Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Cricket in politics: Theresa May idolises that ‘dull’ batsman

- Prasun Sonwalkar

LONDON: If, as the saying goes, your favourite actor, sportspers­on or musician says a lot about you as a person, who is Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s favourite cricketer? Despite a deluge of books and articles about him in recent years, we don’t quite know the answer.

Across the seas, Prime Minister Theresa May – unlike Modi – is a known cricket lover. On Friday, she was at Lord’s for the England-West Indies test match, where she declared her admiration for a batsman who was for many years the scourge of bowlers and spectators around the world — Geoffrey Boycott.

For political pundits, her Boycott fixation is not exactly a surprise — her style in office first as the home secretary and now in Downing Street compares rather well with the dull and dour stonewalli­ng technique on the pitch that Boycott was famous for.

Going by the criticism May has faced during the June elections and on Brexit, she may well say to the pundits, “It’s just not cricket”, but accompanie­d by her cricket-loving husband Philip May, she batted for herself during a chat with BBC’s Jonathan Agnew at Lord’s.

Asked on the Test Match Special programme if Boycott did not “bore you to tears”, she replied: “The whole point was he stuck at it. He had a plan and he got on with it, and more often than not delivered.

“I have made brownies for TMS before, once when Geoffrey Boycott was invited. I brought some brownies up. I handed them to Geoffrey but I don’t know whether they ever made it into the TMS box…All I will say is that Geoffrey Boycott’s still got my Tupperware.”

As if she agreed her tactics in interviews were like a “Boycott defensive block”, she said: “It suited Geoffrey well,” but denied she deliberate­ly went out of her way to refuse to answer questions: “That’s not evasion, it’s just giving a different answer than the one the interview wants.”

May said she did not like being characteri­sed as repetitive and impersonal: “I get frustrated. People use the term ‘robotic’ about me. I don’t think I’m in the least robotic.” In an earlier interview, she admitted to tearing up when her party did not win the June election.

The enigmatic Boycott is reported to be rather pleased with May’s admiration for him. When she became prime minister last year, he predicted that she will be “like Margaret Thatcher”, adding: “She has views and she’s strong. Life is about integrity and principles – it should be. We want politician­s like that with integrity, with principles, with honesty.”

The Yorkshirem­an, who is now an expert on TMS, was recently the centre of a row when he remarked that he would need to “black up” in order to receive a knighthood. He later apologised and the BBC confirmed that he will not be asked to resign from his role.

Boycott played in 108 tests for England and scored over 8,000 runs in a career spanning 1962 to 1986.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Geoffrey Boycott at Lord’s, London, for the third test match between England and the West Indies on Thursday.
GETTY IMAGES Geoffrey Boycott at Lord’s, London, for the third test match between England and the West Indies on Thursday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India