|
|
The Ashes is a
Test
cricket series, played between
England and
Australia - it is international cricket's oldest and most celebrated rivalry
dating back to 1882. It is currently played nominally biennially, alternately in
England and Australia. However since the game is played during the summer, the
venues being in opposite hemispheres results in the break between series
alternating between 18 months and 30 months. If a series is drawn then the
country holding the Ashes retains them. The last
Ashes series was played in
England in
2005 when England won 2-1, the first time they had won The Ashes in 18 years. An
Ashes Test series is currently underway in Australia
2006-07 with Australia leading 1-0; the next series in England will be held
in 2009. The series is named after a
satirical obituary
published in The Sporting Times in 1882 following the match at
The Oval,
in which Australia beat England in
England for
the first time. The obituary stated that English cricket had died, and the
body will be cremated and the ashes taken to Australia. The English media
dubbed the next English tour, to
Australia
(1882-83) as the quest to regain The Ashes. A small
terracotta urn was presented to the
England captain Ivo Bligh
by a group of
Melbourne women at some point during the 1882-83 tour. The contents of the
urn are reputed to be the ashes of an item of cricket equipment, possibly a
bail, ball or stump. The urn is not used as a
trophy for the
Ashes series, and whichever side holds the Ashes, the urn normally remains in
the
MCC Museum at
Lord's because it was bequeathed to the MCC by Ivo Bligh upon his death.[1]
Since the 1998-99 Ashes series, a
Waterford crystal trophy has been presented to the winners.
The first Test match between England and Australia had been played in 1877,
but the Ashes legend dates back only to their ninth Test match, played in 1882. On the 1882 tour, the Australians played only one Test, at
The Oval in
London. It was
a low-scoring game on a difficult
pitch.
Australia made only 63 runs in their first
innings, and
England, led by
A N Hornby,
took a 38-run lead with a total of 101. In the second innings, Australia made
122, leaving England to score only 85
runs to win. Australian bowler
Fred Spofforth refused to give in, declaring, "This thing can be done." He
devastated the English batting, taking the final four wickets while conceding
only two runs, to leave England a mere seven runs short of victory in one of the
closest and most nail-biting finishes in
cricket history. When England's last batsman went in, the team needed only 10 runs to win, but
the final batsman
Ted Peate
scored only 2 before being bowled by Boyle. The astonished crowd fell silent,
not believing that England could possibly have lost by 7 runs. When what had
happened had sunk in, the crowd cheered the Australians. When Peate returned to the Pavilion he was reprimanded by
W G Grace
for not allowing his partner at the wicket
Charles Studd to get the runs. Despite Studd being one of the best batsman
in England, Peate replied, "I had no confidence in Mr Studd, sir, so thought I
had better do my best." The defeat was widely recorded in the English press. In the 31st August
edition of a magazine called "Cricket: A Weekly Record of The Game" there
appeared a now obscure mock obituary to "English Supremacy in the Cricket Field
which expired on the 29th day of August at the Oval". Two days later,
September
2, 1882 a
second mock obituary, written by
Reginald Brooks, appeared in
The Sporting Times. This notice read as follows: The English media fastened on to this notice and dubbed the English tour to
Australia
of 1882-83 as the quest to regain The Ashes of English Cricket. The
underlying metaphor of this naming is problematic, suggesting that English
cricket is a sentient being which was killed by Australia, cremated and then
somehow went in search of its own remains. The three match series resulted in a
2-1 win to England, notwithstanding a fourth match, won by an Australian XI
whose status remains a matter of dispute. The term "The Ashes" then largely disappears from public use for the next
twenty years; certainly, there is no suggestion that this was the accepted name
for the series. Then following the successful English tour of 1903-04 the
English captain,
Pelham Warner published a book called "How We Recovered The Ashes". Even
though the legend is not referred to in the text, the title was enough to revive
public interest in the legend. The first mention of "The Ashes" in the
Wisden Cricketers' Almanack occurs in 1905 and the first Wisden account of
the legend was included in the 1922 edition. As it took many years for the name the Ashes to be given to the ongoing
series between England and Australia, there was no concept of there being a
representation of the ashes being presented to the winners. As late as 1925, the
following verse appeared in The Cricketers Annual: Nevertheless, several attempts had been made over the years to embody The
Ashes in a physical memorial. Examples include one presented to Warner in 1904,
another to Australian Captain MA Noble in 1909 and another to Australian Captain
WM Woodfall in 1934. The oldest however, and the one to enjoy enduring fame, was the one presented
to Hon Ivo Bligh, later Lord Darnley, during the 1882-83 tour. The precise
nature of the origin of this urn however, is matter of dispute. Based on a
statement by Darnley made in 1894, it was believed that a group of
Victorian ladies, including Darnley's later wife Florence Morphy, made the
presentation after the victory in the third test in 1883. More recent
researchers, in particular Ronald Willis
[2] and
Joy Munns
[3]
have studied the tour in detail and concluded that the presentation was made
after a private cricket match played over Christmas 1882 when the English team
were guests of Sir William Clarke, at his property 'Rupertswood', in
Sunbury, Victoria . This was before the matches had started. The prime
evidence for this theory was provided by a descendant of Lord Clarke. The contents of the Darnley urn are also problematic; they were variously
reported to be the remains of a stump, bail or the outer casing of a ball, but
in 1998, Lord Darnley’s 82-year-old daughter-in-law said they were the remains
of her mother-in-law’s veil, casting a further layer of doubt on the matter.
However during the tour of Australia in 2006/7, the MCC official accompanying
the urn said the veil legend had been discounted, and it was now "95% certain"
that the urn contains the ashes of a cricket bail. Speaking on Channel Nine TV
on 25 November 2006, he also said x-rays of the urn had shown the pedestal and
handles were cracked, and repair work had to be carried out. The urn itself is
made of
terracotta and is about four inches
(10 cm)
tall and may originally have been a perfume jar. A six verse poem appeared in the 1 February edition of Melbourne Punch, the
fourth verse of which makes reference to the urn; at some point this verse was
glued to the urn and remains so to the present day. The verse in question reads
[4]: In February 1883, just before the disputed fourth test, a velvet bag, which
was made by Mrs Ann Fletcher, the daughter of Joseph Hines Clarke and Marion
Wright, both of
Dublin, was given to Bligh to contain the urn. During Darnley’s lifetime, there was little public knowledge of the urn, and
no record of a published photograph exists before 1924. However, when Darnley
died in 1927, his widow presented the urn to the
Marylebone Cricket Club and that was the key event in establishing the urn
as the physical embodiment of the legendary ashes. MCC first displayed the urn
in the Long Room at
Lord's Cricket Ground and since 1953 in the MCC Cricket Museum at the
ground. It is ironic that MCC’s wish for it to be seen by as wide a range of
cricket enthusiasts as possible has led to its being mistaken for an official
trophy. It is in fact a private memento, and for this reason the Ashes urn itself is
never physically awarded to either England or Australia, but is kept permanently
in the Museum where it can be seen together with the specially-made red and gold
velvet bag and the scorecard of the 1882 match. Due to its fragile condition, the urn has been allowed to travel to Australia
only twice. The first occasion was in 1988 for a museum tour as part of
Australia's
Bicentennial celebrations. The second visit is timed to coincide with the
2006/7 Ashes series. The urn arrived on 17 October 2006, going on display at the
Museum of Sydney. It is currently touring to other states, with the final
appearance scheduled at the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery on 21 January 2007. In the 1990s, given Australia's long dominance of the Ashes series, and the
by now universal acceptance of the Darnley urn as ‘The Ashes’, the idea was
mooted that the victorious team in an Ashes series should be awarded the urn as
a trophy and allowed to retain it until the next series. As its condition is
fragile, and it is a prized exhibit at the MCC Cricket Museum, MCC were
reluctant to agree. Furthermore, in 2002, Bligh's great-great-grandson (Lord
Clifton, the heir-apparent to the
Earldom of Darnley) argued that the Ashes urn should not be returned to
Australia as it was essentially the property of his family and only given to the
MCC for safe-keeping. As a compromise, from 1998-99 the MCC commissioned a trophy in the form of a
larger-scale replica of the urn in
Waterford Crystal to award to the winning team of each series. This did
little to diminish the status of the Darnley urn as most important icon in
cricket, the symbol of this most ancient and keenly fought of contests. Later in 1882, following the famous Australian victory at The Oval, the
Honourable Ivo Bligh led an England team to Australia, as he said, to
"recover those ashes". Publicity surrounding the series was intense, and it was
at some time during this series that the Ashes urn was crafted. Australia won
the first Test by
nine wickets, but in the next two England were victorious. At the end of the
third Test, England were generally considered to have "won back the Ashes" 2–1.
A fourth match was in fact played, against a "United Australian XI", which was
stronger than the Australian side that had competed in the previous matches;
this game, however, is not generally considered part of the 1882/83 series. It
is counted as a Test, but as a standalone.
After Bligh's victory, there was an extended period of English dominance. The
tours generally had fewer Tests in the 1880s and 1890s than people have grown
accustomed to in more recent years. England only lost four Ashes Tests in the
1880s, out of 23 played, and they won all the seven series contested. There was more chopping and changing in the teams, given that there was no
official board of selectors for each country (at times, two competing sides
toured a nation), and popularity with the fans varied. The 1890s games were more
closely fought, Australia taking their first series win since 1882 with a 2–1
victory in 1891-92. But England still predominated, winning the next three
series despite continuing player disputes. This series began in sensational fashion when England won the First Test at
Sydney by just 10 runs having followed on. Australia had scored a massive 586 (Syd
Gregory 201,
George Giffen 161) and then dismissed England for 325. But England responded
with 437 and then dramatically dismissed Australia for 166 with
Bobby Peel
taking 6/67. At the close of the penultimate day's play, Australia had been
113-2, only needing 64 more runs. But heavy rain fell overnight, and next
morning the two slow left-arm bowlers, Peel and
Johnny Briggs, were all but unplayable. England went on to win the series 3-2 after it had been all square before the
Final Test, which England won by 6 wickets. The English heroes were Peel, with
27 wickets in the series at 26.70, and
Tom
Richardson, with 32 at 26.53. The 1902 series in England became one of the most famous in the history of
Test Match cricket. Five matches were played and the first two were drawn after
being hit by bad weather. In the first match (the first Test ever played at
Edgbaston), after scoring 376, England bowled out Australia for 36 (Wilfred
Rhodes 7-17) and reduced them to 46-2 when they followed on. Australia won
the Third and Fourth Tests at
Bramall
Lane and
Old Trafford respectively. At Old Trafford, Australia won by just 3 runs
after
Victor Trumper had scored 104 on a "bad wicket", reaching his hundred before
lunch on the first day. England won the last Test at
The Oval by
one wicket. Chasing 263 to win, they slumped to 48-5 before
Jessop's 104 gave them a chance. He reached his hundred in just 75 minutes.
The last wicket pair of
George
Hirst and Rhodes were left with 15 runs to get, and duly did so. When Rhodes
joined him, Hirst is famously supposed to have said: "We'll get them in singles,
Wilfred." Unfortunately the story appears to be
apocryphal
and in any case they are believed to have scored at least one two among the
singles. After what the
MCC saw as the problems of the earlier professional and amateur series, they
decided to take control of organising tours themselves, and this led to the
first MCC tour of Australia in 1903-1904. England won it against the odds, and
Plum
Warner, the England captain, wrote up his version of the tour in his book
How We Recovered The Ashes. The title of this book revived the Ashes legend
and it was after this that England v Australia series were customarily referred
to as "The Ashes". England and Australia shared the spoils for the next few years. The entrance
of
South Africa onto the world cricketing scene meant less time for Ashes
series, but even so there were four played after Plum Warner's series, each of
the sides taking two victories. In 1905 England's captain,
Stanley Jackson, not only won the series 2-0, but also won the toss in all
five matches and headed both the batting and the bowling averages. England won
the last series in 1911-1912 by four matches to one, with
Jack Hobbs
establishing himself as a regular with three centuries and
Frank
Foster (32 wickets at 21.62) and
Sydney Barnes (34 wickets at 22.88) forming a formidable opening
partnership. England then retained the Ashes when they won the Triangular tournament,
which also featured
South Africa, in 1912. England looked as if they had established themselves
as the dominating force by the time
World War
I intervened and brought a halt to all international cricket. However the
1912 Australian touring party had been severely weakened by a dispute that
caused Clem
Hill,
Victor Trumper,
Warwick Armstrong,
Tibby
Cotter,
Sammy
Carter and
Vernon Ransford to be omitted. After the war, Australia took firm control of both the Ashes and world
cricket. For the first time, the tactic of using two express bowlers in tandem
paid off as
Jack
Gregory and
Ted
McDonald regularly destroyed the England batting. Australia recorded
thumping victories both in England and on home soil. They won the first eight
matches in succession, and England only won one Test out of fifteen from the end
of the war until 1925. In a rain-hit series in 1926, however, England managed to eke out a 1–0
victory with a win in the final Test at The Oval. Because the series was at
stake, the match was to be "timeless", ie played to a finish. Australia had a
narrow first innings lead of 22. Jack Hobbs and
Herbert Sutcliffe took the score to 49-0 at the end of the second day, a
lead of 27. Heavy rain fell overnight, and next day the pitch soon developed
into a traditional sticky wicket. England seemed doomed to be bowled out cheaply
and to lose the match. In spite of the very difficult batting conditions,
however, Hobbs and Sutcliffe took their partnership to 172 before Hobbs was out
for exactly 100. Sutcliffe went on to make 161 and in the end England won the
game comfortably. Despite the appearance of
Donald Bradman, Australia could not win the next series in 1928-29 either,
losing 4–1. England had a very strong batting side, with
Walter Hammond contributing 905 runs at an average of 113.12, and Hobbs,
Sutcliffe and
Patsy
Hendren all scoring heavily; the bowling was more than adequate, without
being outstanding. Bradman won the next series in 1930 almost by himself (974 runs at 139.14),
as one of the best batting line-ups of all time began to form in the early
1930s, including Bradman himself,
Stan
McCabe and
Bill
Ponsford. It was the prospect of bowling at this line-up that caused
England's captain
Douglas Jardine to think up the
Bodyline
tactic. In the
Headingley
Test of 1930, Bradman made 334, reaching 309* at the end of the first day,
including reaching his hundred before lunch. However he himself thought that his
254 in the preceding match, at
Lord's, was an
even better innings. England hung on until the final Test, at The Oval, which
they went into at 1-1. However yet another double hundred by Bradman, and 7-92
by
Percy Hornibrook in England's second innings, enabled Australia to win by an
innings.
Clarrie Grimmett's 29 wickets at 31.89 for Australia in this high-scoring
series were also important. In 1932, after Bradman's routing of the English team in the previous series,
Douglas Jardine developed a tactic of instructing his
fast
bowlers to bowl at the bodies of the Australian batsmen, with the goal of
forcing them to defend their bodies with their bats, and provide easy catches to
a stacked leg
side field. Jardine insisted that the tactic was legitimate and called it
leg theory but it was widely disparaged and its opponents dubbed it
bodyline (from on the line of the body). Although England won the
Ashes, bodyline caused such a furore in Australia that diplomats had to
intervene to prevent serious harm to Anglo-Australian relations, and the
MCC eventually changed the
laws of cricket to prevent anyone from using the tactic again. Jardine's comments summed up England's views: "I've not travelled 6,000 miles
to make friends. I'm here to win the Ashes." On the batting-friendly
wickets that
prevailed in the late 1930s, most Tests up to the
Second
World War still gave results. It should be borne in mind that Tests in
Australia prior to the war were all played to a finish. Many batting records
were set in this period. Len
Hutton scored 364 at
The Oval to
give England a draw in the 1938 series. This was the world record Test
innings at
the time. Several high partnerships were recorded through the 1930s, many of
them involving Bradman. Australia's first tour of England after
World
War II, in 1948, was led by the 39-year-old Bradman in his last appearance
representing Australia. His team has gone down in cricketing legend as
The Invincibles, as they played 36 matches including five Tests, and
remained unbeaten on the tour. They won 27 matches, drawing only 9, including of
course the 4–0 Ashes series victory. This series is also known for one of the most poignant moments in cricket
history, as Bradman batted for Australia in the fifth Test at The Oval — his
last — needing to score only 4 runs to maintain a career
batting average of 100.
Eric
Hollies bowled him second ball for a duck, denying him those 4 runs and
sending him into retirement with a career average of 99.94. Australia gradually weakened after 1948, allowing England back into the fray
in the early 1950s when they won three successive Ashes series, from 1953 to
1956 to be arguably the best Test side in the world at the time. In 1954/55, Australia's batsmen had no answer to the pace of
Frank
Tyson and
Brian
Statham. A see-sawing series in 1956 saw a record that will probably never be beaten:
off-spinner
Jim Laker's monumental effort at
Old Trafford when he bowled 68 of 191 overs to take nineteen out of twenty
possible Australian wickets. Never has the phrase "he won the match
single-handedly" been more appropriate. England's dominance was not to last, however. Australia thumped them 4–0 when
they next toured in 1958-59, having found a good bowler of their own in
Richie Benaud who took 31 wickets in the 5-Test series. England failed to win any series during the 1960s, a period dominated by
draws as teams found it more prudent to save face with a draw than risk losing.
Of a total of 25 Ashes Tests playing during this decade, Australia won seven and
England three. It was in the 1960s that the predominance of England and
Australia in world cricket was seriously challenged for the first time. West
Indies defeated England twice in the mid-sixties and then South Africa, in its
last series before it was banned, completely outplayed Australia. In 1970/71,
Ray Illingworth led England to a 2-0 win in Australia, mainly because of
John Snow's
fast bowling, while
Geoff
Boycott and
John
Edrich scored the runs. In the mid-1970s, with England clearly going into decline and having to rely
on county-class batsmen, Australian pace bowlers
Jeff
Thomson and
Dennis Lillee wreaked havoc. Australia won the 1977 Centenary Test (which
was not an Ashes contest) but then a storm broke as
Kerry
Packer announced his intention to form
World Series Cricket. England was already in decline and no longer a match for West Indies. World
Series Cricket damaged Australia too and for many years they struggled in Test
cricket. The Ashes had long been seen as a sort of cricket world championship
but that view was no longer feasible. Ian
Botham started the series as England captain but was forced to resign or was
sacked (depending on the source) after Australia took a 1-0 lead in the first
two Tests of the 1981 series.
Mike
Brearley, who had previously retired from Test cricket, agreed to be
reappointed before the Third Test at Headingley. Australia looked certain to
take a 2-0 lead in the third Test when they forced England to follow-on 227 runs
behind. England, despite being 135 for 7, produced a second innings total of 356
with Botham scoring 149*. Chasing just 130, Australia was dismissed for 111,
with Bob
Willis taking 8/43. It was the first time since 1894/95 that a team
following on had won an Ashes Test. Under Brearley's leadership, England went on
to win the next two matches before a drawn final match at The Oval. There is no doubt that this was an exciting and entertaining series but it
must be seen as a paradox in that the excitement was produced by two generally
disappointing teams, neither of which could match the
West Indies at the time. Australia had
Greg
Chappell back in 1982–83, while the England team was weakened by the
enforced omission of the
South African rebels, particularly
Graham
Gooch and
John
Emburey. Australia went two-nil up after three Tests, but England won the
fourth Test by 3 runs (after a 70-run last wicket stand) to set up the final
decider. However, the game was drawn. In 1985 England were bolstered by the return of
Graham
Gooch and
John
Emburey as well as the emergence at international level of
Tim
Robinson and
Mike
Gatting. Australia, under
Allan
Border were weakened by a rebel South African tour, the loss of
Terry Alderman who dominated the 1981 and 1983 series a particular factor.
England won 3–1, with
David
Gower scoring a career-high 215 in the fifth Test to help England to a
2–1-lead, and an innings win in the final test. The 1986/87 England side started badly and attracted some criticism[5].
However,
Chris Broad got three hundreds in successive tests and bowling successes
from
Graham Dilley and
Gladstone Small meant England won 2–1. The final test was again marred by a
controversial umpiring decision as
Dean Jones
was given not out early on in his innings to what appeared a legitimate catch.
He went on to score 185* as Australia recorded their only win. After those wins, however, a period of extended Australian dominance began,
and England did not win an Ashes series again until 2005. It was the Australia of old who arrived in England in 1989 and proceeded in a
determined and professional manner to demolish a poor England team and win the
series 4–0.
Allan
Border had stood firm through the lean years and now enjoyed the company of
some top-class team mates with the arrival on the scene of
Mark Taylor,
Merv
Hughes,
David Boon,
Ian Healy
and above all
Steve
Waugh, who was to be a thorn in England's side for years to come. There can be little doubt that England reached rock-bottom in the 1990s and
was at one stage at the foot of the international rankings. After
re-establishing its credibity in 1989, Australia underlined its superiority with
a succession of victories in 1990/91, 1993, 1994/95, 1997, 1998/99, 2001 and
2002/03 series — all by convincing margins. Great Australian players in these years were fast bowler
Glenn
McGrath; wicketkeeper-batsman
Adam Gilchrist; batsmen
Justin Langer,
Damien Martyn and
Ricky
Ponting who succeed Waugh as captain after 2002/03; and an unorthodox
leg-spin bowler from Victoria called
Shane
Warne. Australia's record since 1989 has impacted upon the overall statistics
between the two sides. Before the 1989 series began, Australia had won 36.9% of
all Tests played against England, England 33.5% with 29.7% of matches ending in
draws. Previous to the 2005 series, Australia had won 40.8% of all Tests,
England 31% with 28.1% drawn.[6] In the period between 1989 and the beginning of the 2005 series, the two
sides had played 43 times; Australia winning 28 times, England 7 times, with 8
draws. Even more astonishingly, only a single England victory had come in a
match in which the Ashes were still at stake, namely the first Test of the 1997
series. All others were consolation victories when the Ashes had been secured by
Australia.
[7] England were undefeated in Test matches in the 2004 calendar year, which took
the team to second in the
LG ICC Test Championship and raised hopes that the 2005 Ashes series would
be closely fought. In fact, the series was even more competitive than anyone had
predicted, and was still undecided as the final session of the final test began.
The first Test at
Lord's was convincingly won by Australia, but in the remaining four matches
the teams were evenly matched, and England fought back. England won the second
Test by 2 runs, the smallest victory by a runs margin in Ashes history, and the
second-closest such victory in all Tests. The rain-affected third Test ended
with the last two Australian batsmen holding out for a draw, and England won the
fourth Test by three wickets after forcing Australia to
follow on
for the first time in 191 Tests. A draw in the final Test gave England victory
in an Ashes series for the first time in 18 years, and their first Ashes victory
at home since 1985. Experienced journalists including Richie Benaud rated the
series as the most exciting in living memory. It has been compared with the
great series of the distant past, such as 1894/95 and 1902.
A team must win a series to gain the right to hold the Ashes. A drawn series
results in the previous holders retaining the Ashes. To date, a total of 62
Ashes series have been played with Australia winning 30, England winning 27. The
remaining five series were drawn, with Australia retaining the Ashes four times
and England retaining it once. Ashes series have generally been played over five Test matches, although
there have been four match series (1938; 1975) and six match series (1970-71;
1974-75; 1978-79; 1981; 1985; 1989; 1993 and 1997). 293 matches have been
played, with Australia winning 115 times, England 92 times, and 86 draws.
Australians have made 264
centuries in
Ashes Tests, twenty-three of them over 200, while Englishmen have scored 212
centuries, of which ten have been scores over 200. On 41 occasions, individual
Australians have taken ten
wickets in a
match. Englishmen have performed that feat 38 times. The Ashes is one of the most fiercely contested competitions in cricket. The failure of England to regain the Ashes for 16 years from 1989, coupled
with the global dominance of the Australian team, had dulled the lustre of the
series in recent years. But the close results in the
2005 Ashes series, and the overall high quality and competitiveness of the
cricket, have boosted the popularity of the sport in Britain and considerably
enhanced the profile of the Ashes around the world. Whilst the tension of the
matches has caused an occasional angry moment, the matches were generally played
with good spirit, and
sportsmanship of the players of both sides has been high, with commentators
often highlighting
Andrew Flintoff consoling
Brett Lee
at the end of the second Test as epitomising this. In interviews following the
final match, players from both sides were quick to congratulate their opponents,
both the individual players and the team as a whole. Tickets for most of the upcoming
2006-07 Ashes series in Australia sold out on the day of release, giving a
strong indication of the intense and renewed interest in the contest
[3]. The series alternate between England and Australia, and within each country
each of the (usually) five matches is held at a different
cricket ground. In Australia, the grounds currently used are
The Gabba (first staged an England-Australia Test in the 1932-33 season),
Adelaide Oval (1884-85),
The WACA, Perth
(1970-71) the
Melbourne Cricket Ground (1876-77) and the
Sydney Cricket Ground (1881-82). One Test was held at the
Brisbane Exhibition Ground in 1928-29. Traditionally, Melbourne hosts the
Boxing Day Test. In England
the grounds used are
The Oval
(since 1880),
Old Trafford (1884),
Lord's (1884),
Trent
Bridge (1899),
Headingley (1899) and
Edgbaston (1902). One Test was held at
Bramall
Lane, Sheffield in 1902.
Sophia Gardens in
Cardiff,
Wales is
scheduled to hold its first Ashes Test in 2009. The popularity and reputation of the cricket series has led to many other
events taking the name for England against Australia contests. The best-known
and longest-running of these events is the
rugby
league contest between
Great Britain and
Australia (see
Rugby League Ashes). The contest first started in 1908, the name being
suggested by the touring Australians. Another example is in the British
television show
Gladiators,
where two series were based around the Australia–England contest. The urn is also featured in the
science fiction
comedy novel
Life, the Universe and Everything, the third "Hitchhiker's
Guide To The Galaxy" book by
Douglas Adams. The urn is stolen by alien robots, as it is part of the key
needed to unlock the "Wikkit Gate" and release the imprisoned world of
"Krikkit". In the cinema, the Ashes featured in the
film The Final
Test, released in 1953, based on a television play by
Terence Rattigan. It stars
Jack Warner as an England cricketer playing the last Test of his career,
which is the last of an Ashes series; the film contains cameo appearances from
prominent contemporary Ashes cricketers including
Jim Laker
and
Denis Compton.[8]
Text and images
from Wikipedia, the free
encyclopedia. under the
|