Drum Magazine Issue 2 | Page 29

27 What Do They Know Of “ Cricket…? udyard Kipling dubbed cricketers ‘flannelled fools’. I take my hat off to him for his restraint, I have called them worse, much worse in my time. While I never truthfully expect to be faced with the choice between hacking off my own arm with a dull bread knife and sitting through an entire test-match, I would not advise any would-be gamblers to put money on the outcome. It would be a close-run thing.” Jon Hill recalls childhood days of cricket with Dad. R Cricket has always been a presence in my life. My dad is from Guyana - the country that has produced great West Indies players such as Sir Clive Lloyd and Shrivnarine Chanderpaul - and has an obsession with the game that borders on the pathological. Childhood summer holidays were spent vainly battling sleep as the ‘action’ from the latest-test match unfolded on the TV before my weary eyes, before being dragged down to the local nets to spend an hour cowering, bat-in-hand, as my old man sent one delivery after another fizzing towards me. But this was nothing compared to the harrowing ordeal of having to watch his village team play on a Saturday. It was here that my hatred for the game was truly forged. I could not reconcile my Dad’s evangelical zeal with the spectacle tortuously unfolding before me, a turgid, incomprehensible non-sport that could drag on for hours and still end in a draw. To him this was the sport of kings, an art form. To my (admittedly untrained) eye, it looked suspiciously like a dozen or so paunchy, red-faced men standing still for a long time, while women in floral skirts burst sporadically and inexplicably into applause. It wasn’t just the mechanics of the game that turned me off. It was the sheer uptight, dreary Englishness of it. Where is the passion, where is the joy in this infuriatingly polite little ‘game’? Where’s the passion, where’s the joy in this infuriatingly polite little ‘game’? “Boy,” says Dad, “heathen! One day I’m taking you to Georgetown so you can see my boys in action …Pass the bread knife…You’ll never understand cricket – our cricket – until you’ve sat in the Bourda Cricket Ground Stadium in Georgetown with a sandwich and a case of Red Stripe watching Lara, watching Ricardo Powell…” »