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Gutted for Mark Butcher. The Surrey cricket captain was just one duet away
from his first major light entertainment crown, only to see karaoke glory on Just
The Two Of Us snatched away from him by the public phone vote. In a
cruel winter altogether for English cricket, this was surely the darkest
night of them all.
Expect the post mortems to be long and furious, and to focus unsparingly on
the coaching role of Sarah Brightman, the first professional in living
memory to be handed a cricketer in a pro-celebrity challenge show and to
fail to deliver a title at the end of it. Such an outcome seemed unthinkable
in the Tufnell/Ramprakash/Gough era. Talk about squandering the promise of a
golden generation. The words Sven, Göran and Eriksson come to mind.
The inquest will also need to get to the bottom of whoever it was who, before
a lightly swung, finals-night rendition of Moon River, issued Butch
with the fatal instruction to sing scat. “Beep-a-dot n’doody,” indeed. Yes,
it was only a couple of bars, but you can get shot for committing scat in
2007 and Butch can perhaps consider himself lucky, in the circumstances,
that he was merely evicted rather than painfully beaten with sticks by an
anguished audience and suspended from the studio’s gantry.
There was further controversy when Hannah Waterman, the eventual winner,
alerted viewers to her intention to wear a low-cut dress for her final
number, in the event that the public voted her through. Analysts agree that
this almost certainly precipitated a decisive swing in the actress’s
direction among undecided voters. Butcher, who could hardly have been
expected to fight fire with fire in this area, simply had no answer.
Clamour to see the cricketer’s cleavage was minimal going into the series, and
stayed at that level fairly consistently throughout, so as soon as Waterman
played the chest card, the contest was no longer taking place on a level
playing field. It’s bound to rankle, and although Waterman could fairly
claim to be merely using “everything available”, it’s an area that, for the
sake of the competition’s integrity, the administrators would now do well to
take a long look at.
Still, when all is said and done, there were consolations a-plenty for
Butcher. He earned a new nickname from Brightman (“the Big Bear”) and how
many county cricketers can say the same? What’s more, on finals night, Tito
Jackson, one of the contest’s judges, brought glad tidings from Michael, his
controversy-inundated brother. “In his book, every one of you are winners,”
Tito explained.
Obviously, it would have been nice to hear more specifically where Michael
ranked the batsman’s chances against Marti Pellow, among others, but you
can’t have everything, and if you had told Butcher at the beginning of the
domestic season that, come January, he would be receiving the best, if
diplomatically vague, wishes of the King of Pop, he would have taken that, I
think.
And even though he finished third, no one was doubting Butch’s potential. Tito
was insistent. “Mark, change careers. Become a performer.” That said, Tito
also suggested that the dancer Brendan Cole’s version of Brown Sugar
was better than Mick Jagger’s, at which point the show’s connection with
events in the real world — tenuous at the best of times — seemed to slacken
to the point where it became irrecoverable.
Still, Brightman, too, spied a future in the business for Butch. “He’s got it
all if he wants to make singing his profession.” Well, do you, Butch? My
tip: lose the girl. Does that sound ruthless? Well, it’s a ruthless
business.
Further bravery against the odds at the BDO World Darts Championship at the
Lakeside, where Davy “The Face” Richardson went into his first-round match
with two cracked ribs, suffered falling over while trying to put on his
trousers. That, as Ray Stubbs of the BBC quite rightly pointed out, is “not
something you normally hear in sport”. Nor in many other places, really.
And lest you infer from the darting context that “The Face” must be some kind
of unhelpfully cumbersome beer monster, let me underline that, even with his
trousers safely in place, the unseeded Englishman is only marginally thicker
than a stick of celery. Maybe that was his problem, in fact. In any
trouser-related tumble, the ribs on the larger kind of darter would have
been less exposed. These are the kinds of upsets that your typical player
bounces straight back from.
Anyway, blessedly, Richardson managed to get to the oche without further
injury, and then spurred himself through the pain barrier to secure a 3-1
victory over Vincent van der Voort, a player described by Bobby “The King of
Bling” George as “very spasmotic”. Well put.
“People say darts isn’t a physical game,” cautioned “The King of Bling”,
reflecting on Richardson’s feat. “But it is.” Too right. It may even be,
from a reckless self-endangerment point of view, more risky than putting on
a pair of trousers. Consider yourself warned.
Giles Smith is a former Sports Columnist of the Year. He is the author of a book about sport on television entitled Midnight in the Garden of Evel Knievel
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