Description
As the 1975
edition of the Wisden Cricketers’ Almanack put it, “Never in the ninety-eight years of Test cricket have batsmen
been so grievously bruised and battered by ferocious, hostile short-pitched balls as were those led conscientiously
by Mike Denness.” Led by tearaway speedsters Dennis Lillee and Jeff Thomson, the Australian bowling attack
terrorised the tourists during the six-match series – by the end of the first Test, two English batsmen had suffered
broken bones. There was plenty more suffering to follow as the Aussies blitzed their way to a 4-1 victory.
When Bob Dylan released his album Blood on the Tracks a few days after the Ashes had been surrendered it
could have been timed deliberately to provide a future author with a book title that reflected events in Australia.
Instead of songs reflecting a “bleak fatalistic view of love”, as one reviewer described it, the album might have
been expected to deliver stories of broken bones and frightening near misses. For that was the narrative of the
doomed attempt by the England team to retain the urn in the face of a barrage of some of the most intimidating
fast bowling ever witnessed.
Nearly 50 years after Dylan’s generosity, David Tossell’s book offers a gripping and forensic account of this
uniquely frightening and wince-inducing Australian summer and the indelible mark it left on cricket.