Tarnished gold

It may have been the `golden age of cricket’ but Edwardian professionals were treated as a lesser breed, their lives often ending in alcoholism and suicide, as Robert Palmer reveals…

Tiger Smith: his wage was on par with a well-bred young woman’s trousseau © The Cricketer
 

“Smith EJ £1 weekly during winter if willing to work (or 10% weekly if no employment found): £2 weekly during summer and farm out at Leamington if possible, or elsewhere, failing which on ground staff.”Such was a minute in the Warwickshire CCC records for August 23, 1907, referring to the famous ‘Tiger’ Smith, who later became the club coach until his retirement at the age of 77. The minute reads as a very inhuman entry – especially ‘farm out’ – and reflects the undignified haggling which went on to obtain players as cheaply as possible.In the early years of the 1900s, these players were known as ‘professors’, the term possibly originating from their role as coaches at universities. The players may have felt that the term conferred upon them some status, but it certainly did not fill their pockets.Although the players were at liberty to work in the winter, opportunities were not abundant and many relied solely on their wage from the county. At best, this provided a hand-to-mouth existence. Even Willie Quaife, who was probably the highest paid player at Warwickshire at that time, earned only around £125 per year. This sum compared to the pay of a railwayman or a clerk but these professions carried a job for life and a pension at the end of it. A cricketer was usually finished when he was 35.In those clays, there was a huge gap between the income of a working man and those of the upper classes. As the Englishwomen’s Domestic Magazine stated, “A well bred young woman’s trousseau in the early 1900s for lingerie alone was expected to cost £100”. In other words, roughly Jim ‘Tiger’ Smith’s wage. Furthermore players were expected to buy their own kit and to pay their own hotel bills and rail fares. `Tiger’ recalled that “the return fare Birmingham- London then was 9s 7d and you could get dinner, bed and breakfast at the Adelphi in Adam Street for 7s 6d. We had nothing to grumble at”.Admittedly clubs like Warwickshire were not well off. For example, in 1902 there was a bill for the new pavilion of £1,374 to find. The profit for that year was a slender £60. Possibly this was why the players were invited to a dinner in 1902 with the touring Australians on the understanding that they paid for their own drinks. Contrast this with the conditions of today’s cosseted cricketer, with his generous salary, perhaps an England contract, lucrative sponsorship, book deal and six-figure benefit cheque. A Geoffrey Boycott speaking engagement would bring in more than a professor’s annual salary.

 
 
Many could not cope with life after cricket. The hangers-on quickly melted away. Presents and souvenirs went to the pawn shops. Suicide was not uncommon
 

Of course the lucky player might expect a Benefit after 10 or 11 years as a capped player. Smith in fact had two Benefits: in 1922, he received £700; and in 1954, he had a testimonial worth £698. This, however, was a rarity. And very often much of a player’s benefit went on paying off debts. The Warwickshire player Johnnie Shilton earned £700 from his Benefit, but he was an undischarged bankrupt and most of the funds were already spoken for by various debtors. The committee was forced to have a discussion about his position, “he being in prison for debt”. Shilton died three years later, aged 37.It has been claimed that Shilton was 42 when he died but, having been unable to gain employment at Warwickshire because he was born a Yorkshireman, he used the birth certificate of his cousin John, who was born in Coventry five years before Shilton.

‘Drink, sir, why I could swim in drink. I wish they wouldn’t give me drink. I wish they would give me the money,’ said Jim Shilton, who died aged 37 © The Cricketer
 

Cricket, generally, was not a long-lived profession in those days. A further hazard was the weather, which could destroy a player’s one chance of putting by a nest egg for his old age, or perhaps of buying a small shop. A player called Syd Santall, who had taken more than 1,000 wickets for Warwickshire, had his benefit in the match against Yorkshire spoilt by rain and he received only £400, which would be worth about £8,000 today. Scant reward indeed.It was not altogether surprising, therefore, that many players ended their days in penury. This was often due to their own failings, among which an addiction to drink ranked high. The players could not afford much to spend on drink. It was their admirers who were the danger, and clubs made appeals to the public not to treat professionals to a tipple. The impecunious Shilton, who was known as Lord Warwick because he was often seen riding around in a hansom cab, said: “Drink, sir, why I could swim in drink. I wish they wouldn’t give me drink. I wish they would give me the money.” Another said he could have drowned in drink.It was not unknown for players to take to the field the worse for drink. Another Warwickshire player, Frank Foster, who was an amateur but strongly inclined against those of his status, recalled that he had hardly tumbled into bed at seven o’clock in the morning after a night’s carousing than two team mates came into his room, stripped him, put him in the bath and for an hour “pummelled and punched” him. They then ordered him a beef steak and a pint of beer for his breakfast. He recalled that he could hardly crawl to the wicket when play began. Even so, he managed to catch Wilfred Rhodes in the first over. On another occasion he remembers leaving the card table for the breakfast table.These anecdotes are not meant to malign old cricketers as a breed. On the whole they were fine, hard-working, steady types, which made it even worse that they should be treated the way they were. We have all heard Lord Hawke’s dictum “Pray God no professional player is ever allowed to captain England”. The magical gift of leadership was felt to reside only in those who had been to a decent public school.Patsy Hendren, the old Middlesex and England player, spoke about the professionals not only having separate dressing-rooms to the amateurs, but also separate gates to the playing area at Lord’s. In one match it happened that 10 amateurs were in the side together with a solitary professional, Hendren. As a concession he was invited to use the amateur’s gate, but with his quirky sense of humour he insisted on using his own gate in solitary splendour.It was much less humorous for the professors when inferior amateurs, such as public school teachers on their summer holidays, took their places, which often led to them losing badly needed match fees. Also galling was the rule at many clubs that professors were not allowed in the pavilion except at meal times or when they were specially called for.

The dashing young Willie Quaife was among Warwickshire’s highest paid players and scored 36,012 runs, but the years took their toll © The Cricketer
 

A particular indignity was the extraneous duties that the players were required to carry out. For example, the professors were expected to umpire club and ground games or to bowl to club members in the nets for a couple of hours. This latter chore was greatly resented, as evidenced by the experience of Shilton. After bowling his heart out at a corpulent member for an hour, he was rewarded with tuppence, the price of half a pint of ale. Legend has it that he threw the money at the member’s feet and shouted, “You must bloody need this more than me”.On another occasion Shilton told a member, a parson wearing a gaudy Free Foresters cap, to “get back to your pulpit where you’ll be more bloody use”. One can imagine the response of the great Fred Trueman to being asked to bowl to plump members wearing multi-coloured hats. ‘Dick’ Lilley and Sam Hargreave, who were both senior Warwickshire professionals, paid £15 apiece in order to secure their release from having to bowl at the members.For all the penury and the indignities, life for the old professors was largely enjoyable; glorious days, in retrospect anyway, of endless sun with springy turf beneath their feet, performing legendary feats in front of adoring crowds. The reality once they hung their boots up was grim. Many could not cope with life after cricket. Then the hangers-on quickly melted away. Presents and souvenirs went to the pawn shops. Suicide was not uncommon: even the great Arthur Shrewsbury, unable to face a summer in which he would not play cricket, shot himself.I once assumed that all cricketers found some congenial benefactor when they retired, someone who provided pleasant work somehow connected with cricket. Unfortunately there were many professors in the early 1900s who had to fend for themselves in the brutish world of the Edwardian underclass. With no marketable skills, many were forced to take ill-paid jobs: if they were lucky, a coaching appointment at a public school; if they were less lucky, working as an unskilled labourer.How surprised the old professors would be if they could come back and see the grounds of today: the ample accommodation, with no separate dressing-rooms, nor gates for amateurs: no amateurs full stop: free and plentiful equipment; a physiotherapist to minister to aches and pains; the indoor schools, the parking spaces for the sponsored cars. The old-timers only had their bicycles to ride.This article first appeared in The Cricketer in September 2002

Adams charged with physical assault

One-match ban for Adams © Getty Images

Andre Adams, the New Zealand allrounder, has been suspended for one domestic match after assaulting a player in a match this week.Adams was charged with physical assault after grabbing the helmet of Bevan Griggs, the Central Districts batsman, and shaking the grill which in turn cut Griggs’s lip.He was suspended by a code of conduct commissioner in Auckland and will miss their last round match of the State Championship next week.He has until tomorrow afternoon to appeal against the decision.

Shaharyar denies ICC concern over Shoaib's action

Rumours abound on renewed ICC scrutiny of Shoaib’s action © Getty Images

Shaharyar Khan, the Pakistan Cricket Board chairman, has denied that Shoaib Akhtar’s action is being closely monitored once again by the ICC, following a maelstrom of rumour and speculation over the last week that suggested the fast bowler was under scrutiny. “The ICC has told me there is nothing against Shoaib because if there was it has to come out and be reported to them,” Shaharyar told Cricinfo. “No report has been received, nothing has been done and the status quo that his action is fine remains.”Since the second Test at Faisalabad, where Shoaib put in fiercely quick spells on the third afternoon and fourth morning, there have been whispers about ICC’s concern with Shoaib’s action. Cricinfo has learnt from sources close to the team that one of the on-field umpires during the Test had privately expressed his concern over some deliveries Shoaib bowled to the Pakistan management but did not report it officially.The fires were fuelled further by Greg Chappell’s comments during the subsequent Test at Karachi, in which he is alleged to have said there was “something seriously different” about Shoaib’s action. Those remarks set off a separate furore altogether, with the PCB, at one point asking the ICC to investigate whether what Chappell had said constituted a violation of the ICC code of conduct.Shaharyar said that matter had now been laid to rest. “We were concerned about the comments made about his action. I went to the ICC and said if Chappell has actually said them they are against the code of conduct. They said if we lay a formal charge, the case will be examined. Subsequently we have not laid a charge because the statements have not been corroborated. We received a reply from the ICC saying Chappell had been informally spoken to and he said he had been quoted out of context. If he says it is out of context then we don’t lay a charge and it is over.”But with Shoaib pulling out of the ODI series due to a stress fracture in his ankle – he will miss the Sri Lanka tour – rumours have only gathered more steam. Reports in India claimed he had been pulled out for fear that he would be called again. And locally, there has been talk of communication between the ICC and the PCB, in which the former has brought to attention the deterioration in Shoaib’s action to the home board. It has been construed by some as an implicit warning of sorts that he may be called if his action isn’t rectified.A few days ago, a local newspaper questioned whether Shoaib was missing the ODI series because of his ankle injury or due to concerns he might be reported during the series. Shaharyar was adamant, however, that no such communication has been passed on from the ICC. “Nothing of the sort has happened. Malcolm Speed has not asked me not to bowl Shoaib. In fact, the ICC has said he has been reported three times and has been passed fit to play. There is nothing from the match referee or the umpires so there is nothing for us to do. His ankle is genuinely bad. He bowled when he shouldn’t have against England and he has damaged his other ankle by avoiding putting pressure on one ankle. It is a genuine injury and that is the only reason he is not playing.”

Free-to-air deal agreed to show Ashes

The Ashes: free to view after all© Getty Images

Cricket fans in Australia without satellite dishes will be able to watch the Ashes series this summer after all, thanks to a last-minute A$1.2million (approx. £500,000) deal with the SBS channel. The small multicultural broadcaster snatched the rights away from the ABC, which had been the front-runner to provide free-to-air coverage after the other main commercial channels had decided against showing the series.Now SBS are expected to broadcast all five Tests of the series, which starts on July 21 at Lord’s. Before this agreement was struck Fox Sports, the Rupert Murdoch-owned pay-TV sports channel, had the sole rights. The Australian newspaper claims the deal came after some “gentle prodding” from the Prime Minister, John Howard, and his Communications Minister Helen Coonan. The PM had a strong personal interest in the dealings, being a self-confessed “cricket tragic”.For the last few months ABC had been in secret negotiations with the ECB to try to secure the rights, but their first offer of A$500,000 (around £200,000) was rejected, as was a revised offer because ABC were not planning on broadcasting all the matches on their main free-to-air channel.It was looking increasingly unlikely that a deal would be reached for those Australians without pay TV. Earlier reports had thrown the situation into some confusion after documents apparently came to light questioning whether the free-to-air channels – ABC, Channels 7, 9 and 10, and SBS – had been given the chance to bid for rights when they were originally put on the table back in 2001.A senate committee was about to decide whether to release information into the public domain about the rights negotiations after Labor senator Stephen Conroy said there was written evidence that the free-to-air channels had not been involved with any discussions, as reported by the AAP news agency.When Australia last toured England in 2001, Channel 7 had the rights to free-to-air coverage but still didn’t show all the matches live, sometimes delaying their coverage to ensure maximum audiences. The timing of the cricket, which will be played during the Australian night, was one of the reasons given for the original lack of interest from the major channels, as they felt their investment would not be repaid with substantial audiences.But there was anger in Australia at the decision by the nation’s free-to-air broadcasters not to show the series, which is tipped to be the hardest-fought Ashes contest in 20 years. England’s rise up the rankings to No. 2 has created the hope that this series will give the Australian team – and public – the competition they crave after watching their side crush all comers in recent years.

Querying umpires out in New Zealand cricket

Players, coaches and administrators querying umpiring decisions will be slapped with a code of conduct charge under changes made to local rulings in the code by New Zealand Cricket for the season of 2003-04. As reported by Wisden CricInfo recently it is part of a crackdown after players abused a privilege extended by umpires.Martin Snedden, the chief executive of New Zealand Cricket, said the change tothe code was necessary because the questioning of umpires’ decisions hadbecome standard practice in recent seasons and this had been having anegative effect on the game. “Over the last few years a trend has come into the game at all levels inwhich captains, players and coaches demand explanations from umpires inrelation to decisions made after appeals.”This practice of demanding explanations from umpires is usedextensively by players to build pressure on umpires and to sway futuredecision making. It’s fair to say that some umpires have encouraged this practice byproviding explanations and, at times, do so without even being asked.”To some extent this development has occurred in the belief that ithelps with player-umpire relationships and communications. However, this is often not the case and these explanations havefrequently led to displays of dissent, disagreement or dissatisfaction.”We have the support of the CPA and the first-class coaches who agreethat it is a fundamental principle of the rules of cricket and theSpirit of Cricket that the umpire is the sole and final arbiter and thattheir decisions must be accepted without question. The next part of the process is for us to properly educate the umpiresand the players, which we will do through their coaches, so that theyare aware of the new expectations before the season starts,” he said.Snedden also said that the new law would be applicable at all levels ofthe game, particularly club cricket. We are aware that poor on-field treatment and by player abuse leadsdirectly to a number of umpires being lost to the game every year. We are determined that this trend will not continue at any level of thegame and we will be working with our major associations to ensure thatthe new expectations of on-field behaviour will be upheld at all levelsof the game.”

Sangram Singh piles on the runs

Helping his team surpass Services’ first-innings total, Sangram Singhmade an unbeaten 215, enabling Himachal Pradesh to declare at 463/5 onDay Three of their Ranji Trophy league match at Una.Batting with a stodgy Rajiv Nayyar, who made 90 off 289 balls, SangramSingh hit 26 fours and four sixes in his 308-ball, 405-minute knock.He was the dominant partner in stands with Varinder Sharma, AmitSharma and Chetan Kumar, none of whom even crossed 20.Services, now effectively unable to push for a win, were 25 for noloss at stumps on Monday, with openers PMS Reddy and K Chawda at thecrease.

Leeds: Report drops Victor Orta claim

Leeds United director of football Victor Orta will leave the club at the end of the season, Leeds Radar report.

The Lowdown: Kinnear to resign?

It has been a busy five days at Elland Road following the 4-0 defeat to Tottenham on Saturday lunchtime, with Andrea Radrizzani and the 49ers enterprise deciding to sack Marcelo Bielsa.

Jesse Marsch was announced as the Argentine’s successor on Monday evening, with reports on the same day suggesting that chief executive Angus Kinnear will resign over the coming months.

It seems as if he won’t be the only Whites official to depart ahead of the 2022/23 campaign, though, with a claim now made on Orta.

The Latest: Orta claim

Leeds Radar posted on Twitter regarding the Whites DoF, claiming he will also depart once the season comes to an end, adding that the 49ers want to bring in their own board of directors.

“Victor Orta will leave Leeds United at the end of this season, along with Angus Kinnear. The 49ers want to bring in their own board of directors, which will likely have a very different structure.”

The Transfer Tavern contacted Leeds Radar about their information, and were told it came directly from a club employee.

The Verdict: Plenty of change…

Radrizzani, Orta, Kinnear and Bielsa enjoyed a strong relationship for three-and-a-half years, however, all four may no longer be a part of the club by the end of the calendar year.

It seems as if Orta and Kinnear will both follow Bielsa out of Thorp Arch by the summer, whereas the San Francisco 49ers have a deal in place to buy Leeds from Radrizzani for more than £400m by January 2024.

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Should the club remain in the Premier League for the 2022/23 season under Marsch, it wouldn’t come as a shock if the 49ers exercised their option to take 100% control, meaning fans may have to be braced for plenty of off-field change.

In other news, Leeds could sign one player this summer, according to a journalist. Find out who it is here.

Jadeja bowls India U-19s to victory

Scorecard
India Under-19s continued their good form with a seven-wicket win over South Africa, to take a 1-0 lead in the two-match series.India’s win was set up by their bowlers who restricted South Africa to less than 200 in both innings. Ravindra Jadeja, the left-arm spinner, took seven in the match including 5 for 32 in South Africa’s second innings.Bowling first, India put themselves in an excellent position after dismissing the hosts for a paltry 164. Only Riley Rossouw stood in their way with 83, and just two other batsmen reached double figures. Pradeep Sangwan took 3 for 37, while Harshad Khadiwale, Garikina Prasad and Jadeja bagged a couple each.Khadiwale then led India’s reply, putting on an unbeaten century stand with Abhinav Mukund at the close of the first day’s play. South Africa’s bowlers performed little better on the second, restricting India to a lead of 95. Khadiwale, Mukund and Virat Kohli, the captain, scored fifties for India, but the rest of the batsmen failed to drive home the advantage.South Africa’s top order then wiped clean the deficit, finishing day two on 116 for 1, leading by 21. However, India fought back on the final day to dismiss the hosts for 176, with Jadeja picking up five, leaving them a mere 82 to chase.India’s batsmen needed only 15.4 overs to complete an emphatic seven-wicket win. Tanmay Srivastava was unbeaten on 34, while Roy Adams picked up two wickets in his three overs.The second and final match of the series begins in Chatsworth on January 16.

Weston's maiden ton comes in vain

The final day of the State Championship match between Northern Districts and Otago ended in a tense draw after Otago lost nine wickets while chasing a target of 266 at Seddon Park in Hamilton.ND declared their second innings at 150 and then set to bowl out Otago in the allotted 78 overs. Otago lost wickets at regular intervals as right-arm fast-medium bowler Graeme Aldridge got three wickets while medium pacers Timothy Southee and Brent Arnel got two each. Aldridge ended with eight wickets for the match, having taken 5 for 75 in the first innings. Tail-enders Bradley Scott and James McMillan played out the last two overs of the day after Otago had collapsed to 197 for 9.Timothy Weston’s maiden century was an effort in vain as Central Districts were bowled out by Auckland chasing 375 on the final day’s play at Eden Park’s Outer Oval.A century by Richard Jones, his second in the game, and a half-century by Rob Nicol allowed to Auckland declare their second innings at 284 for 5. Then their opening bowlers Chris Martin (3 for 80) and Andre Adams (3 for 47) sent back the first four CD batsmen with 10 runs on the scoreboard. Weston (152) and Bevan Griggs (69) made up for the top-order collapse with a 168-run partnership for the fifth wicket. But it was never going to be enough, especially since no other CD batsman scored more than 25. Weston, himself, was dismissed for the ninth wicket caught by Adams off Martin while Griggs was dismissed by Gareth Haynes who got with 3 for 80 with his offbreak bowling. Martin ended with eight for the match while Adams got seven.Wellington won two first-innings points after chasing down Canterbury’s mammoth 613 on the back of Stu Mills’s maiden first-class century at Christchurch.Mills (171) added 184 with Grant Elliot (101) for the sixth wicket and then 176 with Chris Nevin (98). Dewayne Bowden and Iain O’Brien chased down the 46 needed to gain the lead with eight overs to spare. Hamish Bennett, a right-arm medium fast bowler, took four wickets including Mills.

U-19 World Cup quarter-finals round-up

Points table
Australia swept to a convincing nine-wicket win over the hosts Sri Lanka, thanks to a classy allround performance from Moises Henriques. England’s bowlers, meanwhile, performed excellently to restrict Bangladesh to just 155. India’s openers blitzed their way to 284 for 9, crushing West Indies’ hopes of a semi-final place while Pakistan clinically dispatched Zimbabwe out of the tournament with a straightforward win.
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