THIS sound familiar to anyone? Regular first-class cricketer plays for over seven years, not excelling but not sinking into the abyss as many have before. Mid-table mediocrity so to speak.
Said cricketer then wakes up one morning and discovers the cricket fairies (I'd like to imagine Merv Hughes in a Tinkerbell outfit tip-toeing around the house so not to wake anyone up) have turned him into a batting champion. Centuries flow from his bat like beer from the tap, eventually leading to a long-awaited Test call-up.
Once there our hero doesn't disgrace himself either, battling a difficult pitch and strong bowling attack to make a useful 60-odd before being caught behind; his second innings was less sucessful with an lbw decision against him early on.
Should probably mention at this point that our hero is already a published author.
If you're an Australian cricket fan, you probably know the answer. And if you said his first name is Ed, we'd be in agreement.
But our hero for this particular story isn't new Australian opener Ed Cowan - instead, it's former England player Ed Smith.
Mind you though, most of the above could be for Messers Cowan or Smith - and there's more to it than that. Both made their first-class debuts at a young age for world-famous British universities (Cowan at 20 for Oxford, Smith at 18 for Cambridge); both struggled about 4 years into their first-class careers; and both have a reputation for being intellectual in a career (professional sport) that doesn't always look that kindly on those outside the norm.
Probably the major difference between the two Eds is the timing of their season diaries. Cowan's In The Firing Line is about his 2010/2011 season, where his average average of 34 is partially balanced out by a century in the Sheffield Shield final that helps Tasmania to only their second-ever win. Smith's On And Off The Field narrates his amazing 2003 season, where he hit six centuries in six matches to metaphorically blast the door to English selection down with a cannon, bazooka, laser and anything else that came to hand. Both wrote their diaries with very different home lives as well: Cowan is happily married to media personality Virginia Lette and settled in Hobart, while Smith both broke up from his girlfriend and moved house just before the start of the 2003 season. Smith was already a published author by this point, his Playing Hard Ball: County Cricket and Big League Baseball comparing English professional cricket with Major League Baseball.
What is uncanny about the two though is the similarity in writing styles. Both Eds reveal plenty about themselves in their diaries, how they treated triumph and disaster; and even the little tweeks they made to go from Ed Plodder to Ed Dasher. (No, I'm not going to tell you what they were - you have to read the books for that).
So what happens next? For Ed Smith, that 64 on debut remained his highest score after his remaining four innings gave him just 23 runs and had him fade out of England contention. He continued playing for Kent for one more season before moving to Middlesex, retiring in 2008 before becoming a major writer for The Times newspaper.
For Ed Cowan, that chapter is yet to be written. One hopes that when it is, it's written in a way that will continue to do credit to Eds the cricketing world over.
Saturday, 7 January 2012
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