My XI - Geoffrey Boycott: Harold Larwood - 'The sole reason England won the Bodyline series'

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  • Опубликовано: 12 фев 2012
  • Geoffrey Boycott on his eleven favourite bowlers. Part two: Harold Larwood was fast, accurate, and one to do what his captain asked. And he paid the price for it
    Watch more videos like this at www.kyte.tv/ch/cricinfo-youtub...
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Комментарии • 277

  • @jennytodd3499
    @jennytodd3499 9 лет назад +542

    I am Harold Larwood's granddaughter and yes, everything that Geoffrey says is true. I really appreciate all the comments below.

    • @sharpey2006
      @sharpey2006 8 лет назад +34

      +Jenny Todd He was a great. History judges him better than his contemporaries.

    • @genesis1765
      @genesis1765 7 лет назад +24

      best day for bradman when the MCC force ably retired Larwood from the England Team. what might have been if larwood had played on for england.

    • @cheesie6575
      @cheesie6575 7 лет назад +30

      Australians as a whole generally have quite a bit of sympathy for Larwood, and don't blame him

    • @abcsin6526
      @abcsin6526 6 лет назад +9

      Very sad to hear,harold Larwood..but the story is really fascinating to hear..can't believe this situation happened nearly 100 years back

    • @MrVikkgill
      @MrVikkgill 6 лет назад +10

      what a great legend Sir Harold Larwood was..

  • @brettskip1
    @brettskip1 6 лет назад +78

    He was a legend and one of the best fast bowlers ever. The MCC should hang their head in shame after the way they treated that great man. I’m so pleased he never, ever apologised in his life. Good on you Harold. My you rest in peace

  • @mattharcla
    @mattharcla 11 лет назад +80

    The HAPPY ending is that Larwood found, to his surprise, that Australians really like him, held no resentment and treated him as a champion.

    • @benjaminodonnell258
      @benjaminodonnell258 4 года назад +5

      Jardine was the villain of Bodyline, not Larwood.

    • @mattharcla
      @mattharcla 4 года назад +1

      @@benjaminodonnell258 Correct.

    • @andrewgrimes4311
      @andrewgrimes4311 3 года назад +4

      there was no villain Larwood was a real hero

    • @allanmckenzie5961
      @allanmckenzie5961 3 года назад

      @@andrewgrimes4311 Jardine was an arrogant pig. Win at all costs attitude. Glad he never captained again after Bodyline was banned.

    • @devisriroshankandimalla6975
      @devisriroshankandimalla6975 3 года назад +2

      @@allanmckenzie5961 Don't abuse him like that

  • @markhooren5530
    @markhooren5530 2 года назад +18

    Harold Larwood was one of the greatest fast bowlers of all time and had he been able to play more test matches he'd have had hundreds and hundreds of wickets to his name. The way the MCC treated him after that Ashes series was disgusting.

  • @ysgol3
    @ysgol3 5 лет назад +41

    Harold Larwood was one of the UK's finest sportsmen ever.
    I'm sure his family are as proud of him as they ought to be.

    • @IsrarKhan-sg3yd
      @IsrarKhan-sg3yd 4 года назад

      Y will surely be but asked from astralian who still thinking as negativity in the gentlemen game. Certainly he was great but morally and keeping ethical values, he can be termed as black hole on the Earth.

    • @markfinlay422
      @markfinlay422 3 года назад +1

      @@IsrarKhan-sg3yd I have no idea what point you are trying to make.

    • @jacktattis
      @jacktattis 3 месяца назад

      @@markfinlay422 Nor I

  • @kundankanan9074
    @kundankanan9074 4 года назад +22

    "what's changed? It is the same today, they are only interested in money" Bocott comment and punchline are so poignant in his Yorkshire accent.

  • @liarliarliar5827
    @liarliarliar5827 11 лет назад +30

    The whole history of amateurism in high level sport is about exclusion. It's the reason Rugby League exists. When working class professional Fred Perry first won Wimbledon, he heard the Wimbledon club captain in the next room saying to the beaten finalist " sorry about that old chap, wrong man won". Needless to say, the 'right' man was an amateur toff. When Fred Perry died, his family sold off his memorabilia rather than give it to Wimbledon because of the way they treated Him - quite right too!

  • @PaulLMF
    @PaulLMF 6 лет назад +41

    Read Larwood's book. More class than the rest of them put together. And the way he describes his innings of 98!

  • @jshaers96
    @jshaers96 6 лет назад +42

    Say what you like about Boycs, he does a very good job with these mini-profiles.

  • @lovemetu
    @lovemetu 10 лет назад +77

    Geoffrey Boycott, great batsman and disliked to this day by the ruling classes of cricket, his sin ......he is blunt and speaks the truth, something a lot of people in this age of ''back slappers'' dont like !! Of course yet again Geoff speaks the truth, yes a disgrace the way that Harold Larwood was treated and its also a disgrace that Boycott is not involved in helping to run English Cricket, especially in the coaching of batting for the England side, similar to the way that another great Yorkshire player, Fred Trueman was frozen out by the establishment .

    • @lovemetu
      @lovemetu 8 лет назад +2

      18tangles It is often said that Shane Warne would have made for a great Captain of Australia but was never given a chance at it, did a great job here as Captain of Hampshire County cricket team.

    • @lovemetu
      @lovemetu 8 лет назад +1

      +18tangles Well of course we all know those reasons but he had a fine cricket brain and would have done a good job.

    • @lovemetu
      @lovemetu 8 лет назад +3

      18tangles Although Shane always used to take us ( England ) apart, loved watching him bowl !! If you are a true sportsman you should applaud great players, regardless of if they play for your country. I deplore the attitude of the Indian and Pakistani fans who follow their teams in UK. They are mostly born in UK but so biased towards their own teams, refuse to give any praise or applause to England players when they get a Century or similar etc but of course we give applause when their team achieves. When we play the Aussies, New Zealand, west Indies etc, so much better atmosphere between the fans.

    • @lovemetu
      @lovemetu 8 лет назад

      18tangles We were not asked about letting a lot of unsuitable people into the country and if you say anything you are classed as ''Racist'' by the ruling classes !! Angela Merkel has done a similar thing in Germany. Some immigrants do well, work hard, cause no problems at all, are an asset to UK and integrate into UK very well, mostly Asians from China, Philippines, Vietnam etc but Muslims will NEVER integrate with anyone outside of their own religion.

    • @lovemetu
      @lovemetu 8 лет назад

      18tangles Much interbreeding in the Pakistani community in Uk. Young girls as young as 13 or 14 flown out to Pakistan to marry their own relatives, eg most forced marriages to first cousins. If the girls try to marry or go out with who they want in UK, then honour killings, beatings etc is a regular occurrence. Muslims will NOT marry outside their faith and anyone marrying a Muslim must convert to the religion if they belong to another faith. Many children from Muslims families in homes , disabled etc but all hushed up by the government.

  • @utha2665
    @utha2665 6 лет назад +26

    It is sad for Harold Larwood he should never have been ostracized the way he was. Jardine and the MCC should have been the ones apologising.

  • @LyleStacpoole
    @LyleStacpoole 6 лет назад +50

    Larwood was working class and Jardine was upper class - what more can be said - the foot soldiers pay the price and sadly he was not the only one - i hope he enjoyed the sunshine out here, he deserved it!!

    • @martinwarner1178
      @martinwarner1178 Год назад

      That's why, when I hear that 'stuck up snob' accent, I'm warned that I am about to be done over. Peace be to you.

  • @tryarunm
    @tryarunm 9 лет назад +37

    What a celebration of the spirit of cricket and of professional sport that Fingleton hand-held Larwood and family into Australia, so that Larwood could live out his days in peace and gain unexpected admiration and love from a cricket-playing nation. The gentlemen weren't always amateurs; there were Fingletons too.

    • @jacktattis
      @jacktattis 3 месяца назад

      Bradman and the Aussies were just as bad. Take it like men and play better next time.

    • @tryarunm
      @tryarunm 3 месяца назад

      @@jacktattis Leg theory and short-pitched bowling aimed at the batsman were certainly deployed by Australia and England well before 1932 but usually as separate tactics. Their use in concert as a strategy in Australia was new and evil. It definitely was within the rules of the game but violated the spirit and purpose of the game as it made protection of the body - rather than the scoring of runs - by the batsmen of primary importance. Had it come from Australia it might have been labelled 'convict bowling' or something equally derogatory and insulting, but from the holier-than-thou Gentlemen of England it was hypocritical and unsporting. Jardine himself seems to have been fully aware of this for in his book on the Bodyline tour, 'In Quest of the Ashes', he avoids making any mention of his tactics. Instead, he blames the frequent displays of spectator anger, as well as media criticism, on the Aussie fans' frustration at the ineptitude of the Oz batsmen.
      The English players, to their credit, were uncomplaining about the later bumper attacks of Lindwall, Miller, Pascoe, Lillee, Thompson, the West Indies.

  • @hartforp
    @hartforp 11 лет назад +15

    He was a true great ,who in the modern era would be a superstar in all forms of cricket. I met him at our Street party in 1977 in Nottingham,when he came to the Centenary test at Trent Bridge from Australia. He was small slight man and very quiet.He would not say anything about himself but did say Dennis Lillee was the best bowler of those times.Why was he at our Street party? Because it was named after him,Larwood Grove,and I am very proud I met him.

  • @HHM706
    @HHM706 3 года назад +11

    Harold Larwood absolute legend of cricket.

  • @joshuahenry9135
    @joshuahenry9135 5 лет назад +15

    Thanks Geoffrey. I never I knew that Larwood was treated so badly and that the bodyline series was his last. Sad indeed.. Boycott, never favored you as a batsman (as a WI supporter u were d enemy)but now I love your insightful and objective commentary. You are the best.

  • @andywilley3041
    @andywilley3041 4 года назад +8

    I've read a lot about Harold larwood and he was my hero.... Not a tall man but same as me but he was quick... I'm not going to harp on except tell you this..... I made a trip especially to see his statue and I'm not a shed to say that having read his autobiography I t brought tears to my eyes... Forever my hero. Harold a true, honest hard working bloke and yes you took the flak for doing as you was asked in Australia...

  • @lesmarston7709
    @lesmarston7709 4 года назад +14

    A fantastic fast bowler,possibly the fastest bowler ever for his height. If you want to know more about Harold, read the book by Duncan Hamilton, a great read.

    • @stephenarnold3015
      @stephenarnold3015 Год назад +1

      Yeah, I thought Boycott's "he could bowl quite quick" was a bit off. Larwood was lightning fast.

  • @robertbryant6859
    @robertbryant6859 5 лет назад +10

    Harold Larwood was also an accomplished batsman, scoring 70 in the first Test of the 1928/29 series and 98 in the last Test of the 1932/33 series. Later in the 1930s he was playing for the county solely for his batting ability. Allen and Warner were very unpleasant and selfish men.

  • @lapalad
    @lapalad 5 лет назад +5

    A third grade cricket game being played at Kensington Oval Sydney home of the UNSW team. A young player is being belted around the place and watching the game was an elderly gentleman who was a regular at the games. The old man comes down to the fence and says to the young bowler sonny take my advice shorten your run up, try pitching the ball in more and turn side on a bit more, yeah yeah whatever old man was the bowlers reply. Later after the days play the young bowler mentioned the old pommy bloke trying to tell me how to bowl, his team manager replied Well maybe you should take his advice Do you know who that old poms is?? Harold Larwood!!!!

  • @ezeztztztz
    @ezeztztztz 4 года назад +8

    The best short explanation of body line I've ever heard

  • @smarajitpunaykanti6463
    @smarajitpunaykanti6463 3 года назад +4

    Larwood is still remembered as much as Bradman

  • @jonnyhardy2470
    @jonnyhardy2470 9 лет назад +33

    a great legend they were very unfair to him.

  • @brianhaskard1042
    @brianhaskard1042 2 года назад +3

    Met Lol a few times, he was quiet, unassuming & modest, his pal Bill Voce was the outspoken one. How such a small man like him could bowl at 90MPH+ I will never know. Coming from 'Nuncar' myself, he will always be my hero.

  • @russelmurphy4868
    @russelmurphy4868 6 лет назад +5

    It is a great pity we didn't have the Cricket Academy going when Larwood emigrated... Imagine what Australian quicks would be like if we had Larwood teaching them how to bowl! And yes, we would have employed him as a bowling coach.

  • @paulej2871
    @paulej2871 10 лет назад +27

    If Larwood was playing today he would, without doubt be regarded as the best fast bowler in the world........Imagine a bowler as fast as Brett Lee, but much more accurate.........He had a better bouncer than Thompson, was more accurate than McGrath, could swing it both ways and move it both ways off the pitch...... My now dead uncle saw Larwood bowl for Nottinghamshire when they played Glamorgan in Wales. My uncle was only 10 at the time but it made a lasting impression on him. Lance formed a friendship with Harold nearly 5 decades later. He would go around to Larwoods house in Sydney 2x a year and spend the afternoon drinking tea and talking together...He told me that Harold was a thorough gentleman!

    • @siddave100
      @siddave100 10 лет назад +5

      Larwood paid the price for being a captains man! That man was a captains dream! Sadly for him, he was lead by that shmuck Jardine!

    • @paulej2871
      @paulej2871 10 лет назад +5

      The biggest problem was he was a professional when upper class snotty nosed immoral amateurs ran the game...he was asked to apologize for bodyline even though he was following Jardine's and the MCC orders. He refused and never played test cricket again...FUCKING disgraceful!!.....His bowling average if he was bowling in the 1990's-2000's would have been much less than the 28 he had.....I believe he would have beaten McGrath's Av of 21.6

    • @paulej2871
      @paulej2871 10 лет назад +2

      Mind you bodyline was really no different to today's bowling, except for the rule of just 2 behind square on the legside

    • @siddave100
      @siddave100 10 лет назад +3

      I agree, Nawab of Pataudi and Allen could afford to refuse to follow body line.. Pataudi was an Indian royale... Larwood made his living through this sport! If you want to see Larwoods calibre, you check his First class record, he averages a 17!! Thats fucking awesome, almost as good ad Sydney Barnes! Also, whats striking about Larwood is that he was an unconventional fast bowler! He was just 5'8 and was a slap in the faces of those who believe fast bowling is for the taller guys

    • @siddave100
      @siddave100 10 лет назад +2

      Also, I'm so proud of him for not apologizing! That man had self respect! Plus, there were no bowling tracks in those days! He didnot ever play on the bouncy MCG, WACA or Gabba! Watch the bodyline TV show MCG is flatter than Eden Gardens, It wouldnt be wrong to say that it was Eden Gardens where the ball did not turn!

  • @StuartMB68
    @StuartMB68 12 лет назад +12

    Well said Mr. Boycott!

  • @katdes7305
    @katdes7305 Год назад +1

    Genuinely interesting I read Harold Larwood book a few years ago it was an exciting time in cricket

  • @llwyde1104
    @llwyde1104 2 года назад +4

    Great bowler and family man...working class hero.

  • @sacredclown4179
    @sacredclown4179 Год назад +1

    I never liked Boycott, " a one-man show" but listening to him speak of Larwood, and seeing his papable reaction to the way he was treated, blew me away, behind that hubris, is a man that actually cares.

  • @anthonymoore1705
    @anthonymoore1705 5 лет назад +3

    quite quick, what an understatement.

  • @Billie0708
    @Billie0708 3 года назад +2

    The Greatest #XI of All Time
    1 Jack Hobbs
    2 Barry Richards
    3 Don Bradman (C.)
    4 Sachin Tendulkar
    5 Viv Richards
    6 Gary Sobers
    7 Adam Gilchrist (W.)
    8 Shane Warne
    9 Wasim Akram
    10 Dennis Lillee
    11 Sydney Barnes
    12th: Malcolm Marshall.
    Substitutes:
    ( W.G Grace , Brian Lara , Imran Khan , Muttiah Muralitharan , Fred Trueman )

  • @robertlisternicholls
    @robertlisternicholls Год назад +2

    Disgraceful how the cricket establishment treated Harold. The public schoolboys certainly look after their own.

  • @andysmith4976
    @andysmith4976 11 лет назад +8

    there is atleast one thing boycott and chapelli would agree upon. That is that administrators are and in most cases been only interestedin money

  • @ashashroff6351
    @ashashroff6351 5 лет назад +1

    Well said Sir G B from the White Rose County.
    Thank you from all of us from the Red Rose County.
    We pretend, we hate each other.
    But true to heart, we love each other.

  • @roadrunner1337
    @roadrunner1337 7 лет назад +4

    A disgusting saga. Larwood sent to Coventry over cash. The establishment never change. They could have just changed to 2 behind square and pick him and let him take his chances.

  • @sharatsharma8273
    @sharatsharma8273 4 года назад +3

    Amazing.a player being used & then made the scapegoat.why should he apologise.
    Things put in perspective by the great Boycott.always a pleasure to listen when he speaks.no roobish there.

  • @andrewhudson8966
    @andrewhudson8966 3 года назад

    The Adelaide test,one of two tests which I could go back in time to watch,the other the 1902 test at the Oval

  • @thornwivans
    @thornwivans 2 года назад

    Great to hear this history and put it all into context.

  • @apdodger
    @apdodger 12 лет назад +2

    Amazing story from the past, thanks for the upload!

    • @saieedbakthmozumder5443
      @saieedbakthmozumder5443 7 лет назад

      I have immense respect and regards for Mr.Boycot...he speaks the truth never minces his words and has the courage to speak the truth
      for any cricketer or team
      my profound appreciation and regards

  • @jacktattis
    @jacktattis 3 месяца назад +1

    Harold used to go to the South Sydney Leagues club and did my parents They saw him a few times.

  • @charlescovell8054
    @charlescovell8054 2 месяца назад

    My all-time greats England XI is as follows:
    Hobbs
    Cook
    Hammond
    Root
    Compton
    Botham
    Knott
    Larwood
    Underwood
    Anderson
    Barnes
    I would note that the first three picks I went for were Hobbs, Larwood and Barnes. That underlines the greatness of the Wrecker!

  • @Tcb0835
    @Tcb0835 Год назад

    When I was a young quick bowler Harold Larwood was one of my greatest heros. Very fast with a beautiful run up and action. His treatment at the hands of the English cricket establishment was cruel and shameful. He was a hero in that series and should always be regarded as such.

  • @lydialarwood8149
    @lydialarwood8149 5 лет назад +3

    Hi. I'm browsing my great great uncleYes.we have the same surname ( Larwood) That's my favourite thing about my name (:

  • @rmstew
    @rmstew 6 лет назад +3

    The thing that induces the most puke is that Harold Larwood was ordered to apologise to the MCC (not to the Australians).

  • @Bernie8330
    @Bernie8330 3 года назад +1

    Brilliant as Larwood was in that series, England would not have won the Ashes without Eddie Peynter's super courageous innings in the 4th test in Brisbane, so Geoffrey is wrong about Larwood being the sole reason England won the Ashes. Plus, it needed England's batsmen to stand up in the first test after Stan McCabe's immortal innings, and Sutcliffe, Hammond and the Nawab of Pataudi all did (stand up). No England team has ever won in Australia without outstanding batting, and 1932-33 was no exception.

  • @MadderMel
    @MadderMel 3 года назад

    Shocking the treatment of some of our sporting heroes , he was right not to apologize ! Though it obviously got him into trouble with the cricket authorities , good on the Australian batsman who helped him emigrate !
    A great shame that they turned their back on him .

  • @williamsatish25
    @williamsatish25 2 года назад +1

    After the Bodyline serires, Douglas Jardine did follow the same bodyline techniques against the Indians.

  • @sarthakbhalerao1045
    @sarthakbhalerao1045 Год назад +5

    English treated him like dirt, while the Aussies gave him respect when he settled in Australia. England should be ashamed of the way they treated this gem!

  • @kgbmcse
    @kgbmcse 11 лет назад

    Totally agree,with your comments

  • @Cordwangle2
    @Cordwangle2 11 лет назад +7

    British class hypocracy at its worst.

  • @user-mr1js7ws4n
    @user-mr1js7ws4n 4 месяца назад +1

    Larwood’s treatment remains a scandal.

  • @DeejayDREAM
    @DeejayDREAM 11 лет назад

    Spot on, great comment.

  • @robbdavies7749
    @robbdavies7749 13 дней назад

    33 wkts @ 19 a piece! Remarkable

  • @fruitopia6798
    @fruitopia6798 Месяц назад

    Larwood was shunned not because of Bodyline but because he wrote a scathing newspaper article calling the Australian players weak and cowardly and 3rd rate, and the crowds biased and hostile. Some of it may have been true but it was too controversial and unsportsmanlike in that era, it sent a message of bitterness and bullying the MCC desperately wanted to avoid, they had no choice but to shun him. Imagine if somebody in the current era did that with social media. the players had very specific rules against speaking to the press but Larwood crossed over the line and kept going, if he had just apologised he may have been able to play a few more years but his Test career was over by age 28

  • @Ingens_Scherz
    @Ingens_Scherz 2 года назад

    Sir Geoffrey at his very best. A cricket legend, of course, but first and foremost a proper cricket lover.
    Excellent.

  • @kartikmessner2868
    @kartikmessner2868 4 года назад +1

    The British really have a way of rewarding their real heroes..Robert Clive.. larwood..Alan Turing...🤔

  • @roopalivelayudhan7911
    @roopalivelayudhan7911 Год назад

    There was picture made or serial called Bodyline, it portrayed him negatively.

  • @grantwalker147
    @grantwalker147 2 года назад

    The greatest quick this country has ever produced 👏

  • @terrya8989
    @terrya8989 10 месяцев назад +1

    Horrible Bradman, even when Larwood moved to Australia, always held a grudge against him while other Australian cricketers held him in high regard for decades after.

  • @brajeshsingh2391
    @brajeshsingh2391 Год назад

    There is also a mini series called Bodyline produced by BBC. Shows how Harold Larwood a coal miner became a world famous Test Bowler.

  • @ianhawdon3680
    @ianhawdon3680 2 года назад

    Great words on larwood

  • @thavith
    @thavith 11 лет назад +2

    Really? Stralians aren't sportsmen? Pot, meat Kettle... (I know we can be un-sportsman like at times, but this is true of a minority in all countries).
    Actually, Australia applauded Larwood when he batted during the 5th test in Sydney, I remember reading a comment by Larwood that he couldn't believe it. England on the other hand treaded Larwood how? He moved out here to Australia later in his life...
    Great bowler, not the best, but the best England had at that time as far as I am aware.

  • @AshokSridharan
    @AshokSridharan 3 года назад

    The way the MCC hounded him was beyond shameful. A bunch of spineless people bullying a champion, but one who was weak and powerless in a feudal society. They didn’t deserve a champion like him

  • @murali2787
    @murali2787 2 года назад +1

    Its a shame that.a quality fast bowler like Douglas jardine has to end his career due to board politics
    I dont think he made any mistake . It was part of the game plan .So he ever need to apologize any one, even in heaven .

  • @MartinJG100
    @MartinJG100 2 года назад

    Wonderful fast bowler with a silky smooth action. So glad he stood firm and refused to do the 'forelock tugging' routine and allow the G&T club 'hypocrites' to wriggle off the hook and save face.

  • @MonteCarloGaz
    @MonteCarloGaz 7 лет назад +10

    Shocking treatment of Larwood. Bradman wouldn't have the average he ended up with if he was about in later years, just look at Thompson, Lillee and the West Indies battery of quicks. Just bowling length balls at off stump was fodder for Bradman, not sure he would average what he does with these guys sending him rip snorters down all day long, as was proved in the 'Bodyline' series.

    • @akshaya81
      @akshaya81 5 лет назад +4

      West Indies quicks 1960-1980 were also using Indimidatory tactics...don't know why uproar about larwood.....

    • @kundankanan9074
      @kundankanan9074 4 года назад +1

      @@akshaya81 because it was against Australia's fav Bradman.

    • @balajibalajii8093
      @balajibalajii8093 3 года назад

      Average of Bradman in bodyline series 56.67 which is not even average of current players which shows the standards of bradman.

    • @cricketsbiggestfan9071
      @cricketsbiggestfan9071 3 года назад

      @@balajibalajii8093 bradman averaged 56.57 because of having 7-8 fielders in leg side not just because of bouncer.in a real match with fear rule in 1930 bradman conquered larwood with an avg of 140 and 3 double century a record and 974 runs another record. He would have averaged 85-90 easily now and may be 110..

    • @balajibalajii8093
      @balajibalajii8093 3 года назад +1

      @@cricketsbiggestfan9071 Bro I too supporting bradman I know very well about bodyline and packed leg side field. Now a days only two fielders in square leg so bradman would have dominated very well like you said.

  • @vegasrebel781
    @vegasrebel781 6 лет назад +1

    Respect where respects due. Hats off to Mr. Boycott.

  • @collo5034
    @collo5034 2 года назад

    Seriously quick and accurate.
    England's best quick bowler, treated terribly by the establishment, no wonder he emigrated.

  • @kaustuvhalder1602
    @kaustuvhalder1602 6 лет назад +1

    Sad story..

  • @arka21thesun
    @arka21thesun 3 года назад

    I don't know why in subcontinent he considered as villain. Bowler can bowl as he wish ( he is not delivering beamer), just because he didn't allow to play Bradman in his comfort zone he was considered as villain. Larwood is the greatest in my eye

  • @hyena131
    @hyena131 6 лет назад +2

    Wonder why Geoffrey pokes his tongue out every 10 seconds.

  • @SSR175
    @SSR175 3 года назад

    It was a brilliant tactical decision by Doughlas Jardine. If they hadn't stopped Bradman, they wouldn't have had a chance. Larwood was a victim of politics. The man deserved much better.

  • @Spiritkill1
    @Spiritkill1 Год назад

    Harold Larwood took 33 wickets in Bodyline series.

  • @colddiesel
    @colddiesel 3 года назад

    Ian Chappell, the only Australian captain not to have been invited to be a member of the snobs club, the MCC supports Boycott completely. He accused the 32/33 Australian team of being whiners and whingers, Bradman in particular. Luckily for Bradman he only faced one genuinely fast bowler in a 20 year career - Larwood.
    There have been no Australian complaints about Lindwall and Miller, Thomson and Lillee, or more recently Lee, Johnson, Starc or Cummins!

  • @roopalivelayudhan7911
    @roopalivelayudhan7911 Год назад

    Harold Larwood just followed his captain's orders. Surely he could have done a lot more.

  • @davidmalpass7129
    @davidmalpass7129 Год назад

    Kept Bradman to average of 50, an amazing statement from one of the worlds greatest ever batsmen .......... Never see the like of Bradman again n I am English.

  • @Bernie8330
    @Bernie8330 7 лет назад +2

    Larwood took 78 wickets in 21 tests from 1926 in ashes in England until early 1933 end of bodyline series. 33 of those wickets were in 5 bodyline tests. He took 8 wickets in his first test in Australia 4 years earlier in Brisbane.
    That leaves 37 wickets in his other 15 tests against all opposition, albeit mostly Australia. He was either ineffective or injured in rest of maiden ashes tour down under in that aforementioned 1928-29 series, and Bradman tore him apart in 193O in England.
    Whether he would go down as one of the all time great fast bowlers over a whole career was never fully tested just as it wasn't fully tested with South African Barry Richards who only played four tests.
    One thing is for sure: Video evidence suggests that Jeff Thomson is still consistently the fastest recorded bowler of all time and he was recorded on a day he was a little off colour in Perth in late1975 against West Indies when - a rarity in that season and the previous ashes summer - Roy Fredricks and Clive Lloyd smashed him all over the place. That was 42 years ago, so there is no reason to think that no one could have bowled genuinely fast 42 years before that, which takes us back approximately to Bodyline.
    For Jardine's purpose Larwood was able to bowl fast, and accurately into the body and head regions when helmets were still some 35 years away and that would have been terrifying. How well he would have fared over a career when helmets were normal and obviously bodyline banned is a matter that only God will ever know.
    He was certainly great in that series for what his captain needed and it won England the ashes, the only time during Bradman's 2O year career, save the Don's debut series as a 2O year old.
    He would have been 3O when Australia toured England in 1934 had he been allowed to play and not allowed to bowl Bodyline but that is superfluous as he was only ever doing what his captain, Jardine, ordered him in the first place. Gubby Allen had the luxury of refusing to bowl bodyline as he was an amateur and his living did not depend on the game, unlike Larwood and Voce. Gubby Allen captained England on following Ashes tour down under in 1936-37. It was a different era for all cricket, especially English cricket.

    • @danialshah2957
      @danialshah2957 6 лет назад +1

      Even Wasim Akram took only 76 wickets in his first 25 test matches. Imagine if akram had no oppurtunity to play any tests after that for some reasons. No one would have witnessed his brilliance. Pakistanis and Indians would not have worshipped him so much.
      Larwood has very good first class stats and I am sure he would have gotten more wickets in tests and have 4 or more wickets per match if he was given the oppurtunity. Some comments on this video talk about larwoods accuracy, how he could hit the same crack on the pitch in every ball of the over.

  • @rajatshubhrosengupta284
    @rajatshubhrosengupta284 Год назад

    What happened to Larwood after the 1932 - 33 series, is a reflection of the hypocrisy of the MCC ,
    which used him to implement the vicious plan and then advised him to apologise for the same deed.
    Note that the Captain ie Jardine was spared this humiliation.
    There are details that make me conclude that the MCC was the real culprit ; for time and space constraints, I have not mentioned those here.

  • @richardgordon2855
    @richardgordon2855 2 года назад

    my HERO HAROLD LARWOOD, the best of best, comes to something when aussies treated him better like one of their own.

  • @beastboy8459
    @beastboy8459 5 лет назад

    Greatest bowler for me

  • @thavith
    @thavith 11 лет назад

    I know about Gallipoli, I know we were part of a much bigger operation. I know we played a small part in it. You have to remember however, that it was the first time Australia as a nation went to war, so at least give us that. Some people over embellish our part, I know. The UK has a much longer tradition of war than us, but that's OK, we are still young.
    There really are sportsman here, don't believe everything you see on the TV.
    We love the rivalry during the Ashes, I loved 2005 too...

    • @EJP286CRSKW
      @EJP286CRSKW 5 лет назад

      Dave Kay Australia had already fought in the 2nd Boer War ...

  • @ashashroff6351
    @ashashroff6351 6 лет назад

    I still play, refuse to wear helmet. Always believe in Leg theory. It is a two way street.
    GB of the White Rose County, loves from the Red Rose 🌹 County.
    Absolutely true.
    Has truth got a place.
    I still play, tell my lads to ball quick, swing, intimidate and play hard as you can.
    Why all nations can do and us English are frowned upon.
    Perhaps when we put our heads together we had, we can, we have and we shall rule the world.
    The Empire where the Sun refuses to set.

  • @paulchristopher3887
    @paulchristopher3887 5 лет назад +2

    Larwood was right, he did nothing wrong

  • @adwaitchaphekar3325
    @adwaitchaphekar3325 8 лет назад

    body line was all about destroying the confidence of the batsman and create a fear of getting hit

  • @iallso1
    @iallso1 3 года назад

    Nothings changed, if you are from money and attended a private school you can do pretty much what you want with no consequences, if you are working class you can expect to take the blame for everything.

  • @wespaul9345
    @wespaul9345 Год назад

    Boy! Bodyline. As a kid knocking it about in the 70s, that series seemed other worldly. Akin to JFK assassination. You had to be careful what you said about it. Time hasn't changed it's status. Personally I think a bowler should aim at the stumps but I have no problem with the test of courage. Intimadory bowling! Shows how difficult the umpires job can be

  • @citroen-fe3qq
    @citroen-fe3qq 2 месяца назад

    As you say what they did to Harold Larwood was disgusting. Apologise for what - Lille and Thomson never apologised.

  • @sharpey2006
    @sharpey2006 8 лет назад

    Interesting that Boycs wanted to become an administrator at Yorkshire recently, His reasoning was that YCCC was in debt and needed to get onto a more even keel, financially.
    So, he was becoming an administrator more interested in money.Hmmmmmmmmmmmm

    • @pix046
      @pix046 8 лет назад

      Nah, geoffrey is about as interested in enriching himself as Mother Theresa (PM) is.

  • @cl5ltd
    @cl5ltd Год назад +1

    The game was still largely amateur sport in that era and the tactics introduced by England changed the sport. They might have won the series but lost respect and damaged the spirit of the game. Effective & ruthless but just not cricket.

  • @briananderson8330
    @briananderson8330 Год назад

    Shit on by the M.C.C. for following his captains orders. One of the greatest bowlers ever, Should be posthumously awarded an honour by the new King. Get stuck into it Sir Geoffrey.

  • @stephenreeds3672
    @stephenreeds3672 9 лет назад +23

    Had no idea that Larwood was ordered to apologise. That is sickening. And the great Jardine didn't back him up... what a wonderful example of gentlemanly behaviour. What scum they were! Larwood was a great bowler and the whole Bodyline thing was ridiculous. Aus didn't complain until after 3rd Test. They never apologise for anything that happens on a cricket pitch if it's done by them. Apologise for Thommo and his homicidal tendencies? Of course not, they were winning. The only International team to finish a match bowling under arm to make sure they won.

    • @jacobrance1759
      @jacobrance1759 9 лет назад +2

      Stephen Reeds i have a feeling that if a team was bowling around the wicket at 145+kmhs an hour, on uncovered pitches, with seven fielders on the legside you'd complain too champion

    • @SohamBhattacharya3105
      @SohamBhattacharya3105 6 лет назад +1

      All that is fine but when the West Indians under Sir Clive started bowling bodyline on their English tour, why did the English start complaining then? Doesn't make sense.

    • @utha2665
      @utha2665 6 лет назад +4

      All of the cases you mention here weren't against the laws of cricket at the time, but each of them brought about changes to the laws. And each was considered, in their day, unsportsmanlike. However, for Jardine to applaud his bowler after Larwood cracked Bert Oldfield in the head saying well bowled, that's just disgusting sportsmanship.

  • @thebatt6183
    @thebatt6183 2 года назад

    That was harsh

  • @deepakavinash
    @deepakavinash 4 года назад

    Very sad...

  • @capio78
    @capio78 5 лет назад

    Disgusting treatment. Today’s sportsmen should watch this to know how lucky they are mcc sjouod apologise

  • @TheVanguard333
    @TheVanguard333 2 года назад

    Only good bowling bodyline, Bradman.smashed over 200 against him before hand when Larwood was playing orthodox cricket

  • @aussiesmoko
    @aussiesmoko Год назад

    Woodfull was felled by a blow to the heart, almost provoking a riot. After Woodfull was dismissed, English manager Plum Warner came to privately express his sympathy, to which Woodfull famously replied "I do not want to see you, Mr Warner. There are two teams out there. One is playing cricket and the other is not."[2][3][4][5] England completed a convincing 4-1 victory, but Woodfull was much praised for his stoic public behaviour.
    I remember back in the seventies and early eighties glued to the TV watching the ashes here in Australia over summer. I remember Geoff boycott and Ian bothham, batting sometimes , more like alot of times, it was slow because poor Geoff just used to block all the time , him and boycott were the same very hard to get out . The days when Lillie, pascoe , Thompson , Lawson was bowling , pace. Then there was bob Willis bowling pace fore the poms. Underwood , Gower, knott illinworth , 8 ball overs too. Oh then there was the rest day half way though the match
    Now cricket is ruined with this stupid tip and run pajama party garbage.
    I'd prefer to watch two 5 match test cricket series than these tip and run .
    Just wondering , Mr boycott, if you are kind enough to reply who would you think would have been as good as bowler over the last fifty years with accuracy and pace as larwood . Geoff Thompson, or Thomo would come horribly close , perhaps Marshall or b8g bird garner
    Thank you Mr boycott for your time if you find time to reply

  • @pranjalsinha1427
    @pranjalsinha1427 6 лет назад +3

    If you need a good fast bowler, go to a coal mine

  • @antonyhobbs1144
    @antonyhobbs1144 3 года назад

    Sir Geoffrey Lord Boycott of Fitzwilliam

  • @sarelras4103
    @sarelras4103 2 года назад

    I have always liked Boycott his truth telling I like. Never popular with the establishment