Wednesday, 6 July 2011

Steve James: Thanks Aggers, I've eaten tribute to the late, great Brian Johnston and Test Match special

Central book is the classic commentary in 1991, incident names Agnew and Johnston will be forever linked and recall; a moment where they were overcome by a fit of laughter that almost brought a nation to a standstill, as motorists listening should learn to control their laughter.

A chapter entitled ' legs to the ' is rightly focused on their conversation on hit-counter dismissal of Ian Botham by curtly Ambrose to oval, his dislodge the surety leg as he presented to be hit by an inner thigh bouncer.

"Yes, he just did not cross his leg," said Agnew maliciously .c ' was just too for the Johnston loving insinuations. They attempted to plough on with a game of the day, but it is useless.

"Aggers, stopping." Johnston caught just before the burst of laughter pair uncontrollable.Try to read this passage without laughing aloud yourself.

Nobody had ever called "Aggers" before he met Johnston on his first day on the TMS.Auparavant Agnew, was especially "Aggy". This is the beginning of a relationship very particulière.Radiodiffusion with Johnston was "like a one-to-one with your grandfather asked for old chat, Agnew writes.

But this book is also much more: Agnew autobiographical reflections, his thoughts on the State of play and its future, including: ttwweennttyy, matches rigged, technology and the qualification of England, but best of all, several other tales delightfully witty and warm zone sat.

All done with a slight keys .c ' is the way the easiest and most enjoyable reading.

I'll confess that I always had a shoe pinches for Agnew.Season 1988 eight days a week diary has been an influence and inspiration.

I remember particularly vivid description of heroic sleeves of the teammate Laurie Potter, Leicestershire were grouped for 90 by a Caribbean endemic to the path of Grace."The 16 best out I have never seen," he wrote one Blocker intern impressed.

Agnew could, however, be a Crabby person on the ground, are fast launchers, and my a game encounters with him came when he arrived at the University of Cambridge with Leicestershire.

It was a slow step, and it was his best aborder.Mes student colleagues didn't take it."I could bat here without pads on" was a gémissement.Il could not - sees his bat?- but I defended its frustrations.Pour this understanding I quickly dubbed the "professional dour.

Now that corresponding BBC cricket, Agnew is a professional model in a way very différente.Et is far from being austère.Il is the former professional player ideal current.

He learned his craft at BBC Radio Leicester, even though he had only studio presentation rather outside his new employer, Mike Lewis, Chief the BBC then broadcasts sports and to the external, supposed to broadcasting.

Inevitably, it would vote today for cricket, fourth cricket for the BBC after Johnston, Don Mosey and Christopher Martin-Jenkins.

But can it be next? to amid all the anecdotal lightness of its Agnew book offers a disturbing word of caution.

"I can see where the next generation of commentators will come," he wrote. "If no action is taken now, Test Match special will wither on the vine, and once its unique identity dies, he will never return.»

Now that would be a tragedy, as many listeners Ashes baby under next week duvet is probably confirm.


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