This is a comprehensive history of the overseas tours by England’s cricket teams, stretching from 1878 up to the Ashes tour of Australia in the winter of 2021/22.
Simon Wilde has been reporting on cricket for decades and followed a lot of these tours himself. Obviously, the initial prospect of a tour to a warmer climate during the depths of the English winter is alluring, but Wilde’s account shows how arduous such tours can become.
In the early days, such tours were taken under the aegis of the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC), rather than badged as England. Several weeks were required in which to cram in all the necessary games (which would include a full test series against the host country’s national team, strewn among a handful of other fixtures against local and regional teams, often of widely varying calibre, and on some unkempt, and occasionally downright hazardous, pitches. Indeed, up until the early 1960s, not only was a great swathe of time required to accommodate the various fixtures, but teams might find themselves spending several weeks on a boat sailing to and them from the host country.
Cricket tours encountered all sorts of problems, ranging from local political unrest and agitations against unpopular governments to full on demonstrations aimed at the cricketers themselves. Administrative and consular support was not always available, and shortage of money could often be a problem. Sometimes the host country had only sporadic provision of aspects of infrastructure taken for granted back home. Often the attitudes of the players or their managers provoked wider problems.
Wilde delve into all of these issues and more. Having been a passionate cricket fan for many years, I was engrossed by much of the content of this book. It is always nice to have distant memories of hitherto long forgotten incidents sparked into life. My own slight cavil was that the book would have benefited from a few more light-hearted anecdotes, which might have broken up hat occasionally felt like a turgid serving of Geoffrey Boycott’s batting of the deadest of dead pitches.