3 drops, all easy enough for this level
Missing Stokes leadership out there.
Missing Stokes leadership out there.
I'm on highlights now so not following, have I struck again?Very out
Waste of a review
LBWI'm on highlights now so not following, have I struck again?
And the supply teacher in charge on the pitch.Dawson, managed to get in the way of it and lose it, could have wiped his face off.
Crawley with seemingly much easier catch. Tired minds, tired bodies.
For me personally, the most heartbreaking death of someone I've never met. He was my hero as a young kid. I wanted to bat just like him, I still play the pull shot with his iconic leg swivel.RIP Graham Thorpe, very sad.
He'd been repeatedly unwell for a while, under a cloud he couldn't shake, wife and children. My heart is lowest because I keep thinking of the train driver.For me personally, the most heartbreaking death of someone I've never met. He was my hero as a young kid. I wanted to bat just like him, I still play the pull shot with his iconic leg swivel.
As an adult, I relate to all of his health issues, and have gone through the same stages of hopelessness and frailty, and nobody not even your closest family can help you. The saddest story. What a cricketer though, if he played today you'd add 10 runs to that average and he'd be playing in any T20 league he wanted.
For me personally, the most heartbreaking death of someone I've never met. He was my hero as a young kid. I wanted to bat just like him, I still play the pull shot with his iconic leg swivel.
As an adult, I relate to all of his health issues, and have gone through the same stages of hopelessness and frailty, and nobody not even your closest family can help you. The saddest story. What a cricketer though, if he played today you'd add 10 runs to that average and he'd be playing in any T20 league he wanted.
I've had chronic depression for a decade now, three malaise comes and goes, you do the best you can, I'm sorry for his family who as they said felt helpless to fix him, and it's true, some birds aren't meant to be caged. I'm really really glad more is spoken about him of late because he really was a bloody good cricketer, one England's finest. Averaging mid 40s in that era in that team.He'd been repeatedly unwell for a while, under a cloud he couldn't shake, wife and children. My heart is lowest because I keep thinking of the train driver.
It was nice hearing fond memories of him from former team mates. TV and radio today. The push for the 'Mind' charity is good as well.