10 for 66 and All ThatArthur Mailey's classic autobiography, first published in 1958, is a wry and engaging account by a talented cricketer from a very different era - full of zest, varied, quick, shifting the point of attack, sometimes extravagant, frequently brilliant and always thoughtful. For fifty years, Arthur Mailey played and watched first-class cricket. During his Test career he played against many of the greats, and on one notable occasion dismissed his idol, Victor Trumper, to his immediate regret: 'I felt like a boy who had killed a dove.' 10 for 66 and All That is a reminder of the glory days of cricket - amateurs and professionals, Bradman, Noble and Trumper batting, and Barnes, O'Reilly and Fleetwood-Smith with the ball. |
Contents
1 | |
2 Youth | 11 |
3 Opposing My Hero | 19 |
4 Picked for Australia | 28 |
5 Watering the Wicket | 33 |
6 Test Captains | 47 |
7 Men at the Other End | 61 |
8 The Party in the Shack | 77 |
11 Rebels of Cricket | 121 |
12 Tinkering with the Rules | 132 |
13 CricketIts Joy and Its Future | 143 |
14 Cricket Dramatised | 157 |
15 A Test and Two Policemen | 166 |
16 The World v Mars | 171 |
Epilogue | 177 |
About the Author | 181 |
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Common terms and phrases
Alf Noble Arthur Mailey asked Australian cricket Australian team average ball Barton King batsman Benaud better big cricket Bosanquet bosie Bradman captain captaincy Clarrie Grimmett club Cricket Ground cricket writers Douglas Jardine English fast bowler feel field first-class cricket Fleetwood-Smith flight Frank Woolley Freddy Brown gave googly H.L. Collins half-volley hand happened Herby Collins Jack Gregory Jack Hobbs Jim Laker Johnny Douglas knew Larwood leg stump leg-break lifting the seam lunch Maurice Tate medium-pace Melbourne never Neville Cardus occasion off-break Oval Percy Fender perhaps Philadelphia pitch play players Ponsford Ranji realised rebel runs score seemed selectors Sid Emery side slow bowlers slow bowling slow spinners South Wales spin bowlers Sydney tactics Test cricket Test match Test team thought took top-spin tour England umpire Victor Trumper Wagga Wally Hammond Warwick Armstrong wicket-keeper wickets Woodfull wrong