Christopher Martin-Jenkins
Attend an evening with Andre Agassi

Cricket hooked me early in life. With a bat and a ball it is easy to explain
why. The sheer pleasure of timing a stroke for the first time, the sound of
that resonant “tock”, the swift dispatch of the ball to some gratifyingly
distant place can be enough to hook anyone with an eye for a ball. For the
fielder it is the catch that sticks in an outstretched hand or the throw
that hits the stumps. As for the bowler’s joy in hitting the stumps and
hearing that distinctive clip of parting bails! It could conjure up images
and analogies that would not be appropriate.
So let’s just call them champagne moments. I should have had one as a
schoolboy at Lord’s in 1963, but I was out for 99. At least Mike Atherton
and I have that in common, but his 99 was against Australia at Lord’s. I
would not have minded that on my CV.
Reporting and commentating have been extremely fortunate alternatives,
however, so here are 25 of the happiest memories, starting with some
experienced only from a distance.
1953
England regained the Ashes at the Oval after (just on) 19 years. Hutton,
Edrich, May, Compton, Graveney, Bailey, Evans, Laker, Lock, Trueman, Bedser.
If ever a team deserved MBEs to a man it was that one. Happily, most of them
eventually got honours of one kind or another.
1954-55
Sydney. The game that sparked that rarity - a comprehensive England win in a
series in Australia. It was cold at home and I remember my father in his
dressing-gown coming in to tell me that Tyson, Statham, Bailey and Appleyard
- but especially the ferociously fast Frank Tyson - had bowled out
Australia.
1956
Jim Laker's incredible 19 wickets at Old Trafford. I have clear memories of
every phase of that extraordinary match and of going outside to play cricket
in the garden as soon as Len Maddocks had been leg-before to complete the
rout. Off went Jim to his immortality with his sweater over his left
shoulder and everyone's ecstasy carefully suppressed.
1958
Surrey's seventh county championship title in a row. All the usual suspects:
May, Barrington, Bedser and Loader, Laker and Lock. Micky Stewart brilliant
at short leg. Arthur McIntyre neat as a pin behind the stumps.
1960
The tied Test in Brisbane. Three wickets in the last over, Wes Hall with his
shirt hanging out and mayhem. Frank Worrell the personification of dignity.
Joe Solomon the unlikely hero.
1963
The never-to-be-forgotten draw at Lord's. Ted Dexter in his pomp. Hall and
Worrell again; Brian Close in his finest hour. A radio experience this time
- John Arlott, Robert Hudson and, at the death, Alan Gibson, calmly and
clearly taking us through that last, pulsating over.
1966
Lord's. Garry Sobers supreme with ball and bat and Colin Milburn's roistering
126 not out.
1968
Derek Underwood's ruthless hounding of Australia after the rain at the Oval.
Nine fieldsmen round the bat and sawdust everywhere. No Ashes, but a drawn
series and justice at last, after a succession of series in which England
were as good.
1973
Trent Bridge, the friendliest ground of all. Bevan Congdon's 176 to delay an
England victory. I dash down the M1 to be in time for our elder son to be
delivered. Brian Johnston announces the birth and an astrologist writes to
say the stars portend that he will become a cricket commentator. Close, he
is a barrister.
1974
Sabina Park. Dennis Amiss saves England with a noble 262 not out on my first
tour for the BBC. There is a romance about breaking such news.
1975
Lord's. The first World Cup final. Clive Lloyd in his pomp, Viv Richards
brilliant in the covers, West Indies triumphant but Australia tough to beat
as always. The limited-overs game at its captivating best, in the days
before it became tired and overdone.
1981
Headingley. This has to be the Dom Perignon 2000. The match that England
could not win but did. Ian Botham's wonderfully free-spirited innings and
Bob Willis's sensational fast bowling on a horribly tricky pitch on the last
day. As in 2005, the matches that followed, at Edgbaston and Old Trafford,
were scarcely less inspiring.
1985
Edgbaston in glorious weather and more Aussie bashing. David Gower in supreme
form, ten wickets in the match for Richard Ellison, and Edmonds and Emburey
in harness.
1986-87
The MCG: The most recent series victory in Australia. I was on the air when
Gladstone Small took the catch off Phil Edmonds that won the Ashes.
1991
Graham Gooch's masterly 154 under heavy clouds at Headingley against
Marshall, Patterson, Ambrose and Walsh.
1993
Shane Warne's astounding first ball in a Test match in England. Poor Gatt!
1994
West Indies had been invincible for a decade, so the Barbados Test, when Alec
Stewart scored a hundred in each innings and Angus Fraser took eight for 75,
was probably Atherton's finest hour as captain.
1994
Antigua. Brian Lara breaking Sobers' Test record score, for the first time.
No batsman gave me more pleasure.
1995-96
Atherton again: the famous rearguard at the Wanderers. Ten hours and 45
minutes of unyielding concentration.
2001
Robin Martin-Jenkins, down breeze for once, taking seven for 51 at Horsham in
a season when he also scored a double hundred at Taunton. Chris Adams, the
Sussex captain, called him a “complete” cricketer and England class. There
would be champagne then!
2003
Sussex's long-awaited first championship title. Mushtaq Ahmed's genius,
Murray Goodwin's winning runs on a sunlit afternoon at Hove but the ultimate
team performance.
2004
Kensington Oval. A sultry Saturday morning. Matthew Hoggard takes a hat-trick
to complete what Stephen Harmison started at Sabina Park.
2005
Edgbaston, Old Trafford and Trent Bridge. Three of the best Tests of all
packed into a few heady weeks, followed by Kevin Pietersen's clinching tour
de force. The desperate finish at Edgbaston has to be the pick.
2006
Bombay. An England victory against the odds, always the most exciting. It all
went wrong for Andrew Flintoff, the captain, soon after, but this was a
great team effort, with Strauss, Panesar and Udal.
2006
James Kirtley's sensational burst of bowling to win the C&G final at
Lord's. Sussex, again. Sorry!
— Christopher Martin-Jenkins will continue to contribute regularly to The
Times after stepping down from his role as Chief Cricket Correspondent.
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