Almanac Cricket: Our new ACS writer remembers his first summer of cricket

 

Lorenzo Di-Mauro Hayes is our new Australian Cricket Society Scholar. He will be mentored by John Harms throughout 2025. His articles will appear in various ACS publications and here at www.footyalmanac.com.au

 

 

 

 

 

 

The summer of 2013-14 by Lorenzo Di-Mauro Hayes

 

The summer of 2013-14 wasn’t the first summer where I watched cricket, but it was the one where I fell in love with the sport and this makes sense. I was eight years old at the time and this summer was the most cricket I was able to watch. My family house had nothing more than the standard free to air television channels at the time, so I barely knew about this competition called the Big Bash League.

The first two editions of the re-vamped T20 competition since it moved to a franchise model was shown exclusively through Fox Sports. I don’t think I knew what the Big Bash even was at the start of 2013. Which feels about right, because it was a somewhat invisible competition for its first couple of years. But by BBL 03, Channel 10 had snapped up the rights to show all 35 matches for the season. The IPL had begun to take off in India, but Australia was about to get its first national look at franchise T20 cricket. Not that this summer was going to be a bad one for the traditionalists, because there was a big five-Test series going on that summer called The Ashes.

The classic Channel 9 intro music welcomed every session of play of the first edition of the Ashes, in just six months. With the 2015 Cricket World Cup set to be played in Australia and New Zealand, the decision was made to play two Ashes series in the one year, with the talking point of the series still Stuart Board’s refusal to walk at the First Test at Trent Bridge, when Ashton Agar quite clearly claimed his wicket. So, it is fair to say that 2013/14 was a big summer in Australian cricket and a great time to really start watching the sport. With so much cricket on, some matches were not always the most inspiring, and not always ones I wanted to see through to the end, but there was always hope for something better to appear in either format.

So, each day it was on, Test cricket on Channel 9 would dominate the day. On 20th December, BBL 03 began so when after the end of day’s play at the MCG and SCG Tests, one could double up with a Big Bash match on Channel 10 in the evening. With the biggest series in all of Test cricket leading into this newly flashy colourful league playing the T20 format, the summer of 2013/14 was one of great contrast. While the Big Bash, by its very name, was focused on the high-power scoring of the batters, so much of this Ashes Test series, saw the focus on one man; Australia’s lethal moustachioed left arm fast bowler, Mitchell Johnson.

Johnson was always a mixed bag bowler. If he nailed his line and length, the batter was caught behind or was watching the middle stump somersault its way down to third man, if he didn’t, Johnson would be the one watching, as his delivery was being smashed through cover to the fence. During that summer, there were plenty more somersaulting stumps, in an extraordinary individual performance in a five-Test series. Adelaide was a masterpiece. Some of those deliveries are still extraordinary more than a decade later. After being awarded the Man of the Match thrice, there was no shock when Johnson was awarded Man of the Series for his 37 wickets.

As for the Big Bash, not for the last time, my adopted Melbourne Renegades were a long way off and the rival Melbourne Stars saw their season end in the finals. Ben Dunk topped scored for the season with 395 runs but his Hobart Hurricanes went down in Perth to the Scorchers. One of my most clear BBL 03 memories is watching Craig Simmons reaching three figures in 39 delivers on January 16, 2014. It was the fastest BBL century, a record only recently levelled by Mitchell Owen. Owen was part of that generation of early BBL lovers, going to games and supporting his team with great passion. That explains why he is sticking with the Hurricanes and the Big Bash, because it is a big part of the reason, he is a professional cricket right now.

Perhaps because I saw one of the greatest Test series performances early on in life, I have always considered Test cricket to be the pinnacle for the sport. It might also be just about the most aptly named sport, nothing is a Test quite like playing the same game over five days, with no guarantee it ends with a win or loss. But the contrast between the white and coloured clothing, between the red and white ball, between Test and limited over cricket, left me with a lesson I’ve always held. Despite what you might hear for some, there is no such thing as a bad format of cricket. Tests, 50-over and 20-over cricket, each provided something different while being at the same sport.

No other sport has such a mix of novelty and familiarity, quite like cricket. You can go from losing your fingernails watching the number 10 and 11 bat out a draw as the light fades, to picking your jaw off the floor as you watch a massive six bring up a match-winning century. What the 2013/14 cricket summer and every summer, every cricket match since, have taught me is the sport has elements you can’t find in other sports. Those elements are products of bygone eras, that should we lose them today, you could never get them back tomorrow. Yet it is the sport behind Hawkeye, the revolutionary technology that help assists umpires and referees in other sports the world over. Let’s hope future cricket fans never forget, what childhood Lorenzo learned, that the different formats each are brilliant due to having their own drama and differences. Because if we lose that? Well, that’s just not cricket.

 

 

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Comments

  1. Mickey Randall says

    Welcome Lorenzo. Enjoyed your memoir and especially the reference to that astonishing Mitchell Johnson spell in Adelaide. I recall vividly, watching it in Singapore on my laptop via steaming. The fear of the Englishmen was very real (and understandable).

    Looking forward to more of your insights.

  2. Welcome Lorenzo.

    As today is the first day of Summer (1 December), together with the title of this article, got me thinking of doing a cricket team where either every player’s first name or part of his first first name or surname or part of his surname is related to Summer in some way.

    This is the World 11 Summer of Cricket Team:

    Alastair Cook (c) (Cook as in Heat)
    Sunil Gavaskar (Nickname of Sunny and Sun in his first name)
    Joe Burns (Burning Heat)
    Charles Burgess (C.B.) Fry (26 Tests England 1896-1912/Fry)
    Sunny Singh (Haryana Ranji Trophy/Kings XI Punjab/Sunny)
    Washington Sundar (15 Tests India 2021-present/Sun in his surname)
    Barry Milburn (wk) (3 Tests NZ 1969/Burn as part of his surname)
    Ray Bright (Bright Ray of Sunshine)
    Aaron Summers (3 T20s Hobart Hurricanes 2017-18/Summers)
    Will Somerville (6 Tests New Zealand 2018-21/Somer in surname for Summer)
    Harry Boyle (12 Tests Australia 1879-84/Boil)

    This team will play a pretend exhibition match against the World 11 Winter of Cricket Team:

    Aamer Sohail (c) (Hail in surname)
    Alex Hales (11 Tests England 2015-16/Hail)
    Suresh Raina (18 Tests India 2010-15/Rain)
    Aidan Blizzard (21 FC Vic/SA 2005/06-2010/11/Blizzard)
    Storm Parker (T20s for Hong Kong/Storm)
    Colin McCool (wk) (14 Tests Australia 1946-50/Cool in surname)
    Nick Winter (22 FC South Australia 2018-present/Winter)
    Sam Rainbird (56 FC Tasmania 2012/13-2023/Rain in surname)
    John Snow (Snow)
    Allan Frost (24 FC South Australia 1965/66-1967-68/Frost)
    Salmi Rain (17 matches Gzira United Nepal/Rain)

    Venue: Suncorp (Sun) Stadium
    Entertainment: The songs “Summer of ‘69”, by Bryan Adams and “Winter in America”, by Doug Ashdown

    Let’s hope for a good game of cricket where the players won’t be too hot and cold!

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