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Kim Hughes was one of the most majestic and daring batsmen to play for Australia in the last 40 years. Golden curled and boyishly handsome, his rise and fall as captain and player is unparalleled in cricketing history. He played several innings that count as all-time classics, but it's his tearful resignation from the captaincy that is remembered.
Insecure but arrogant, abrasive but charming; in Hughes' character were the seeds of his own destruction. Yet was Hughes' fall partly due to those around him, men who are themselves legends in Australia's cricketing history? Lillee, Marsh, the Chappells, all had their agendas, all were unhappy with his selection and performance as captain - evidenced by Dennis Lillee's tendency to aim bouncers relentlessly at Hughes' head during net practice.
Hughes' arrival on the Test scene coincided with the most turbulent time Australian cricket has ever seen - first Kerry Packer's World Series Cricket, then the rebel tours to South Africa. Both had dramatic effects on Hughes' career. As he traces the high points and the low, Christian Ryan sheds new and fascinating light on the cricket - and the cricketers - of the times.
460 pages, Kindle Edition
First published January 3, 2009


"But hey, that was Kim the man. Take that away and you take a lot of his batting force away. He had this attitude that some bowlers couldn’t bowl and no matter what they threw up he was going to dispatch it. That’s probably what alienated him at the start against some senior figures. People objected to the brashness they saw—that brashness as a person which manifested itself in his batting."

"Doshi bowled gorgeous, looping left-armers in whites crisply ironed, sleeves buttoned to the wrist and thick square glasses that he fingered before gliding in. Upon getting thumped he never seemed cross, merely puzzled, as if it did not compute."