First published in Cape Argus, 15 March 2002. John Young on South Africa’s test spinner. Denys Hobson must have been smiling at Paul Adams’s return to test cricket last weekend. Soon after the Proteas returned from the West Indies, with Adams again having been relegated to drinks carrier for most of the tour, the wrist
Cricket
The perfect picnic at Lord’s
John Young explores the social ‘season’ of London’s cricket crowds. This article first appeared in The Weekender, 2008. There is a small patch of grass in west London that on one day of the year assumes an importance vastly disproportionate to its size. This is the Coronation Garden in the Lord’s cricket ground. On the
Grow black Protea cricketers at school level
First published in Mail & Guardian 29 April 2016. Sports’ Minister Fikile Mbalula’s announcement this week that prominent sporting codes may not bid to host international events is only the latest contretemps in a long line of rows between politicians and sports’ administrators. Ironically, it was the African National Congress which pushed for South
In search of CLR
First published in Wisden Cricket Monthly, May 2015. There is a C.L.R. James Institute in New York and a library in the London borough of Hackney but it’s hard to find signs of the author of cricket’s greatest book in his home town. John Young searched high and low. “Tunapuna at the beginning of this
The Doors of Township Cricket Are Open Now
All the boys want to be Temba
Play Up, Play Up and Win the War
Exactly a hundred years ago, England and South Africa were battling it out for real. And as John Young shows, the Boer War had a surprising amount to do with cricket