courtesy, of porportion, as he drives his boundaries. He will hit
    a bowler for four fours in an over and not give him reason to
    feel bruised or affronted. It is all done so quietly, so
    modestly. The game's hard combativenss is put out of sight, out
    of all one's senses, when Woolley bats. Even the bowlers may
    well be deceived, and think that they are not Woolley's
    adversaries at all, but, at his own sweet pleasure, his
    fellows-in-bliss, glad followers of him along an enchanted way.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From DAVID SADLIER@21:1/5 to DAVID SADLIER on Mon Apr 17 06:31:17 2023
    On Monday, 17 April 2023 at 14:14:59 UTC+1, DAVID SADLIER wrote:
    On Monday, 10 January 1994 at 09:58:27 UTC, Uday Rajan wrote:
    This is a re-post of Cardus' essay on Woolley, first posted about a year ago, with apologies to Sadiq for the delay. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- FRANK WOOLLEY, by Neville Cardus
    (from "Good Days", 1934)
    During the quarter of a century that is Woolley's career so
    far, the game has gone through many changes. Bowling has had its
    fashions. Fast break-backs; slow and medium spin, now from the
    off, now from the leg; swerve and googly; this theory and the other---Woolley has had acquaintance with the lot of them. And
    while other batsmen have compromised some virtue of their style
    so that they might do the proper and expedient thing, Woolley
    has gone his ways undisturbed, as though unaware of the
    ambuscades about him. Other and more suspicious men have looked
    ahead. `Ah!' they have told themselves, `here are gins and
    snares of a strange new invention. here are googlies and swerves.
    I must borrow the latest specifics. Fatal to trust to the ancient
    counters. The straight bat, the clean drive---why, these would
    lead me to disaster were I to use them to stop the modern
    bowling. I must hold the bat down, watch the ball all the way,
    keep my legs in front. Yes, I must be modern in the presence
    of modern bowling.'
    Since 1919, few batsmen have dared to drive a cricket ball
    hard and straight; fewer still have dared to cut past point. They
    have, most of them, got back on their wickets, watched the spin
    and the swerve to the last fraction of a second. The delayed
    stroke, supposedly safe, is bound to be cribbed and confined,
    unfree and unbeautiful. Even Hobbs has suffered a change in his
    play; his bat no longer moves where the master would have it go;
    it has for years now been weighted by circumspection, a doubting,
    empirical bat. Woolley on the eve of his forty-seventh birthday
    made runs as felicitously as he made them for us nearly thirty
    years ago. Never has he compelled a crowd to ask whether cricket
    is as good as it used to be; never has he made the pavilion clock
    go round with slow, tedious fingers. No other cricketer living
    has served the meadow game as happily and faithfully as Woolley
    has done, summer after summer. No other living cricketer has
    moved cricket crowds to the happiness which has been felt
    whenever and wherever Woolley has batted, north, south, east,
    or west, green and pleasant Mote Park or grim and sulphurous
    Bramall Lane.
    Cricket belongs entirely to summer every time that Woolley
    bats an innings. His cricket is compounded of soft airs and
    fresh flavours. The bloom of the year is on it, making for
    sweetness. And the very brevity of summer is in it too, making
    for loveliness. Woolley, so the statisticians tell us, often
    plays a long innings. But Time's a cheat, as the old song
    sings. Fleeter he seems in his stay than in his flight. The
    brevity in Woolley's batting is a thing of pulse or spirit,
    not to be checked by clocks, but only to be apprehended by
    imagination. He is always about to lose his wicket; his
    runs are thin-spun. His bat is charmed, and most of us, being
    reasonable, do not believe in charms. There is a miracle
    happening on every cricket field when Woolley stays in two or
    three hours; an innings by him is almost too unsubstantial for
    this world. His cricket has no bastions; it is poised
    precariously---at any rate, that is how the rational mind
    perceives it. But, for that matter, all the loveliness of the
    world seems no more lasting than the dew on the grass, seems
    no more than the perfume and suppliance of a minute. Yet the
    miracle of renewal goes on, and all the east winds in the
    world may blow in vain. So with Woolley's cricket; the lease
    of it is in the hands of the special Providence which looks
    after things that do not look after themselves.
    His batsmanship, like all fine art, can be enjoyed by
    everybody, because it is fresh and natural, and, at bottom,
    as simple as it is modest. Other cricketers need
    sophistication to praise them. Their point of view must be
    understood. The state of the game, or the wicket, has to be
    looked into. `I simply must play so-and-so,'`Why, look at
    the bowling!---you simply cannot play a long-lengthed hit
    against that kind of spin.'`The pitch is getting drier; the
    ball's turning.' We have to attend to these esoteric points
    before we can get to the quality of the latest innings by
    Bloggs of Blankshire---one hundred and six in four hours and
    a quarter, without a chance, without a risk. No child,
    knowing nothing of cricket but bat and ball, could understand the
    game as Bloggs plays it. But innocence itself will open eyes of understanding when they look upon an innings by Woolley. Here,
    indeed, is true, unspoiled cricket; bat and ball, indeed, and
    little else, save the touch of an artist---a cricketer who is as
    much a weaverof beauty's spells as any Kreisler who ever lived.
    The score-board does not get anywhere near the secret of
    Woolley. It can tell us only about Bloggs; for him runs and
    results are the one justification. To add up the runs made by Woolley---why, it is as though you were to add up the crochets
    and quavers written by Mozart. An innings by Woolley begins from
    the raw material of cricket, and goes far beyond. We remember it
    flong after we have forgotten the competitive occasion which
    prompted the making of it; it remains in the mind; an evocative
    memory which stirs in us a sense of a bygone day's poise and
    fragrance, of a mood and a delectable shape seen quickly, but for
    good and all. Some of Woolley's innings stay with us until they
    become like poetry which can be told over again and again; we see
    the shapeliness of his cricket with our minds and we feel its
    beauty with our hearts. I can think of cricket by Woolley which
    has inexplicably found me murmuring to myself (that I might get
    the best out of it)
    Lovely are the curves of the white owl sweeping
    Wavy in the dusk lit by one large star.
    I admit, O reader, that an innings by Woolley has nothing to
    do with owls and dusk and starlight. I am trying to describe an
    experience of the fancy; I am talking of cadences, of dying falls
    common to all the beauty of the world. My argument, in a word, is
    concerned not with Wolley the Kent cricketer, but that essence of
    his batsmanship which will live on, after his cricket is done
    with, after his runs and averages have been totted up and found
    to be much the same as those of many other players. He has made
    music for cricket in all places---muted music, for never is
    Woolley's cricket assertive, strident. He is the soul of
    courtesy, of porportion, as he drives his boundaries. He will hit
    a bowler for four fours in an over and not give him reason to
    feel bruised or affronted. It is all done so quietly, so
    modestly. The game's hard combativenss is put out of sight, out
    of all one's senses, when Woolley bats. Even the bowlers may
    well be deceived, and think that they are not Woolley's
    adversaries at all, but, at his own sweet pleasure, his
    fellows-in-bliss, glad followers of him along an enchanted way.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From John Hall@21:1/5 to DAVID SADLIER on Mon Apr 17 16:29:21 2023
    In message <3a67dff6-7ca0-462e-a242-0debb4f3e902n@googlegroups.com>,
    DAVID SADLIER <derails1932@gmail.com> writes
    On Monday, 10 January 1994 at 09:58:27 UTC, Uday Rajan wrote:
    This is a re-post of Cardus' essay on Woolley, first posted about a year
    ago, with apologies to Sadiq for the delay.


    Thanks for the repost. I wonder if you realised it's been 19 years since
    Uday Rajan posted it.
    --
    John Hall "[It was] so steep that at intervals the street broke into steps,
    like a person breaking into giggles or hiccups, and then resumed
    its sober climb, until it had another fit of steps."
    Ursula K Le Guin "The Beginning Place"

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Dryes@21:1/5 to John Hall on Mon Apr 17 11:09:39 2023
    On Monday, April 17, 2023 at 11:32:05 AM UTC-4, John Hall wrote:
    In message <3a67dff6-7ca0-462e...@googlegroups.com>,
    DAVID SADLIER <derai...@gmail.com> writes
    On Monday, 10 January 1994 at 09:58:27 UTC, Uday Rajan wrote:
    This is a re-post of Cardus' essay on Woolley, first posted about a year >> ago, with apologies to Sadiq for the delay.


    Thanks for the repost. I wonder if you realised it's been 19 years since Uday Rajan posted it.
    --
    John Hall "[It was] so steep that at intervals the street broke into steps, like a person breaking into giggles or hiccups, and then resumed
    its sober climb, until it had another fit of steps."
    Ursula K Le Guin "The Beginning Place"

    What happened to all the Indians posting here, one was a real moron!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From John Hall@21:1/5 to Dryes on Mon Apr 17 19:22:45 2023
    In message <3391f797-1d22-4fda-a001-443b19028985n@googlegroups.com>,
    Dryes <dryes1617@gmail.com> writes
    On Monday, April 17, 2023 at 11:32:050 >> In message <3a67dff6-7ca0-462e...@googlegroups.com>,
    DAVID SADLIER <derai...@gmail.com> writes
    On Monday, 10 January 1994 at 09:58:27 UTC, Uday Rajan wrote:
    This is a re-post of Cardus' essay on Woolley, first posted about a year >> >> ago, with apologies to Sadiq for the delay.
    <p>

    Thanks for the repost. I wonder if you realised it's been 19 years since
    Uday Rajan posted it.

    What happened to all the Indians posting here, one was a real moron!

    Considering there must have been 20 or more, if only one was a real
    moron they were doing pretty well. I suppose they all went first to web
    forums and then to Twitter when that came along. (As was also the case
    with most of the non-Indian posters too.)
    --
    John Hall "[It was] so steep that at intervals the street broke into steps,
    like a person breaking into giggles or hiccups, and then resumed
    its sober climb, until it had another fit of steps."
    Ursula K Le Guin "The Beginning Place"

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Moriarty@21:1/5 to John Hall on Tue Apr 18 15:13:50 2023
    On Tuesday, April 18, 2023 at 1:32:05 AM UTC+10, John Hall wrote:
    In message <3a67dff6-7ca0-462e...@googlegroups.com>,
    DAVID SADLIER <derai...@gmail.com> writes
    On Monday, 10 January 1994 at 09:58:27 UTC, Uday Rajan wrote:
    This is a re-post of Cardus' essay on Woolley, first posted about a year >> ago, with apologies to Sadiq for the delay.


    Thanks for the repost. I wonder if you realised it's been 19 years since Uday Rajan posted it.

    29. I don't think that's the longest time I've seen between posts in a usenet threads, but I reckon it'd be close.

    -Moriarty

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From John Hall@21:1/5 to Moriarty on Wed Apr 19 09:40:55 2023
    In message <13179ab2-2ab4-4358-9e07-1139ed71a919n@googlegroups.com>,
    Moriarty <blues95@ivillage.com> writes
    On Tuesday, April 18, 2023 at 1:32:050 >> In message <3a67dff6-7ca0-462e...@googlegroups.com>,
    DAVID SADLIER <derai...@gmail.com> writes
    On Monday, 10 January 1994 at 09:58:27 UTC, Uday Rajan wrote:
    This is a re-post of Cardus' essay on Woolley, first posted about a year >> >> ago, with apologies to Sadiq for the delay.
    <p>

    Thanks for the repost. I wonder if you realised it's been 19 years since
    Uday Rajan posted it.

    29. I don't think that's the longest time I've seen between posts in a
    usenet threads, but I reckon it'd be close.

    -Moriarty

    Oops! How did I fail in a basic piece of subtraction?
    --
    John Hall "[It was] so steep that at intervals the street broke into steps,
    like a person breaking into giggles or hiccups, and then resumed
    its sober climb, until it had another fit of steps."
    Ursula K Le Guin "The Beginning Place"

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Bob Martin@21:1/5 to John Hall on Thu Apr 20 06:46:08 2023
    On 19 Apr 2023 at 08:40:55, John Hall <john_nospam@jhall.co.uk> wrote:
    In message <13179ab2-2ab4-4358-9e07-1139ed71a919n@googlegroups.com>,
    Moriarty <blues95@ivillage.com> writes
    On Tuesday, April 18, 2023 at 1:32:050 >> In message <3a67dff6-7ca0-462e...@googlegroups.com>,
    DAVID SADLIER <derai...@gmail.com> writes
    On Monday, 10 January 1994 at 09:58:27 UTC, Uday Rajan wrote:
    This is a re-post of Cardus' essay on Woolley, first posted about a year >>> >> ago, with apologies to Sadiq for the delay.
    <p>

    Thanks for the repost. I wonder if you realised it's been 19 years since >>> Uday Rajan posted it.

    29. I don't think that's the longest time I've seen between posts in a >>usenet threads, but I reckon it'd be close.

    -Moriarty

    Oops! How did I fail in a basic piece of subtraction?

    Don't apologise.
    19, 29, 39 years, Neville Cardus is never unwelcome.
    I enjoyed it.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Robert Henderson@21:1/5 to Uday Rajan on Mon May 29 10:35:49 2023
    On Monday, January 10, 1994 at 9:58:27 AM UTC, Uday Rajan wrote:
    This is a re-post of Cardus' essay on Woolley, first posted about a year
    ago, with apologies to Sadiq for the delay. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- FRANK WOOLLEY, by Neville Cardus
    (from "Good Days", 1934)
    During the quarter of a century that is Woolley's career so
    far, the game has gone through many changes. Bowling has had its
    fashions. Fast break-backs; slow and medium spin, now from the
    off, now from the leg; swerve and googly; this theory and the other---Woolley has had acquaintance with the lot of them. And
    while other batsmen have compromised some virtue of their style
    so that they might do the proper and expedient thing, Woolley
    has gone his ways undisturbed, as though unaware of the
    ambuscades about him. Other and more suspicious men have looked
    ahead. `Ah!' they have told themselves, `here are gins and
    snares of a strange new invention. here are googlies and swerves.
    I must borrow the latest specifics. Fatal to trust to the ancient
    counters. The straight bat, the clean drive---why, these would
    lead me to disaster were I to use them to stop the modern
    bowling. I must hold the bat down, watch the ball all the way,
    keep my legs in front. Yes, I must be modern in the presence
    of modern bowling.'
    Since 1919, few batsmen have dared to drive a cricket ball
    hard and straight; fewer still have dared to cut past point. They
    have, most of them, got back on their wickets, watched the spin
    and the swerve to the last fraction of a second. The delayed
    stroke, supposedly safe, is bound to be cribbed and confined,
    unfree and unbeautiful. Even Hobbs has suffered a change in his
    play; his bat no longer moves where the master would have it go;
    it has for years now been weighted by circumspection, a doubting,
    empirical bat. Woolley on the eve of his forty-seventh birthday
    made runs as felicitously as he made them for us nearly thirty
    years ago. Never has he compelled a crowd to ask whether cricket
    is as good as it used to be; never has he made the pavilion clock
    go round with slow, tedious fingers. No other cricketer living
    has served the meadow game as happily and faithfully as Woolley
    has done, summer after summer. No other living cricketer has
    moved cricket crowds to the happiness which has been felt
    whenever and wherever Woolley has batted, north, south, east,
    or west, green and pleasant Mote Park or grim and sulphurous
    Bramall Lane.
    Cricket belongs entirely to summer every time that Woolley
    bats an innings. His cricket is compounded of soft airs and
    fresh flavours. The bloom of the year is on it, making for
    sweetness. And the very brevity of summer is in it too, making
    for loveliness. Woolley, so the statisticians tell us, often
    plays a long innings. But Time's a cheat, as the old song
    sings. Fleeter he seems in his stay than in his flight. The
    brevity in Woolley's batting is a thing of pulse or spirit,
    not to be checked by clocks, but only to be apprehended by
    imagination. He is always about to lose his wicket; his
    runs are thin-spun. His bat is charmed, and most of us, being
    reasonable, do not believe in charms. There is a miracle
    happening on every cricket field when Woolley stays in two or
    three hours; an innings by him is almost too unsubstantial for
    this world. His cricket has no bastions; it is poised
    precariously---at any rate, that is how the rational mind
    perceives it. But, for that matter, all the loveliness of the
    world seems no more lasting than the dew on the grass, seems
    no more than the perfume and suppliance of a minute. Yet the
    miracle of renewal goes on, and all the east winds in the
    world may blow in vain. So with Woolley's cricket; the lease
    of it is in the hands of the special Providence which looks
    after things that do not look after themselves.
    His batsmanship, like all fine art, can be enjoyed by
    everybody, because it is fresh and natural, and, at bottom,
    as simple as it is modest. Other cricketers need
    sophistication to praise them. Their point of view must be
    understood. The state of the game, or the wicket, has to be
    looked into. `I simply must play so-and-so,'`Why, look at
    the bowling!---you simply cannot play a long-lengthed hit
    against that kind of spin.'`The pitch is getting drier; the
    ball's turning.' We have to attend to these esoteric points
    before we can get to the quality of the latest innings by
    Bloggs of Blankshire---one hundred and six in four hours and
    a quarter, without a chance, without a risk. No child,
    knowing nothing of cricket but bat and ball, could understand the
    game as Bloggs plays it. But innocence itself will open eyes of
    understanding when they look upon an innings by Woolley. Here,
    indeed, is true, unspoiled cricket; bat and ball, indeed, and
    little else, save the touch of an artist---a cricketer who is as
    much a weaverof beauty's spells as any Kreisler who ever lived.
    The score-board does not get anywhere near the secret of
    Woolley. It can tell us only about Bloggs; for him runs and
    results are the one justification. To add up the runs made by
    Woolley---why, it is as though you were to add up the crochets
    and quavers written by Mozart. An innings by Woolley begins from
    the raw material of cricket, and goes far beyond. We remember it
    flong after we have forgotten the competitive occasion which
    prompted the making of it; it remains in the mind; an evocative
    memory which stirs in us a sense of a bygone day's poise and
    fragrance, of a mood and a delectable shape seen quickly, but for
    good and all. Some of Woolley's innings stay with us until they
    become like poetry which can be told over again and again; we see
    the shapeliness of his cricket with our minds and we feel its
    beauty with our hearts. I can think of cricket by Woolley which
    has inexplicably found me murmuring to myself (that I might get
    the best out of it)
    Lovely are the curves of the white owl sweeping
    Wavy in the dusk lit by one large star.
    I admit, O reader, that an innings by Woolley has nothing to
    do with owls and dusk and starlight. I am trying to describe an
    experience of the fancy; I am talking of cadences, of dying falls
    common to all the beauty of the world. My argument, in a word, is
    concerned not with Wolley the Kent cricketer, but that essence of
    his batsmanship which will live on, after his cricket is done
    with, after his runs and averages have been totted up and found
    to be much the same as those of many other players. He has made
    music for cricket in all places---muted music, for never is
    Woolley's cricket assertive, strident. He is the soul of
    courtesy, of porportion, as he drives his boundaries. He will hit
    a bowler for four fours in an over and not give him reason to
    feel bruised or affronted. It is all done so quietly, so
    modestly. The game's hard combativenss is put out of sight, out
    of all one's senses, when Woolley bats. Even the bowlers may
    well be deceived, and think that they are not Woolley's
    adversaries at all, but, at his own sweet pleasure, his
    fellows-in-bliss, glad followers of him along an enchanted way.

    No one comes close to Wooley's record as an allrounder., viz:

    Years Team
    1906–1938 Kent
    Career statistics
    Competition Test First-class
    Matches 64 978[a]
    Runs scored 3,283 58,959
    Batting average 36.07 40.77
    100s/50s 5/23 145/295
    Top score 154 305*
    Balls bowled 6,495 94,949[b]
    Wickets 83 2,066
    Bowling average 33.91 19.87
    5 wickets in innings 4 132
    10 wickets in match 1 28
    Best bowling 7/76 8/22
    Catches/stumpings 64/ 1,0 18
    Source: CricInfo, 28 December 2021

    RH

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  • From Gilly's Danda@21:1/5 to Bob Martin on Mon Jun 5 23:55:02 2023
    On Thursday, April 20, 2023 at 2:46:12 AM UTC-4, Bob Martin wrote:
    On 19 Apr 2023 at 08:40:55, John Hall <john_...@jhall.co.uk> wrote:
    In message <13179ab2-2ab4-4358...@googlegroups.com>,
    Moriarty <blu...@ivillage.com> writes
    On Tuesday, April 18, 2023 at 1:32:050 >> In message <3a67dff6-7ca0-462e...@googlegroups.com>,
    DAVID SADLIER <derai...@gmail.com> writes
    On Monday, 10 January 1994 at 09:58:27 UTC, Uday Rajan wrote:
    This is a re-post of Cardus' essay on Woolley, first posted about a year
    ago, with apologies to Sadiq for the delay.
    <p>

    Thanks for the repost. I wonder if you realised it's been 19 years since >>> Uday Rajan posted it.

    29. I don't think that's the longest time I've seen between posts in a >>usenet threads, but I reckon it'd be close.

    -Moriarty

    Oops! How did I fail in a basic piece of subtraction?
    Don't apologise.
    19, 29, 39 years, Neville Cardus is never unwelcome.
    I enjoyed it.

    We had a trove of Cardus stuff here once - at https://groups.google.com/g/rec.sport.cricket/c/yiAZZ39_P9o/m/BO9uSILiI2gJ.

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  • From Hamish Laws@21:1/5 to Robert Henderson on Tue Jun 6 20:21:47 2023
    On Tuesday, May 30, 2023 at 3:35:51 AM UTC+10, Robert Henderson wrote:
    On Monday, January 10, 1994 at 9:58:27 AM UTC, Uday Rajan wrote:
    This is a re-post of Cardus' essay on Woolley, first posted about a year ago, with apologies to Sadiq for the delay. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- FRANK WOOLLEY, by Neville Cardus
    (from "Good Days", 1934)
    During the quarter of a century that is Woolley's career so
    far, the game has gone through many changes. Bowling has had its
    fashions. Fast break-backs; slow and medium spin, now from the
    off, now from the leg; swerve and googly; this theory and the other---Woolley has had acquaintance with the lot of them. And
    while other batsmen have compromised some virtue of their style
    so that they might do the proper and expedient thing, Woolley
    has gone his ways undisturbed, as though unaware of the
    ambuscades about him. Other and more suspicious men have looked
    ahead. `Ah!' they have told themselves, `here are gins and
    snares of a strange new invention. here are googlies and swerves.
    I must borrow the latest specifics. Fatal to trust to the ancient counters. The straight bat, the clean drive---why, these would
    lead me to disaster were I to use them to stop the modern
    bowling. I must hold the bat down, watch the ball all the way,
    keep my legs in front. Yes, I must be modern in the presence
    of modern bowling.'
    Since 1919, few batsmen have dared to drive a cricket ball
    hard and straight; fewer still have dared to cut past point. They
    have, most of them, got back on their wickets, watched the spin
    and the swerve to the last fraction of a second. The delayed
    stroke, supposedly safe, is bound to be cribbed and confined,
    unfree and unbeautiful. Even Hobbs has suffered a change in his
    play; his bat no longer moves where the master would have it go;
    it has for years now been weighted by circumspection, a doubting, empirical bat. Woolley on the eve of his forty-seventh birthday
    made runs as felicitously as he made them for us nearly thirty
    years ago. Never has he compelled a crowd to ask whether cricket
    is as good as it used to be; never has he made the pavilion clock
    go round with slow, tedious fingers. No other cricketer living
    has served the meadow game as happily and faithfully as Woolley
    has done, summer after summer. No other living cricketer has
    moved cricket crowds to the happiness which has been felt
    whenever and wherever Woolley has batted, north, south, east,
    or west, green and pleasant Mote Park or grim and sulphurous
    Bramall Lane.
    Cricket belongs entirely to summer every time that Woolley
    bats an innings. His cricket is compounded of soft airs and
    fresh flavours. The bloom of the year is on it, making for
    sweetness. And the very brevity of summer is in it too, making
    for loveliness. Woolley, so the statisticians tell us, often
    plays a long innings. But Time's a cheat, as the old song
    sings. Fleeter he seems in his stay than in his flight. The
    brevity in Woolley's batting is a thing of pulse or spirit,
    not to be checked by clocks, but only to be apprehended by
    imagination. He is always about to lose his wicket; his
    runs are thin-spun. His bat is charmed, and most of us, being
    reasonable, do not believe in charms. There is a miracle
    happening on every cricket field when Woolley stays in two or
    three hours; an innings by him is almost too unsubstantial for
    this world. His cricket has no bastions; it is poised
    precariously---at any rate, that is how the rational mind
    perceives it. But, for that matter, all the loveliness of the
    world seems no more lasting than the dew on the grass, seems
    no more than the perfume and suppliance of a minute. Yet the
    miracle of renewal goes on, and all the east winds in the
    world may blow in vain. So with Woolley's cricket; the lease
    of it is in the hands of the special Providence which looks
    after things that do not look after themselves.
    His batsmanship, like all fine art, can be enjoyed by
    everybody, because it is fresh and natural, and, at bottom,
    as simple as it is modest. Other cricketers need
    sophistication to praise them. Their point of view must be
    understood. The state of the game, or the wicket, has to be
    looked into. `I simply must play so-and-so,'`Why, look at
    the bowling!---you simply cannot play a long-lengthed hit
    against that kind of spin.'`The pitch is getting drier; the
    ball's turning.' We have to attend to these esoteric points
    before we can get to the quality of the latest innings by
    Bloggs of Blankshire---one hundred and six in four hours and
    a quarter, without a chance, without a risk. No child,
    knowing nothing of cricket but bat and ball, could understand the
    game as Bloggs plays it. But innocence itself will open eyes of understanding when they look upon an innings by Woolley. Here,
    indeed, is true, unspoiled cricket; bat and ball, indeed, and
    little else, save the touch of an artist---a cricketer who is as
    much a weaverof beauty's spells as any Kreisler who ever lived.
    The score-board does not get anywhere near the secret of
    Woolley. It can tell us only about Bloggs; for him runs and
    results are the one justification. To add up the runs made by Woolley---why, it is as though you were to add up the crochets
    and quavers written by Mozart. An innings by Woolley begins from
    the raw material of cricket, and goes far beyond. We remember it
    flong after we have forgotten the competitive occasion which
    prompted the making of it; it remains in the mind; an evocative
    memory which stirs in us a sense of a bygone day's poise and
    fragrance, of a mood and a delectable shape seen quickly, but for
    good and all. Some of Woolley's innings stay with us until they
    become like poetry which can be told over again and again; we see
    the shapeliness of his cricket with our minds and we feel its
    beauty with our hearts. I can think of cricket by Woolley which
    has inexplicably found me murmuring to myself (that I might get
    the best out of it)
    Lovely are the curves of the white owl sweeping
    Wavy in the dusk lit by one large star.
    I admit, O reader, that an innings by Woolley has nothing to
    do with owls and dusk and starlight. I am trying to describe an
    experience of the fancy; I am talking of cadences, of dying falls
    common to all the beauty of the world. My argument, in a word, is concerned not with Wolley the Kent cricketer, but that essence of
    his batsmanship which will live on, after his cricket is done
    with, after his runs and averages have been totted up and found
    to be much the same as those of many other players. He has made
    music for cricket in all places---muted music, for never is
    Woolley's cricket assertive, strident. He is the soul of
    courtesy, of porportion, as he drives his boundaries. He will hit
    a bowler for four fours in an over and not give him reason to
    feel bruised or affronted. It is all done so quietly, so
    modestly. The game's hard combativenss is put out of sight, out
    of all one's senses, when Woolley bats. Even the bowlers may
    well be deceived, and think that they are not Woolley's
    adversaries at all, but, at his own sweet pleasure, his
    fellows-in-bliss, glad followers of him along an enchanted way.
    No one comes close to Wooley's record as an allrounder., viz:

    Years Team
    1906–1938 Kent
    Career statistics
    Competition Test First-class
    Matches 64 978[a]
    Runs scored 3,283 58,959
    Batting average 36.07 40.77
    100s/50s 5/23 145/295
    Top score 154 305*
    Balls bowled 6,495 94,949[b]
    Wickets 83 2,066
    Bowling average 33.91 19.87
    5 wickets in innings 4 132
    10 wickets in match 1 28
    Best bowling 7/76 8/22
    Catches/stumpings 64/ 1,0 18
    Source: CricInfo, 28 December 2021

    Aggregate records just mean that he's played a hell of a lot of matches
    He was a great first class cricketer but only a moderate performer at test level

    and, depending how you rate bowling versus batting for importance as an allrounder, even at first class level
    Miller, Faulkner, Rhodes, Proctor all have pretty decent claims to be ahead of Woolley

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