Showing posts with label Alastair Cook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alastair Cook. Show all posts

Tuesday, 7 December 2010

Ha

Posted by Tania Kindersley.

Regarding today's post:

As so often, I write something about writing, and go back to find that it contains schoolgirl errors. TWO typos today; as always, you all very politely looked the other way. I suppose it must be fitting that it should happen in a post about embracing imperfection. The good old universe nudging me in the ribs, as usual.

They are corrected now, so all manner of things shall be well. And you get a bonus picture, of something which is pretty close to perfect, at least at the moment.

The magnificent ALASTAIR COOK, whose astonishing batting helped England to a most uncharacteristic and glorious defeat of the Australian cricket team on home ground:

Alistair Cook at the crease 

(Picture by Getty Images.)

Actually, Cook is rather ideal for today's theme. He might be scoring double hundreds this month and be the hero of the hour, but not that long ago he quite lost his form, and could not hit a barn door. All the critics sharpened their knifes, with a nasty, gleeful strafing sound. Not good enough, they said; lacking technique; not fit to play for England. The very same people who are now falling over themselves to praise him were sneering at him only weeks ago. I do not understand enough about the intricacies of the game to quite explain it, but it was something to do with the way he used his legs, or did not bend his knee, or something. Look at that picture. Can you see anything amiss with that bendy knee? (Also bear in mind he was doing that for over ten hours in blazing sun.) It reminds me of that part in Charade when Audrey Hepburn gazes up at Cary Grant and says Do you know what is wrong with you? and he smiles down at her and says No, and she grins blissfully and says: Absolutely nothing.

Anyway, it just goes to show that you can have absolutely crappy streaks and then come back and win things for your country.

Really am stopping now.

Saturday, 4 December 2010

A brief divagation on the national character

Posted by Tania Kindersley.

When I am not thinking about who invented the expression 'quantative easing' or what exactly is wrong with the brain of Senator John McCain, I sometimes contemplate the national character. I am not quite sure if such a thing exists. I like to think it does, because I do so adore making sweeping statements about plucky Britons or can-do Americans or the intellectually superior French. The problem is the exceptions which may prove or disprove the rule. (My favourite German friend is not at all efficient and very funny and rather louche, as if he wakes up each morning determined to undermine stereotype.)

Also, while nations are stitched together by institutions and history and culture, they are also made up of millions of diverse individuals who peskily refuse to go quietly into good boxes. Is a farmer in Devon going to have the exact same set of assumptions as an accountant in Burnley? I can't be sure. A trannie in Soho might have a slightly different outlook than a gentleman who owns half of Wales. (That was not a figure of speech. My friend the Man of Letters was at dinner last week with someone who actually does own half of Wales. Or it might have been Northamptonshire. It is a good thing I do not write for The New York Times; the fact checkers would have steam coming out of their poor ears by now.)

But last night, I did feel very British indeed. After England performed a miracle of bowling in getting Australia out for 245, I allowed myself a little stirring of hope. Then, just before I went to bed, the news came that Andrew Strauss, the England captain, was clean bowled for one. ('Straussy, Straussy, Straussy,' cried the cricket fans on Twitter, in noisy dismay.) And here was my immediate thought: well, that's it then. That's it, then. I put away childish things, like dreams of victory, and stumped off stoically to bed. There was almost some relief in it; we were back to business as usual, which consists of tiny flickers of vain hope before the hard crash of reality. I had to be extra stoical, because the boiler chose that moment to conk out, so I went to bed in all my clothes, with five blankets, two eiderdowns, dogs arranged over my legs for extra insulation, and a final blanket over them so they did not freeze. It did not occur to me to complain or rage against the dying of the light. As I lay in the perishing cold, I felt the click click click of reset expectations.

It is quite odd, the 'that's it then' response. I am actually very optimistic by nature. I believe things will get better, that most people are good and kind, that if I work hard enough then one day I will write the perfect sentence. But when it comes to cold and sport, my Britishness kicks in as if someone has thrown a switch.

Somewhere in the night, the optimism elves went to work. I woke up and gave the boiler one more desultory try, and it roared into life. I hardly dared go to the Test Match Special website to see the score, but as I squinted at the screen through my fingers I saw the miraculously improbable news that Alistair Cook had put on 136. ALASTAIR COOK now goes into capitals along with JIMMY ANDERSON. The interesting thing about both those boys (and they are still boys really, incredibly young to be doing such extraordinary things on the world stage) is that they display a bit of national character of their own. Endlessly asked by excitable journalists about their brilliant numbers, they go straight for polite understatement. They do not bask or brag. They always give the most credit to their team-mates. 'The lads were great,' they say.

Cook has smashed a bunch of records in the last week. His name will be carved on plaques and written into Wisden in letters of fire. You could forgive him a moment of cockiness. Instead, he said, diffidently: 'We have to keep our feet on the ground as one good day does not win you a test.' There it is, the national character, if it does exist: phlegmatic, understated, and most of all, not getting carried away.

Of course, you could look at The X Factor or any city centre on a Saturday night and draw a very different conclusion about Britishness. For today though, I go with the Anderson and Cook version. They are properly lovely young men, and I hope their mothers are proud.

And now for your snow pictures.

The trees, the trees:

4th Dec 1

4th Dec 4

4th Dec 5

Dog running through the trees, with her ears in the air, which always makes me laugh:

4th Dec 2

I love this view of the bridge; it looks almost like a painting:

4th Dec 6

Garden chairs covered in snow, making me think of three cross old ladies, for some reason:

4th Dec 12

SNOW DOGS:

4th Dec 7

4th Dec 9

Duchess having a little sit, and wondering if that is a rabbit she can hear rustling about in the woods:

4th Dec 10

Oh, oh, the raving beauty:

4th Dec 8

Final snow trees:

4th Dec 6-1

4th Dec 11

And now I must go and do some work. I naughtily took yesterday afternoon off to listen to the cricket on the iPlayer, and so must make good the deficit, or my agent will parachute in and demand an explanation.

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