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Richie Benaud’s Blue Suede Shoes

By: David Kynaston, Harry Ricketts
Narrated by: David Thorpe
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Publisher's Summary

LONGLISTED FOR THE WILLIAM HILL SPORTS BOOK OF THE YEAR PRIZE 2024
Bloomsbury presents Richie Benaud’s Blue Suede Shoes by David Kynaston and Harry Ricketts, read by David Thorpe.

David Kynaston and Harry Ricketts relive the compelling story of a gripping Ashes-deciding Test match that heralded the dawn of an new era for English cricket.

The Ashes are on the line as England and Australia meet at Old Trafford in July 1961 for the fourth Test. For most of the match, England have their noses ahead – until a dramatic final day, of intensely fluctuating fortunes, as the tourists eventually storm to victory. In short, an Ashes classic, told here by David Kynaston and Harry Ricketts in vivid and immersive detail, recreating the sometimes agonising experience of millions of armchair viewers and listeners.

At the heart of Richie Benaud’s Blue Suede Shoes are two strikingly contrasting personalities: England’s captain, the Cambridge-educated, risk-averse, establishment-minded Peter May; and Australia’s captain, the charismatic, risk-taking, open-minded Benaud – a contrast not only between two individuals, but between two cricketing and indeed national cultures. Whereas Benaud and Australia symbolised a new, meritocratic era, May and England seemed, in what was still an amateur-dominated game, to look back to an old imperial legacy out of sync with the dawning Sixties.

The sharply observed final chapters take the story up to the present day. They relate the ‘after-lives’ of the match’s key participants, including Ted Dexter, Bill Lawry and Fred Trueman as well as May and Benaud; trace the continuing chequered relationship between English cricket and broader social change; and, after six more decades of fierce Ashes rivalry, wrestle with the perennial conundrum for all England supporters – why do the baggy green caps usually beat us?

©2024 David Kynaston and Harry Ricketts (P)2024 Bloomsbury Publishing Plc

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A slow start but it came together in the end

Focusing mainly on one test match was interesting. I can remember as a very small boy in England wishing England to win and of course being disappointed. As an adult living in Sydney by very far from where Richie Benaud lived I have a different take. I remember more Richie as a test commentator much loved and missed. Obviously written from an English point of view it’s sad to hear of the decline of cricket in England. Hopefully it will be temporary but in this age of instance everything test cricket may have seen its best days. As far as I am concerned there is nothing better than a good test match.

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