Tagged with mcg

seasons greetings

Happy Chanukah, giant alien clam day, eid, santa’s birthday, cloning day, pagan sacrifice day, or insert relevant day after Happy.

Let’s be honest though, I’m an atheist and couldn’t give a flying rats @ss about any of them.

My religious holiday is boxing day, which if Mash is to be trusted, has something to do with letting the servants take over once a year.

To cricket lovers it means test matches, and to Melbourne cricket lovers, its like finding out the dixie chick’s are having an orgy and it only costs 35 bucks to get in.
This time it’s even better cause it may actually be a good match.

Sure the pitch has less life in it than an amish picnic, and the victorian drought has picked a sh1t time to break on us.

But this could be a good series, I’ve tried not to get excited up until now, but the thought of a Christmas dinner in a nursing home has forced me to look ahead to Boxing day.

Hayden, Gilly, Punter, Roy, Lee, Clarke, Sachin, Rahul, VVS, Anil, Dhoni and maybe even my current favourite player Yuvraj.

That my friend, is cricket viagra.

My underwear is literally bursting at the seams.

Eat up your turkey, prawns, curry and tofu mung beans lunch before thinking about what lies ahead.

Cricketers taking to the big stage, like wrestlers and gladiators before them.

Commentators looking for their cliché book to describe how great the G is.

Bogans drinking cheap lager out of plastic cups.

People paying $23.45 for a burnt pie that is too hot to eat anyway.

Indian security guards smiling as they pretend to really look in your bags.

The members full of the biggest tossers that money can buy.

Bikinied women being ogled by men that could never afford them.

Tony Greig being called a wanker.

Oh it shall be grand my friends.

And I your humble narrator blogging directly from the ground, the way Bill Ponsford would have wanted it.

If you weren’t sexually awakened before, you are now.

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My mcg medium pace conspiracy theory


I first noticed this back in 96. Steve Waugh had just taken a wicket. By then he hardly bowled, because his body wasn’t up to it. For you kiddies, Steve Waugh was an injury prone all rounder like Shane Watson, except he made runs and took wickets, until he just made runs.

That day he took a Sri Lankan wicket and then broke down, so Taylor threw the ball to Ponting.

I remember being slightly confused by it all. Then Ponting took the wicket of Asanka Gurusinha (I think, I didn’t look it, let’s hope my memory holds true). At the time it was still a one off thing.

Even after that incident Steve Waugh would often take his arm out of mothballs to bowl at Melbourne, he average 25 with the ball there.

Ian Harvey would bowl 20 over spells at the G. No one would score off him, and he’d always get a couple of wickets.

Andrew Symonds seems to come on pretty much first change at the G, and his bowling average of 15, is a little better than his standard average.

Why do you think New Zealand are never allowed to play tests at the G, it has very little to do with the fact that they can’t fill it, its much more to do with the fact their team always has about 8 medium pacers in it.

I even thought this might have something to do with drop in pitches, but my father whose experience is far longer than mine, says the G has always helped medium pacers.

David Hookes knew it, the day he died Victoria had about 5 medium pacers playing for Victoria. They were the reason they won.

Just yesterday I was at the G, and future PM David Hussey was in complete control. Katich throws the ball to a couple of medium pacers, next thing you know Hussey and his silent partner Klinger are on their way back to the pavilion.

The amount of times, middle order batsmen who couldn’t get me out in the dark, bowl at the G and look like they are bowling hand grenades, is phenomenal.

There is something spooky about the G, it is one of the greatest coliseums in the world. Yet slow right arm junk does damage there, it’s sort of like a Catholic pencil neck geek conquering the lions in Rome. Or Kamran Akmal dating a Bollywood star.

Another conspiracy theory we have is about Hansie Cronje in a threesome with Princess Di and Tupac, but we’ve already mentioned that one.

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The G & me

Recently I was granted a special permission, (special to me) the gift of wireless connection that only media receive at the MCG.

Meaning I can use the Internet at the G, while I watch the games. You can imagine how excited I was, am. I could have kissed the Mcg’s media manager, which over the phone would have been quite a feat.

So this is my first post written and posted at the G. It’s dedicated to the ground I grew up at.

You can be lucky in life, I was born in Melbourne, so that’s a bit more fun than say the West Bank, Denver or Freetown.

Living in Melbourne, only 40 minutes from the MCG, is something you can take for granted. Every year I visit the ground at least 30 times. Mostly for Aussie rules, but that’s only cause there’s a lot more football played here than cricket. Most cricket supporters from around the world would love to visit it just once.

My first memory of the ground was a football match between Collingwood (my mob) and Geelong. All I remember is the Collingwood cheer squad yelling Ablett is a w@nker, as he kicked goal after goal. At the time I didn’t know what one was, or that he was one. Now I understand and agree with the sentiment.

My first cricket memory was a state game between NSW and the Vics. Mike Whitney stormed in first ball of the day and slipped over. That’s when I fell in love with watching the game. Later in the day Simon O’Donnell hit out, eventually caught hooking, that’s when I fell in love with Victoria.

First test I saw was Pakistan. Akram was the fastest thing I had ever seen, and then Dean Jones came out to face him. One ball later and the hometown hero was sent back by Akram. Later on a Pakistan player picked the ball up from the fence, and someone hit him with a flag. Seemed unnecessary, but I still laughed.

The 1st One dayer I saw was with Big daddy and my Uncle, my dad wouldn’t go, as he hated one day cricket and Kerry Packer. The game was against New Zealand and the only thing I remember is getting told off by some middle aged woman who thought I was standing up too much. Oh and alot of sheep jokes.

I went to the David Boon memorial game, and spent most of the second innings chatting to Devon Malcolm on the fence. He was a very nice chap, good sense of humour.

I saw Warne’s hattrick, no really. Was in the underneath section of the old Olympic stand at the back of the first level. Just my dad and me, we actually thought it would be a good days cricket, first ball, McDermott got a wicket off a full toss, I think, and I remember saying to Dad, what a waste of time it was coming down today. Other than the hattrick I was correct.

When I was a teenager we used to take plastic containers full of bourbon into the ground. Even then, I knew drunk is the only way to truly enjoy a one dayer. We never really got that drunk to be honest, it was so hot you usually sweated it all out straight away.

My dad still won’t forgive me for going to the 4th day a test against the Windies. We saw a scrappy days play, where Damien Martyn made 60 odd I think. The day my dad wanted to go to was the 5th day, where Warne took his first 7 wicket haul. Whoops. But I blame him, I knew too much about cricket, he said let’s go to the 5th day, and I said no, the cricket might not last all day on the 5th and I wanted to see a whole days play. I was right.

In 2001 on the way to the G, Big daddy and another guy got run over in front of me. I’m talking the full deal, knocked up in the air, the shoes went flying, the windscreen was broken and it looked like they would both die. The ambulance took us to the hospital, they decided that both of them were ok, so from there we went straight to the cricket. Where Big daddy continued to take the glass out of his hair for the whole game (and for the next few days).

I remember the state games where Langer would be abused by the Victorian fans from the moment he walked out on the field until the close of play. I also remember him swearing at them, threatening them and one day squaring up to a guy who was standing next to me. The guy was 6’6, but he backed down before Langer did.

The One Dayer against South Africa that was so boring that Big Daddy fell asleep. Mind you there was a lot of bourbon involved.

The state games where Greg Matthews would sledge the crowd non stop. Between every ball, and at the end of every over. In fact the only time he shut up was during his overs.

I saw McGrath flip the bird to a Victorian supporter one day, sure he deserved it, but it was funny coming from him.

Of the three best innings I have seen at the G, only one was not by Matthew Elliott, that was Jacques Kallis holding off Shane Warne on a fifth day wicket. That was amazing, he was beaten so many times, but he just never wavered.

Almost every time I’m at a cricket game with my dad he mentions the story about the day he was working the bar at the G, but no one wanted a beer. Sobers was playing for the world eleven, my dad watched the whole thing for free. Sobers made a double hundred, and everyone who saw it knew it was something amazing.

Only last year I remember Sime and myself laughing uncontrollably at Big Daddy as he abused Ponting for near on an hour, cause Ponting wouldn’t bring McGrath on to finish the tail. It was to be McGrath’s last test in Melbourne. Even when the crowd sitting around us told Big Daddy to shut up, he just kept doing it, until Lee took the last wicket.

I had one of the hottest girls I’ve ever seen sit in front of me at a test against Pakistan once. She was, um, well built with a low level of covering on. Thanks to the MCG grandstand gradient and her constant stretching I had a great day. I think Dizzy and Marto made runs.

The best innings I saw at the G was Matthew Elliott smashing Stuart Clark and Stuart MacGill around. Behind me, sat then Australian chairman of selectors Trevor Hohns. Every time Elliott hit another 4 or 6, I turned to him and made a little comment. He took it well, didn’t help Elliott though, who only played two more tests after that.

I sledged David Hookes the day he died. He was Victorian Coach at the time, and as he often did, he was walking around the boundary while we were struggling. I said, “think we’ve got enough all rounders playing Hookesy”, he smiled and said ”yup”. We had about 6 all rounders playing that day, and Lehmann was smashing them everywhere. Then the game turned, the all rounders took a bag full of wickets. That night he was king hit.

Later that season I went to 4 out of the 5 days in the pura Sheffield cup Shield final. I was on the ground when the great Chuck Berry announced his retirement, and someone yelled out Oh fu©k no as he said it.

I also was at the one day game where Warne did his shoulder and Berry had to go out and field.

Thanks to an ex I’ve even had a bit of lovin at the ground. It wasn’t a six, but it was a well run three. Hows that for a metaphor.

I went to a football game once, and on the way out I walked past the Keith Miller statue at the ground. He looked like a superhero, which he practically was. So I wrote a short story about him being one.

I once attended a Bushrangers camp where I bowled with Damien Fleming and Craig Howard. And Chuck Berry gave me keeping advice. All of this happened on the G.

It’s amazing how a piece of real estate can feel like a family member. I feel more comfortable sitting in the grand stand on my own, than I have at any job or social situation in my whole life.

I do take it for granted, but that doesn’t mean I don’t know how lucky I am.

Now available to read at Sportsfreak.

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at the G


I’m sitting at the G as I write this, not as I post it, as the mcg wireless network is only available for media.

Apparently they haven’t read my blog, I am tempted to walk up to an official and say don’t you know who I am? But I’m not wearing my cricket with balls lime green tracksuit, so they really may not know who I am.

Memo to self get cricket with balls t shirts made up for boxing day.

The reason I’m here is I’m watching the bushrangers take on the warriors.

I got here just as the first warriors wicket fell, so I saw Gilchrist stroll out in front of a crowd of 87 people.

There is something odd about seeing Gilchrist walk out to a crowd smaller than your local school play ground.

Its like watching Muhammad Ali bare knuckle box out the back of the Powell hotel. Sure it’s cool to watch, but it’s just not quite as magical.

Anyway Gilly, just got run out, do you know why, because when I watch Gilly bat, he always gets run out.

Perhaps my man love for him makes him a little slow off the mark.

Maybe he can feel me willing him on.

Perhaps my kamikaze style of running between wickets rubs off on him.

Or maybe today it was that he got lost in David Hussey’s (future PM David Hussey) eyes.

I don’t know how to explain this paranormal phenomena

Anyway I’m off to get some chips, and move seats, the old lady knitting near me is starting to eye me off.

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