At the end of a school day in the summer of 1921 two West Bridgford schoolboys in short trousers would race down Central Avenue to Trent Bridge cricket ground. Arriving at the ground they parted two uprights in a wooden perimeter fence and squeezed through. They dashed to the pavilion steps and wormed their way through to the front. They never had tickets and went unnoticed. At close of play they thrust a small black autograph book into the faces of the departing players. These included icons of Nottinghamshire cricket – John and George Gunn, Joe Hardstaff Sr, the captain Arthur Carr, Fred Barratt and W.W. “Dodger’ Whysall. The older boy might squeeze off a photograph on his box camera. At that time, when their cricketing heroes included Jack Hobbs and Herbert Sutcliffe, visits to the ground after school included Test Matches. The camera would then be carried home, mother was shooed out of her kitchen, the boys would set up a darkroom and they developed the photos of their heroes. The next day after school they returned to the ground with book and photographs and asked the players to sign them.
For these boys Trent Bridge was Mecca, a phantasmagorical field where academic
studies were forgotten quickly and their sporting passions were indulged. The
cricket ground was where they lived out their dreams whilst they knocked a bat
and ball around with their fellows at the tea intervals. And so was born a
lifelong love of a game and attachment to a few acres of green grass.
The younger of the boys was my father. Cricket engulfed him as he grew
up without his father to interest him in other hobbies. Later in life he co-founded
an amateur team at his factory. He passed on to me a feel for the game - only a
modest talent to play it evolved. Yet Trent Bridge became part of me as it did
for him and for successive generations of Nottinghamians for nearly two hundred
years.
Trent Bridge cricket ground is one of the best and widely loved Test
grounds in the world. I began to wonder why. Applying an interest in landscape
and people co-existing together I discovered this piece of ex-swampy meadow has
attracted a colourful cast of characters who have made their mark on history since
1838. Great drama has been witnessed taking place on this turf; sporting careers
and reputations have been made, enhanced and broken too.
In 1838 a local man named William Clarke married the landlady of the
(now world famous) Trent Bridge Inn. Being both a cricketing fellow and an
entrepreneur Clarke developed both interests. He became landlord of another famous city
watering hole The Bell in Market Square and along the way he founded
Nottinghamshire Cricket Club. Acquiring the meadow behind The Trent Bridge Inn he
opened the ground for play on 28th May 1838. The first inter county
match at Trent Bridge was against Sussex two years later and the first Test
Match against Australia in 1899.
My first memory of Trent Bridge was attending, amongst a crowd of
25,000, the 1955 Test Match against South Africa with my father. Having only
played myself on The Forest (and regular beach cricket at Sutton on Sea) I was enthralled
with the size of the ground, the brilliant green sward and the ancient
pavilion. I don’t remember the play or who won. (Apparently I saw Frank Tyson
take 6-28 and Peter May bat).
Next, and I do remember this; some idle days later that decade spent scoring
county matches from the western stand. The team included a West Indian fast
bowler named Carlton Forbes. He had a magnificent physique. His glistening skin
reflected the green grass as he thundered in to bowl. His skill was awesome but
how strange to make a living mostly in front of meagre crowds.
A summer holidays in1959 spent in the indoor nets at Trent Bridge proved
ultimately to be non-productive for me, when the next year tennis and golf took
precedence. Yet I got to face bowlers from the Notts coaching staff and I was
happy.
In 1972 we were spellbound by both the magic of an unknown Aussie called
Bob Massie and the speed and aggression of one Dennis Lillee. Paying spectators
could, by now, drink beer all day at Trent Bridge; and we did; and Australia
crushed England.
A Randall bat |
1993, the Aussies are here again. Elder son is deep into swotting for A-level exams, which are getting on top of him. What should we do? Go to Trent Bridge of course and pour beer down the lad as he tries to forget his studies and release the tension of the classroom – just like his grandfather seventy-two years before. I don’t remember the play much but as ever, there is little more agreeable in summer than watching the world’s best cricket unfolding live in front of your eyes, pint in hand, and enthusing the next generation.
2012 we basked in sunshine at the Bridge once again as Andrew Strauss
made his twenty-first and last century for England. Then, a year later, more Trent
Bridge drama. I still enjoy a mischievous smile at the memory of Stuart Broad’s
bravado. He refused to walk after being incorrectly given not out to a decisive
wicket-taking ball. How delicious it is to conjure up images of the Aussie
fielders blowing gaskets and carrying a grudge away from the match. Two years on
it is Stuart again with his mesmerising 8-15 against more Aussies. Oh, what
joy, what theatre it all has been!
A science fiction backdrop |
Up until 1948 the club first team was made up purely of Nottinghamshire
men. In that team of ’21 were seasoned players with years of service for Notts
under there belts. Trent Bridge, ground and club, was central to their lives. They
were not going to be separated easily. It was difficult for young men to get
into the side.
When
Joe Hardstaff finally managed to gain a place in the first team he arrived
early at Trent Bridge and crept nervously into the home side’s changing-rooms.
Fred Barratt was there before him. ‘Where should I put my bag Mr. Barratt?’ he
asked. “Over theer,” Fred Barratt growled, indicating a spot beside the door
through which the young man had just come. ‘Then thou’l’t be soonest out
o’bleddy door. *
Another famous servant of Trent Bridge was groundsman Ron Allsopp. He did
not start out as a man of the soil; earlier in life he made bicycles at the
city’s Raleigh works. Yet he yearned to work outdoors, he had an interest in
turf. Brought to the club after Frank Dalling retired Ron achieved fame and
notoriety in the 1980s. Twice earning the accolade of groundsman of the year, and
the ire of opposing teams, Ron cultivated pitches to exploit the talent of
bowlers Clive Rice and Richard Hadlee.
Ken Taylor is a further, happy and contented Trent Bridge ghost that I
found in the shadows. He was appointed one of the first professional managers
at a county club in 1978 and assembled a team of brilliant yet strong-minded
characters that won the championship in the ‘80s. Peter Wynne-Thomas
(Nottinghamshire CCC President, author, librarian and possessor of all cricket
knowledge) says: “Ken Taylor was the most brilliant manager I ever encountered.”
An intriguing ghost is that of Eddie Marshall who started the
supporters’ club after the Second World War. He ran a timber business and later
was responsible for bringing Garfield Sobers from Barbados to Trent Bridge – one
more Notts legend was created. Dick Milnes was a chairman and president of
Notts CCC and a notable city businessman being company secretary at Boots. He
enthused Peter Wynne-Thomas to start a library which today houses the second
largest collection of books on cricket in the world. (It has one more after my
latest visit). Peter’s idols are Joe Hardstaff Jnr and Bill Voce (the latter a
name to send shivers down an Aussie’s spine along with a Trent Bridge favourite,
Harold Larwood). Many former players still visited the ground to chat with younger
players and anyone they met who shared a love of the ground. The place has this
effect on people.
Trent Bridge is not only one of the best Test Match grounds in the world
but also one of the most approachable and friendliest. In the last century,
cricket grounds tended to be administered by gruff and conservative ex-military
types who shunned innovation and warded off visitors and away teams. Peter
Wynne-Thomas and his contemporaries strive successfully to adopt Harry
Dalling’s philosophy and style in welcoming all and celebrating the game.
For 180 years a former meadow has - in summertime only and for one,
three or five days at a time - drawn ordinary people to an arena and exposed
them to drama. New pages of sporting history have been written; blood, sweat
and tears have been spilled and then the people have been sent out on to the
street to get on with their lives. Being a Nottingham lad I still get my
sporting adrenaline rush from either a winter visit to the library or a day
drinking beer sat on a hard white seat watching the world’s best players. The
landscape set out before spectators is contrived and unnatural save the grassy
square. Yet this strange field captivates cricket aficionados from across the
world and draws them in to debate the game’s characters, traditions, its challenges
and its future.
And what happened to that black autograph book? That is a mystery. It
was given to a former Notts and England captain to add to the Trent Bridge
archive but it never arrived. A piece of detective work is unfolding and one
day the book may come to light and take its place at the hallowed place simply
called Trent Bridge.
------
* From The Trent Bridge Battery,
the Story of the Sporting Gunns by Basil Haynes & John Lucas.
I am very grateful to Peter Wynne-Thomas who on two occasions has shared
with me his immense knowledge of the good, the bad and the ugly of the
wonderful game at Trent Bridge. The game and the ground have enriched lives. They
continue to do so.
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