The Cricket War: The Inside Story of Kerry Packer's World Series Cricket

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Text Publishing, 2002 - Cricket - 408 pages
In May 1977, the cricket world woke to discover that thirty-nine-year-old Sydney businessman Kerry Packer had signed thirty-five international stars for his own televised 'World Series'. The Cricket War, revised and updated in this edition, is the definitive account of the split that changed the game on the field and on the screen. In helmets, under lights, with white balls and in coloured clothes, the outlaw armies of Ian Chappell, Tony Greig and Clive Lloyd fought a daily battle for survival. In boardrooms and courtrooms, Packer and cricket's rulers fought a bitter war of nerves. It was the end of cricket as we knew it - and the beginning of cricket as we know it.

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About the author (2002)

Gideon Haigh is an Australian journalist and writer, born in 1965. He was educated at Trinity College at the University of Melbourne. He has contributed to numerous newspapers and magazines in his thirty years as a journalist. He has written thirty books and edited seven others. His book, On Warne, won the British Sports Book Awards Best Cricket Book of the Year Award, the Cricket Society and MCC Book of the Year Award, the Jack Pollard Trophy, and the Waverley Library Nib Award. The Office won the NSW Premier's Literary Awards Douglas Stewart Prize for Non-fiction. Other recent titles include Uncertain Corridors: Writings on Modern Cricket, End of the Road?, and The Deserted Newsroom. He was the winner of the 2016 Ned Kelly Awards best true crime award for Certain Admissions.

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