Thread:
At the precise moment when Monty Noble was being born in Sydney’s Haymarket, #onthisday 1873, a military band passed by playing loud music as if to herald his arrival in the world. Mother Maria immediately declared that her eighth and last child would be famous.
#cricket
He was called ‘Mary Anne’ by the Sydney crowd because of his initials. His teammates called him ‘Boots’ because of the massive footwear in which he took the field.
History, however, cannot afford a flippant nickname for Montague Alfred Noble the cricketer.
A top-order batsman of pedigree, Noble could swing the ball prodigiously. With a grip borrowed from visiting American baseball players, he pinched the seam between his thumb & forefinger. The result was a medium-paced out-swinger carrying the threat of cutting back off the seam.
In 42 Tests, he scored 1,997 runs at 30.25 mostly from the top of the order, often as opening batsman … in those days on either side of the turn of the last century when wickets were dicey and uncertain. He also scalped 121 wickets at 25 apiece.
As a batsman he was versatile, his approach based on situational demand, with the ability to vary his methods. He could defend for hours and could also use his height and reach to drive, pull and cut.
One of the masters of spin-swerve, Noble was prone to use break-backs to get his wickets on helpful pitches.
He was also brilliant at point and had a superb throwing arm. Once when the team was passing through Suez Canal, he beaned an Arab on the shore with a perfectly thrown apple after the man had made objectionable gestures.
As a child, Noble showed less inclination for cricket and more towards the church. He rang the bell at St Mark’s in Darling Point & excelled at singing solos in the choir. Later, when in England, he often visited churches.
His chosen profession in the end was that of a dentist.
During the final phase of his career, Noble became one of the most innovative and astute captains. A superb strategist, he was a model skipper whose personal qualities were for long considered to be the template for the ideal Australian captain.
Apart from the tactic of keeping his bowlers fresh with short spells, he also introduced the trick of keeping the cover open to lure the batsmen into snicking drives to the slip and gully.
In his seminal The Game’s the Thing Noble wrote, “The great leader is the embodiment of all the hopes, virtue, courage and ability possessed by the ten men under his command. If he is not, he is but the shadow and lacks the substance of captaincy. He will not last.”
Noble’s innovations went beyond the field of play. He used to put sugar cubes in his whiskey to prevent hangover. Some of his playing shirts had air holes in the arms.
He also contributed to cricket as a dentist.
One of his patients was Bill Ferguson who was soon engaged as baggage man and scorer. Fergie served Australia for almost half a century in that capacity and never lost a bag.
Ferguson’s sister was another of his patients, and later became his wife and the mother of his four children.
During the Second World War, Noble, at the age of 67, served as a volunteer dentist for the Australian Army in Liverpool, on Sydney’s outskirts. It was in this capacity that he suffered a heart attack while taking part in a social game of cricket and died a few days later.
In The Water Diviner, Russell Crowe used a cricket bat specifically of the same brand as used by Noble 10 years before the Gallipoli debacle.

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29 Jan
Thread:
Andy Roberts, born #onthisday 1951.
He used to walk back to his mark, the eyes cold and calculating, the face expressionless and half hidden behind the beard, the shoulders hunched and alert, the mien brooding and ruthless. Image
Then he would turn and rush in, building up speed along the way, exploding as he reached the crease. His arm would come over, at right angles to his torso, but would reach a height as his shoulder dipped. He would glide along his right toecap, hit the crease with his full weight. Image
The leather streaked out of his hand in a blur of red, zooming towards the batsman at a rate rarely matched. The natural movement from off to leg, but sometimes away swing would flummox the best. Often the ball would lift sharply putting the batsmen in immense physical peril. Image
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27 Jan
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Daniel Vettori (born #onthisday 1979) came in as a 18-year-old with scholarly looks ... and made his way to becoming a senior statesman of #Cricket Image
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By the time he called it a day, half his life had been spent on the cricket ground. Image
There were changes on the way.
The long locks fell away early, the boyish angularity of the cheeks was filled up with the heaviness of experience; the glasses too changed from the light metal frames to rather forbidding, wide spectacles. Image
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26 Jan
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In a team full of hardened men, who played the game with scary ruthlessness and earned the tag The Ugly Australians with deserving valour and pride, Kim Hughes (born 26 Jan 1954) arrived as a breath of fresh air. #cricket #onthisday #kimhughes Image
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And he even went where no Australian captain had ever gone before, walking into the dressing room of the opponents and apologising after his pace bowler had unleashed a beamer. Image
Read 15 tweets
6 Jan
Thread:
Happy Birthday @therealkapildev
Kapil Dev was always present, in every cricket-crazy consciousness of India of my boyhood

#onthisday #cricket
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5 Jan
Thread:
5 Jan 1971. Garth McKenzie bowled to Geoff Boycott.
The general feeling among the players was it was a part of a joke.
However became part of epoch-making history.
The first ever ODI had kicked off.. .

#cricket #onthisday
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With the Melbourne authorities facing losses of up to £80,000, both boards agreed to arrange an extra Test - the seventh!! The England cricketers were not as delighted as in this pic. They demaded more money. Good old days of Test cricket.
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5 Jan
Thread:
MAK Pataudi born 5 Jan 1941
Here is the main painting by @Mahasatish1 from the #Pataudi exhibit in @SussexCCC permanent Asian Connection display.
#cricket #onthisday

Details of the exhibition (concept and research yours truly, artwork Maha)

cricmash.com/news/sussex-th…
The display covers Ranji, Duleep, Pataudi, Imran and Mushtaq.
Each of the five legends are covered with one main painting and two large biographical frames of sketch and text.
Here is the first biographical frame of Tiger.
Here is the second frame for Tiger..
#cricket #onthisday #pataudi
Read 4 tweets

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