Wisden EXTRA 14

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151 editions of the world’s most famous sports book

WisdenEXTRA No. 14, February 2015

World Cup Special

The show must go on Over the next month cricket’s World Cup marks its 40th anniversary in Australia and New Zealand, still unsure of where it fits into the game’s labyrinthine constellation. World Cups are supposed to be the showpiece, yet cricket’s version does not even use the format of the game which is still regarded as the pinnacle of the sport, nor that which is its most accessible. Increasingly it risks being lost among a tide of tournaments and matches which dull the senses; these days you can make a reasonable guess that somewhere around the world a one-day international is taking place (there were 450 of them between this World Cup and the last one in 2011). Even those who govern the game have seemed unsure what to make of it, forever tinkering with the number of teams and stretching the quantity of matches so that they appear like dots at the earth’s end. Over the next few pages Matthew Engel, who was ringside when the World Cup was born, reflects this opinion in his skilful but damning navigation through the last 40 years. As Matthew sees it, a good thing has gone to waste. And yet if we cast the net back over the first ten World Cups we scoop up – beneath a mountain of dead fish 
– some triumphant and indelible moments in cricket history. West Indies launching a new era in 1975, India’s earth-shaking victory in 1983, Pakistan reaching fever pitch in 1992, Sri Lanka landing among the elite in 1996, the semi-final thriller between South Africa and Australia at Edgbaston in 1999, Dwayne Leverock’s earth-shaking catch in 2007 (in my mind he is perpetually defying gravity), the coronation of

Eagar’s Eye

Tendulkar in 2011. Plenty to cherish there, and to keep us hopeful. There is no reason why the World Cup can’t be a lot of fun. Some say the 50-over game is being squeezed out by the shorter and longer formats either side of it, but it is still loved round the world. It binds the eras, long enough to offer the ebb and flow that distinguishes cricket but spiced with a ticking clock. And only the arch-cynic could deny that, however poorly it is treated, sport still has a mind of its own. As Patrick Eagar’s photographs show in this issue of Wisden EXTRA, you never know quite what’s in store. We might get lucky. What the World Cup really needs to get it up and running is a good show from its supporting cast, the Associate nations who have too often flattered to deceive. For them, this tournament is the apex of achievement. On page 10 Khurram Khan and Kabir Khan, two Pakistan-born cricketers who have been at the centre of cricket in the United Arab Emirates and Afghanistan, speak intimately and insightfully about the particular challenges – political and technical – faced by their adopted nations. If you feel like Matthew does you can duck the World Cup by dipping into our extract from the new anthology Wisden on Grace, featuring the unlikely trio of Geoffrey Moorhouse, Neville Cardus and Craig Spearman. We also pay tribute to Phillip Hughes by reprinting the report of his twin Test hundreds at Durban six years ago – a match in which short-pitched fast bowling was to the fore. Benj Moorehead p23

Patrick Eagar, the doyen of cricket photographers, has covered nine of the ten World Cups since 1975. In that time he has seen some strange things – bizarre dismissals, shock defeats, even a war over stumps. Across these pages Patrick delves into his World Cup collection to find 10 events that took him by surprise. © John Wisden & Company Limited 2014

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WisdenEXTRA • World Cup Special

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