Cricket

  • Being Freddie
    Andrew 'Freddie' Flintoff is one of the most exciting cricketers in the world and has improved out of all recognition during the last two years. In 2003, he was England's best player at the World Cup. Then, explosively, he lit up the second half of the summer in 2004, lifting spirits at Lord's with...
  • Home
    Do you believe that you can define a person by the home they live in and the possessions they surround themselves with? Do the books on their shelves and the paint on their walls give away their personality, and what would you think about someone who lived in a white, minimal space with nothing at ...
  • A Corner of a Foreign Field
    A book that interweaves biography with history, the lives of cricketers with wider processes of social change. C.K. Nayudu and Sachin Tendulkar naturally figure in this book, but so too do Mahatma Gandhi and Muhammad Ali Jinnah. The Indian careers of the English cricketers, Lord Harris and D.R. Jar...
  • Caps, Hats and Helmets
    One of cricket's favourite characters pens an unpredictable collection of reflections. Like his bowling action, his unique turn of phrase and mischievous humour delivers: taxi ride from hell...the human clothes peg on strike...rogue room-mates...microphone mayhem......
  • Fair Field and No Favour
    No other contest in Australian sport evokes the tradition, history and fierce national rivalry of the Ashes and the 2005 Ashes series was one of the most eagerly anticipated in over a decade. Would Australia cement its place as one of the great teams in history or would it signal the end of Austral...
  • Broken Angels
    For one woman, Nancye O'Reilly, this shocking path of events is real. Such tragedies would have destroyed a lesser woman, but Nancye took control of her life and made some crucial decisions to improve her lot and that of her two remaining sons. As a result of her extraordinary experiences, she is n...
  • No Bull
    When the official history of twentieth century Wall Street is written, it will certainly contain more than a few pages on Michael Steinhardt. One of the most successful money managers in the history of The Street, Steinhardt far outshone his peers by achieving an average annual return of over thirt...
  • According to Skull
    Kerry O'Keeffe was a spin bowler in the Australian cricket team from 1971 to 1977. So when he commentates on ABC Radio's Grandstandyou know you can trust him! He is also one of the funniest commentators in the business and can crack himself up faster than anyone else. His laugh is one of the best-k...
  • Playing with Fire
    When Nasser Hussain first met Duncan Fletcher, it marked the beginning of a partnership that was to transform the English cricket team. They injected steel into the team they gave it backbone. England became a hard team to beat - and they started to win test matches, at home and abroad. And yet Hus...
  • Andrew Flintoff
    Andrew Flintoff is the most exciting talent in world cricket today, the kind of player who comes along once in a generation. Named Man of the Series during the epic Ashes success of 2005, his powerful stroke play, aggressive fast bowling, brilliant slip-catching and enjoyment of the game made him a...
  • Cricket's Great Entertainers
    As a widely respected cricket historian, with an encyclopaedic knowledge of the game, and also a writer with a great sense of fun, Henry Blofeld is the ideal man to select the great characters of cricket who have livened up the sport. We learn of the exploits of the legendary Ian Botham, a man who ...
  • Freddie Flintoff
    Andrew Flintoff, the new England captain, is one of the most exciting sportsmen in the world, and, following the historic Ashes victory of 2005, one of the nation's best-loved and most instantly recognisable characters. 'Freddie Flintoff - My World' ...
  • Boony's Ashes
    A whimsical book of memories, tall tales, jokes, laughs and cricket trivia from one of the nation's most popular sporting sons....
  • Inside Stories
    Cricket Australia has never before opened its Board minutes to scrutiny. This is the first full, frank and fearless account of 100 years of the Board's control of Australian cricket. A collection of Australia's finest cricket writers delve into the issues that shaped the game in this country, based...
  • 2006 New Zealand Cricket Almanack 2006
    The 59th edition of the New Zealand Cricket Almanack includes the Champions Trophy in England and New Zealand's first ever series in Bangladesh. Two tests and the inaugural Chappell-Hadlee series followed in Australia before home internationals against Sri Lanka and Australia. To end the season the...
  • Cheltenham and Gloucester Cricket Year 2005
    The Cheltenham & Gloucester Cricket Year once again provides the first overview of the cricket season, both at home and abroad. Lavish in presentation, compelling in style and comprehensive in breadth, the Cheltenham & Gloucester Cricket Year 2005 features reports from professional cricketers a...
  • Cricket Year 2007 2007
    Now in its twenty-sixth edition, Cricket Year 2007 once again provides the first overview of the cricket season, both at home and abroad. Lavish in presentation, compelling in style and comprehensive in breadth, this year's much-anticipated annual is now in colour throughout and, as ever, includes ...
  • Cricket's Strangest Matches
    A fascinating collection of true stories about cricket's oddest matches - some bizarre, some astonishing and some just downright hilarious. Taken from the annals of the games history, Cricket's Strangest Matches is a must for all cricket enthusiasts and for anyone interested in the history of the s...
  • Farokh Engineer From the Far Pavilion
    The story of one of the finest wicketkeeper-batsmen in the history of the game. Born in Dada in Bombay in 1938, Farokh Engineer quickly displayed a prodigious talent with both bat and gloves. Selected to play for the India Starlets in the late 1950s, he broke into the Test side in 1961. Having ceme...
  • A Wisden Collection: v. 2
    For 141 years Wisden Cricketers' Almanack has collected and collated what happens in top-class cricket, making Wisden the most famous name in sports publishing. Its pages record the development of a game and reflect social changes in the world beyond the game's boundaries. This second volume of A W...
  • The Wisden Dictionary of Cricket
    Do you know - the difference between a chinaman and a doosra? - where to find cow corner, the V, and the corridor of uncertainty? - what Nelson, Merlyn and Michelle have to do with cricket? - how to get a ball to reverse-swing, or how the Duckworth/Lewis method works? - the origin of yorker, googly...
  • Modern Psychology for Cricket and Other Australian Sports
    By profiling the psychological skills of world class athletes, researchers have found that different sports and different positions within the one sport have different psychological requirements. Shows how these same profiling techniques can be used to discover strengths and weakness in competitive...
  • Penguins Stopped Play
    It seemed a simple enough idea at the outset: to assemble a team of eleven men to play cricket on each of the seven continents of the globe. Except -- hold on a minute -- that's not a simple idea at all. And when you throw in incompetent airline officials, amorous Argentine Colonels' wives, cunning...
  • What is a Googly?
  • Farewell to Cricket
    Sir Donald Bradman's thorough and lucid exposition of the game's technique. This final revision includes his rating of Shane Warne, Ian Healy and Steve Waugh within a full historical survey of the game and its greatest players, fully reset and amply illustrated....
  • Bradman's Best
    Sir Donald Bradman saw all but a few of the 20th century's greatest cricketers play the game. Apart from being cricket's most successful player and captain, Bradman built a reputation over five decades as the game's most knowledgable and incisive selector. These factors, combined with his status as...
  • Chappelli Speaks Out
    Chappelli a great competitor on and off the cricket field. Loves his cricket and he's not afraid to share his opinions of the game. His thoughts are always well worth reading.' Mark TaylorWith Chappelli it is either black or white, but always passionate.'Ian HealyIn 1959, a sixteen-year-old Ian Cha...
  • Cricket Speak
    The game of cricket was invented by the Brits, perfected by the West Indians and Australians, and to this day - and no doubt forever more - will continue to utterly baffle the everyday Yank. To say it is a strange sport is an understatement of Viv Richard's sized proportions. What other game w...
  • Cricket's 300 Men (+ 1)
    It is the ultimate in cricket - to score a Test innings of 300. And Brian Lara has now pushed that on to 400. In the long history of the game only 17 batsmen have become triple centurions, beginning with Surrey's Andrew Sandham in the West Indies in 1930 and culminating in Lara's astonishing feat i...
  • Denis Compton
    Denis Compton was one of England's - indeed cricket's - greatest batsmen. In the summer of 1947 alone he scored 18 hundreds. But not only was he a flashing stroke player who could take any bowling attack apart: he was one of the last of a vanished breed of sportsmen, who played more than one sport ...
  • Is it Cowardly to Pray for Rain?
    The Ashes 2005 saw an almighty clash between age-old enemies: England versus Australia Freddie versus Gilly the King of Spain versus the King of Spin worker versus conscience. For up and down the land, the nation wondered the same question - how can I follow the cricket at work without being given ...
  • John Wright's Indian Summers
    Former New Zealand test cricket opener John Wright was appointed coach of the Indian cricket team in 2000. Against all predictions Wright - the first foreigner ever appointed to the position - held that position almost unchallenged throughout four successful, but often-turbulent years. In that time...
  • Legends of the Baggy Green : Dubious Behaviour and Achievements from Cricket's Chequered History
    Full of brigands and bogans, legends and sledgends, Legends of the Baggy Green is an acerbic commentary on the codes and manners of cricket behaviour. Part social history, part blooper tape, this book takes sports comedy back to where it all began.Th...
  • Miller's Luck
    Keith Ross Miller was named after two adventurous aviators and went on to be one himself. He was all things to all men, and women. Miller was a person of style, charm and grace, a lover of opera and classical music, yet with the common touch. Born of a humble Australian background, he was blessed w...
  • Private Don
    'Have you ever stopped to think how much the hurly burly and turmoil of cricket have taken out of me in the last 40 years?'He was the greatest cricketer the world has ever known. He was also one of the greatest enigmas. Sir Donald Bradman was a fiercely private man, but from 1953 to 1977 he faithfu...
  • Boycott
    Swimming star Lisa Forrest was only sixteen years old when she found herself at the centre of one of Australia's most significant sporting and political moments, the controversial boycott of the 1980 Olympic Games in Moscow at the height of the Cold War. In this meticulously researched and compelli...
  • Letters Home
    Immediately after graduating from Carleton College (in Northfield, Minnesota) in June 1939, John Hlavacek sailed for China to teach English at the Carleton-in-China Middle School in Fenchow, Shansi Province. After five weeks of training in Chinese at a language school in Peking, John and a fellow t...
  • Huddersfield's Nineteenth-century Yorkshire: v. 11
    J.R. Ellam has selected for career analysis eleven cricketing legends - all from Yorkshire, all from the Huddersfield area, and all born in the 1800s. Yorkshire captains like L. Greenwood and E. Lockwood are joined by batsmen Berry, Thewlis and A. Greenwood. Teamed with the triumvirate of Hirst, Ha...
  • Tom Graveney at Lords
    Tom Graveney one of English cricket's icons, veteran of 79 Tests and a long county career with Gloucestershire CCC and Worcestershire CCC, elected as President of MCC for 2004/2005 at the grand age of 77. This book will celebrate Tom Graveney's year in office and give an interesting account of the ...
  • Bearders
    Bill Frindall, known to cricket fans everywhere as the Bearded Wonder, is now the longest-serving member of the Test Match Special team, having been its scorer since 1966 and not having missed a home Test match in 40 years. In this highly entertaining volume of memoirs, he looks back at some of the...
  • Twenty20 Vision
    Mushtaq Ahmed is, by any measurement, one of the most colourful characters in cricket. He made his Test debut for Pakistan in 1989 and has made 38 appearances in all. He was largely responsible for reviving the dying art of leg spin. His form in 2006 to date has brought some of the best bowling per...
  • Keith Miller
    The definitive biography of Australia's most dashing cricketer. It is authorised by Miller's family. He is a legendary figure from the game's great age. This work presents remarkable revelations about Miller's relationship with Princess Margaret. Roland Perry is the latest major cricket author to j...
  • As it Was
    Cater's reminiscences of his Civil War experiences, simply titled As It Was, comprises a superbly detailed and colorful description of a soldier's life in the ranks of the Third Texas Cavalry and the Nineteenth Louisiana Infantry.In the early chapters of As It Was, Cater describes his youthful expe...
  • Ranji
  • Out of My Comfort Zone
    Rarely does a truly great player reveal as much of himself and his sport as does Steve Waugh in his long awaited autobiography. "Out of my Comfort Zone" is a frank look into a unique life in cricket, a journey into Waugh's life on and off the field. He opens up on his personal life in a way few wou...
  • True Colours
    TJ Meridian returns with two friends to her childhood home in Meridianville, Texas, with secret plans to bring prosperity back to an area her father nearly destroyed a decade earlier. But when her prize horse falls ill, she learns in a confrontation with the local vet, Dr. Mare Gillespie, that the ...
  • Butter-finger
    Riccardo Small lives on the Island. He's the smallest boy in his class at school, and he loves cricket. In fact, he's a walking cricket encyclopaedia and can tell you the averages of every West Indian test match player in history, the names of all the cricket grounds in the world and more besides. ...
  • Young Wisden
    Young Wisden is the perfect introduction to one of the most enjoyable world sports - cricket. Packed with colour photographs and illustrations, this beautifully laid out book really brings the game to life. The author takes a wry look at every aspect of the game that a new fan could wish to know ab...
  • Cricket
    This insightful new series explores different sports how and where they're played, the equipment and kit needed and how to get involved. There are tips on training and on developing techniques. The books also feature sporting heroes at the top of their game, with exciting photos of them showing the...
  • Coming Back to ME
    It can take a long time to build up a life, and only moments to destroy it. Gary and Molly met in the way couples do: after a long haul of being single, quickly becoming soulmates and rejoicing in that fact. Beautiful, red-haired Molly ignites a fire in Gary and he eases the pain she feels about he...
  • Stumped!
    The world of sport generates perennial debates that can drive a grown man to distraction or create rifts between the firmest of friends. Fear not. Stumped! The Sport's Fans Book of Answers is here to save us.Sports and trivia fans enjoyed QI: The Book of General Ignorance Googlies, Nutmegs and Boge...
  • The Wisden Cricket Quiz Book
    * When did fried calamari stop play in a first-class match? * Who was the first Test player to be born in Papua New Guinea? * And who said But when does it start? after watching two hours' cricket at Lord's? The answers to these questions, and nearly 2,000 others, can be found somewhere in past edi...
  • Cricket Lexicon
    Cricket - perhaps more than any other sport - has a language that delights those who know it, and confuses those who don't. While some of us have never actually heard the sound of leather on willow, everybody has heard of bowling a googly and playing a straight bat. But few know what terms like doo...
  • Inside and Out
    Mark Tewksbury is best known as a gold-medal-winning Olympic swimmer. His remarkable sixteen-year athletic career included three Olympic medals, numerous world records, and inductions into three major halls of fame: the Canadian Olympic Hall of Fame, the Canadian Sports Hall of Fame, and the Intern...
  • The Black Lords of Summer
    An amazing account of the establishment and reception of the Aboriginal team which represented Australia in the 1868 tour of England. Written and researched by well known cricket author Ashley Mallett....
  • Don Bradman
    This fascinating book takes a very different look at Australia's most popular sporting hero, Sir Donald Bradman. Unlike the mostly reverent literature on 'The Don', this book explains how his iconic status was created and sustained, and what his popularity and heroism say about the meaning of Austr...
  • Are the Fixtures Out?
  • The Sporting Life And Other Trifles
    The Sporting Life And Other Trifles By Robert Lynd A memoir of english sport. 252 pages. Originally published in 1929. Many of the earliest books, particularly those dating back to the 1900s and before, are now extremely scarce and increasingly expensive. Obscure Press are republishing these classi...
  • Golf
    Golf's popularity has gone through the roof in the last five years. It is now a $26 billion industry, with approximately 26 million golfers. A stream of golf picture books and mediocre how-to books followed this surge. But, finally, here's an easy to read and understand instructional book to help a...
  • More Than a Game; The Story of Cricket's Early Years
    The former Prime Minister examines the early history of one of the great loves of his life in a book that sheds new light on the summer game's social origins....
  • More Than a Game
    Whether you love them or loathe them, look back with wistful nostalgia to the days of Pong and Space Invaders, or regard the whole phenomenon with blank incomprehension, there is no doubt that computer and video games now occupy a significant place in contemporary popular culture. The economics alo...
  • Encyclopedia of International Cricket Players
    This guidebook to every cricketer who has played international cricket, is packed with player statistics, and detailed player profiles. It is a one-of-a-kind encyclopedia....
  • Playfair Cricket Annual 2008
    The 61st edition of Playfair reviews England's 2007 series against the West Indies and India, as well as their winter tours to Sri Lanka and New Zealand. The book is packed with all the essential information required to follow events on the cricket field, with unrivalled up-to-the-minute statistica...
  • Wearing the Baggy Green
    Wearing the Baggy Green covers Cricket in the Depression era, Post World II, and the 2005 Ashes series. This is a must for all cricket fans: statistics, photographs, potted histories, statistics, controversies, statistics, did I mention statistics? Crickerers love stats....
  • Spun Out
    'He is a walking paradox. He is supremely confident, yet profoundly insecure. He is brilliant, but also a buffoon. He is generous and thoughtful, but utterly self-obsessed. This book is the search for why.' Having shone the spotlight on Kerry Packer and Alan Bond, bestselling biographer, award-winn...
  • Village Cricket
    'Cricket books should meet one or more of these necessary requirements, being either literate and amusing to read, or meticulously researched, or original in concept. Tim Heald's THE CHARACTER OF CRICKET triumphantly meets all three,' said Benny Green in 1986. Nearly twenty years later, at an annua...
  • Aggers' Special Delivery
    Once you get to grips with the sacred mysteries of cricket, it soon becomes obvious that it is a sport with a deep and fascinating history, with every match producing an avalanche of statistics and a treasure trove of colourful anecdotes. Aggers' Special Delivery is an essential accompaniment to a ...
  • Arm-ball to Zooter
    What's the difference between short leg and deep midwicket? When would you be thinking about bowling a yorker? What's so great about the sound of leather on willow? Cricket's vocabulary is a mixture of jargon and cliche, poetry and prose, misty-eyed romanticism and old-gits' cynicism. "Arm-ball to ...
  • Ashes 2006-2007
    Presents an inside look at the 2006-2007 Ashes tour as the definitive record of this feverishly anticipated event. Contains all of Gideon Haigh's day-by-day writing for the Guardian - match reports, profiles, analyses and more....
  • Ashes to Ashes
    A frank assessment of the past, present and future of the game from the first cricketer to have captained and coached the England team. The personalities and contributions of characters such as Basil D'Oliveira, Graham Gooch, Graeme Hick and Phil Tufnell are dissected and he offers fresh insights i...
  • The Ashes
    A comprehensive account of the history of the Ashes Tests, from their informal beginnings in the 1860s to the sure-to-be-legendary Australian 5-0 victory of 2006. It tracks the development of the contest from a money-making tour exercise to one of the world's most enduring and feisty sporting rival...
  • Birth of the Ashes
    When the Hon. Ivo Bligh took an English team to Australia in 1882-83, he said he was going to reclaim the Ashes of English cricket, lost at the Oval. Australia won by 7 runs, and the wife of a Melbourne property baron, who had a little urn on her man...
  • Botham
    Celebrating the 30th anniversary of the debut of one of the world's greatest cricketers, this will be an official book, with authoritative text from Mark Baldwin (The Times), supported with lavish full colour and b/w photos of Ian Botham's life and cricket career. Following his Test debut in 1977, ...
  • The Battle Renewed
    On 12 September 2005 at The Oval in London, after 5886 days, eight series and 44 Tests against Australia under seven captains, England won back the Ashes. On 23 November 2006 at The Gabba in Brisbane, and after only 437 days, the battle will be renewed. The Ashes' loss severely jolted Australian cr...
  • Calling the Shots
    Behind the scenes on Doctor Who from one of the show's leading directors. Graeme Harper's association with Doctor Who began in the mid-1960s, and he directed some of its best-loved episodes in the 1980s. In 2005 he made a triumphant return to the series, directing David Tennant's Doctor in the accl...
  • Captain Australia
    First published in hardback in November 2000, this work has been revised as a trade paperback to include updated material on Sir Donald Bradman, Steve Waugh, and Waugh's replacement Test skipper for part of the 2000-01 season, Adam Gilchrist. It is a...
  • Cricket for Dummies
    Includes a diagram of fielding positions for easy reference A complete guide to cricket for players and fans Whether you're a budding player or aspiring armchair expert, "Cricket For Dummies" will help you get to grips with this fascinating sport. Inside you'll find an o...
  • Cricket in Australia 1804-1884
    Presents an entertaining and factual book for all cricket lovers. For the first time, a complete history of cricket in Australia, in the 19th century, has been researched and written in this comprehensive format....
  • Cricket Walkabout
    This thought provoking story will stir the conscience of many Australians. Within three short years this team of tribal Aborigines, mostly from a small, compact, area of Western Victoria, mastered the rudiments of cricket and in 1868 was able to match it with long established English teams....
  • Eleven
    Former Test cricketer and author Ashley Mallet describes the agony and ecstasy in selecting the best Eleven of the past 100 years. The outcome is a team with great batting depth - nine players who have scored Test Centuries, and specialist batsmen who are courageous, consistent and adaptable....
  • Freddie
    He's the hottest talent in the cricketing world today. Hailed as the next Ian Botham, Andrew 'Freddie' Flintoff is a truly phenomenal cricketer. Adored by the fans and an inspiration to his team-mates, it is said that when Freddie's playing, the bar ...
  • Heroes of 100 Tests
    There is also a composite chapter on cricketers who have played 90 to 99 Tests including Mohammad Azharuddin who scored a century in his 99th Test and was lost to cricket. Entwined are tantalising trivia and detailed statistics of each 'centurion'....
  • The Hansie Cronje Story
    Hansie Cronje captained the SA team for six years and played in 68 Test Matches. Statistically, he remains South Africa's greatest cricket captain ever. His global popularity stemmed from his bright and boyish approach to life, a man with the common ...
  • In Bradman's Band
    Ex-Test cricketer Ashley Mallett looks behind the scenes at the life of cricket's greatest batsman, and gives a rare insight into what went on in Australia's greatest ever sporting team, the Invincibles. This is a candid and illuminating account of the great players of the Bradman era who played in...
  • In it to Win it
    What is it about the Australian cricket team that has propelled them to the top of world cricket? Australia's leading cricket writer puts the last three decades under the microscope, from World Series Cricket to the best Ashes ever....
  • Long Shadows
    A Londoner by birth, Alice Chase had met her husband Walter, while visiting Somerset on a charabanc trip. She had now lived in the small Somerset village of Bramwell with Walter and their four children for twenty years. But the past can throw long shadows, and Alice had never been completely sure w...
  • My Cricket Journey
    An account of Barry Gibbs' involvement with Australian cricket, including his time as Secretary of two of the six state cricket associations. His book also covers the very close association he had with the late Sir Donald Bradman....
  • My Spin on Cricket
    MY SPIN ON CRICKET tells the story of the great game through the ages, through personal anecdotes and a lively, well informed narrative by Richie Benaud, the popular cricket commentator and former Australian cricket captain. Hailed as one of the most influential cricketer and cricket personalities ...
  • Mystery Spinner: a Life of Jack Iverson
    Jack Iverson is one of the most enigmatic sportsmen in Australian history. When, at the age of thirty-five, he burst into the Australian Test cricket team in the early 1950s as a spin bowler, he was practically unplayable. But, as Gideon Haigh shows in this extraordinary book, the mystery of Iverso...
  • No Balls and Googlies
    Provides a refreshingly amusing insight into many aspects of the 'elegant game' of cricket, exploring its origins, traditions, records, milestones, memorable moments, and remarkable facts. Did you know that cricket was classified as one of several il...
  • One Test
    Martin Bowerman has researched and profiled the 24 living cricketers to represent Australia in just One test. All their stories and circumstances are distinctly different, from replacing the Test Captain of the time, to been seen as the next great sp...
  • The Penguin Book of Ashes Anecdotes 1882-2005
    Hundreds of the best stories, from more than 260 publications, create the fullest, fieriest, and funniest account of these two nations divided by the common game of cricket. This is an account of the Ashes Series....
  • Rod Marsh
    The author revels in the spirit of the game - including its sometimes larrikin spirit - and has written a deeply appreciative account of the career of Rod Marsh, from his formative years in Perth, when Western Australia was still isolated from much o...
  • Summer Game
    'Outstanding This book ought to change the writing of cricket history by setting new standards The affect is evocative and powerful. Buy his book. It's brilliant.' - Matthew Engel, Wisden Cricket MonthlyThe Summer Gameis a fascinating history of Australia in international cricket between 1949 and 1...
  • Teach Yourself Cricket
    Teach Yourself Cricket is the essential guide for cricketers of all ages who want to improve their all-round skills and player performance. Written by Mark Butcher, Captain of Surrey County Cricket Club and former England Captain, together with Paul Abraham, an ECB Level 3 Coach and Berkshire Count...
  • Tom Smith's New Cricket Umpiring and Scoring
    Tom Smith first wrote his guide for umpires and scorers in 1980. Since then it has gone through five full-revised editions. The new Tom Smith is the first to be fully redesigned and updated for the 21st century. Its publication coincides with interna...
  • A Vision Splendid
    Bradman Oval, Bowral can trace its competitive cricket roots back to the Glebe Wicket on 20 October 1888. It became the cricketing birthplace of the game's greatest cricketer, Sir Donald Bradman in the 1920s; was renamed Bradman Oval in 1947 and arose phoenix-like with a magnificent pavilion a...
  • 100 Not Out
    Premier Cricket in Victoria after 100 years is stronger and more exciting than ever. Includes rarely seen photogarphs and 150 player profiles, from Shane Warne to Hassett and Oldfield....
  • 150 Years of NSW First-class Cricket
    In this incredibly candid, moving and very funny memoir, the irrepressibly entertaining Jacki Weaver writes generously and wittily on her life, her loves and her great passions....
  • Australian Test Cricketers
    This essential alphabetical, ready-reference features career summaries, statistics, and photographs of every Australian Test cricketer, from 1877 to 2006....

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