Saint Gough’s Day

Neil Anderson expresses his gratitude to Gough Whitlam on the 41st anniversary of the 1972 “It’s Time” election win.

The Hunnas still have more to give: A Profile interview with Mark Seymour

Jake ‘Cobba’ Stevens wants to throw his arms around you, and take you to the holy grail of Oz Rock. Cobba interviews Mark Seymour the lead man of the legendary Hunters & Collectors.

Adelaide Oval Reimagined

Michael Sexton reassures the doubters that the sublime essence of Adelaide Oval has been retained. Can he guarantee any bounce from the dubious drop-in pitch?

Cold Night

Another Kate Birrell gem captures a chill evening on the cricket field in watercolours and words. “Maaarvellous”.

Crio’s Question: Will a team of a..holes beat an a..hole team?

Crio thinks ‘team bonding’ is over-rated. Does liking your team mates help performance? Let us know what you think.

Sledging – Don’t single out cricket

Matt Watson reckons sledging is a fact of life, and we should suck it up. See if you agree with him, or if you reckon he’s just a …………………………..

The Right Colours

Vin Maskell offers a gentle meditation (memoir?) about the colours we nail to our mast. A delicate pastry to go with your weekend coffee.

Cricket book launch – Gideon Haigh’s Uncertain Corridors

In good news for cricket fans, Gideon Haigh has a new book out. You are invited to the launch of ‘Uncertain Corridors’ TONIGHT. (Nov 30)

The Great Minds of Footy: School of 2013.

Scribes in the three-quarter time huddle. Squizzy Dimitriadis partially obscured in the front. D.K. Gorman on the left. Orson Kane middle front. Goddess Advantage with firm grip on her red. And many more. (Name them)

1988-89 – a love letter

It’s 25 years since Brutas Mudcake discovered cricket. Curtly Ambrose. Cricket cards. Mervmania. It does not rank as one of the most memorable seasons in cricket history on the surface but to a seven year old, it was magical. But could we possibly beat the Windies?

Six sixes

Mickey Randall takes a trip down memory lane to revisit some of the biggest tonks of our time. Some on the public stage, some local glories. Mickey is sometimes the victim, never the perpetrator.

Straight Talking Irishman tackles Discrimination

Peter Baulderstone offers the companion piece to last week’s blog from top Irish hurling player Conor Cusack about his journey with severe depression. Conor’s even more illustrious brother Donal Og is profiled in this article about his ‘coming out’ as a gay sportsman.

Australia back on the path to grateness

Jeff Dowsing discusses whether victory in the end justifies sometimes distasteful means.

Wear your footy jumper at the launch tonight

Just to emphasise: writers, please wear a footy jumper at the Melbourne launch tonight. It’s a fun part of the evening. (Look in on wonder as middle-aged men squeeze into an old jumper bearing hoops.)

The best sports book award winner announced

The Guardian is at again, this time running excerpts from the best sports books in 2013. It’s a British award (what, no footy?), but buckle in nonetheless.

Doing a Reverse Funky- An Off-Spinner’s Lament

Luke Reynolds shows us that there are still new tricks for old dogs on the cricket field. (We won’t tell Mick about the back.)

Rookie Draft Shock – Almanac gutted

Peter Baulderstone noticed a lot of suspicious names in the AFL Rookie Draft. “Say it ain’t so”.

Crio’s racing (on thin ice!)

Crio takes a quick whirl around the country, then comes home with a scenario that some might consider unlucky.

The ten best sports films

What, no footy films? The Guardian has listed its top celluloid depictions of blood, sweat and tears. Let’s hear about a few of yours.

Ashes Diary 2013-14, Entry no.1

Andrew Starkie offers a calm, sensible, thorough analysis of both teams in the first Ashes Test. Despite this we have decided to publish it.