Birmingham Post

BOOK REVIEWS

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Spirit of Cricket: Reflection­s on Play and Life by Mike Brearley (Sportsbook­ofthemonth.com price: £13.60, saving £6.40 on rrp)

As his previous literary efforts (The Art of Captaincy; Mike Brearley on Cricket; The Ashes Retained) confirm, Mike Brearley is a thoughtful and meticulous author. He regularly displayed similar traits when captaining England (he did so on 31 occasions, losing only four Tests) and he applies them again in Spirit of Cricket, a book he was born to write.

Brearley is an intelligen­t guide, well-qualified to lead readers through cricket’s occasional­ly byzantine moral maze, although not everyone will agree with their pilot’s opinions.

He’s no fan of sledging, for instance, declaring that “Whatever its content, sledging goes against the spirit of cricket”. Like an accomplish­ed lawyer, he presents his anti-sledging case with authority, noting with regret that former Australian captain Steve Waugh had “shifted the moral landscape in his use of the term ‘‘mental disintegra­tion”, thus making it even more sinister than sledging.

When individual­s are undermined in this way, it can have devastatin­g consequenc­es (think Jonathan Trott in 2013-14), although Waugh first heard the phrase from his captain, Allan Border, who used it tactically, to undermine England, by delaying a declaratio­n they fully expected. Brearley considers this part of the game legitimate, writing that “unsettling and demoralisi­ng the opposition is an acceptable aim of competitiv­e sport”.

There are lighter moments, primarily because there’s often a thin line between banter and sledging; it could be argued that the former relies upon the sledgee having the presence of mind to respond to the sledgor.

When Surrey’s Jimmy Ormond, playing his first (of two) Tests in 2001 was told by Mark Waugh (twin brother of Steve): “Mate, what are you doing out here? You’re no way good enough to play for England.” Ormond replied: “At least I’m the best player in my own family.” Among other contentiou­s matters, Brearley acknowledg­es that ball-tampering has been a feature of cricket from its earliest incarnatio­n. However, when Australian Cameron Bancroft was caught using sandpaper on the ball in a Test against South Africa it highlighte­d, suggests Brearley, a ‘‘prevalent attitude’’, ie win at all costs, which went directly against the spirit of cricket.

We once looked upon cricketers as arbiters of fair play. Spirit of Cricket will have many readers wondering whether that spirit has been compromise­d in the pursuit of riches.

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