Keith Miller, Don Bradman and the myth of 87 powered by fickle memory

December 27, 1929. A young Don Bradman was nearing his century against Victoria when he was bowled by Harry ‘Bull’ Alexander. The legendary all-rounder Keith Miller had just turned 10, but was, by his own account, present in the ground that day. And also according to Miller that was the day the superstition surrounding 87 was born. Arunabha Sengupta looks at the facts and figures and tries to deduce what took place.

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William Attewell: The Cardus mistaken identity

In the much vaunted, and largely fictitious, Autobiography of Neville Cardus, as well as in his Summer Game, there are accounts of his experiences as the assistant coach of Shrewsbury School, along with the delightful anecdotes about the Nottinghamshire and England cricketer William Attewell who served as the head coach. Arunabha Sengupta documents how these episodes, like so many Cardus musings, were nothing but creations of his fertile mind.

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Neville Cardus and his date of birth

Neville Cardus, officially born April 2, 1889, revolutionised cricket reporting, transforming it from a staid description of events on the field to a series of metaphors invoking Greek gods and heroes. However, he was also notorious for his refusal to let the facts get in the way of a good story: he frequently wrote supposed “first-hand” reports of matches at which he was not present, and sometimes of ones which never actually took place. Michael Jones discovers that this cavalier disregard for the small matter of truth was exhibited in accounts of his own life as much as in his cricket reports.

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Cricket Dress: It was not always all whites

The introduction of numbers and names behind the cricket attire in Test matches seems to have shocked many into indignation. The great pristine game of cricket is going to the dogs and all that …
No, actually traditional cricket is not supposed to be played in whites. Not unless there is a very specific window of traditionalism. 
Arunabha Sengupta looks at the way cricket dress has evolved through the years.

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There is no evidence that opening the batting is more difficult than batting lower down the order

It is the general belief that facing fast bowlers with the new ball makes opening more difficult than batting down the order. However, we tend to attach less importance of the value of making first use of a placid track and other perks of an opener’s job. Arunabha Sengupta analyses those batsmen who have opened as well as batted lower in Test cricket and concludes that there is no evidence to say that opening is a more challenging task.

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The Claim "Playing for a weaker batting side handicaps a batsman" has no basis

We often hear the argument that a batsman’s efforts are more commendable when he makes runs for a weaker side. Arunabha Sengupta crunches numbers to show that there is no evidence that a batsman is handicapped by batting in a weaker side. On the contrary, there is plenty to suggest that such situations boost the career of a batsman.

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