The Big Ship: Warwick Armstrong and the making of modern cricket

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Allen & Unwin, 2012 - Sports & Recreation - 448 pages
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Warwick Armstrong was the W.G. Grace of the antipodes. A 21 stone mountain of a man, he dominated Australian cricket in the early decades of the 20th century as its outstanding all-rounder, and in 1920-21 led the Australian Test team to the only 5-0 victory in an Ashes series - a historic feat not even Steve Waugh's remarkable 2001 side managed to repeat. Irascible and curmudgeonly, he was also arguably the first cricketer of the modern age. He demanded his full financial worth, played the game to the edge of the laws and sometimes beyond, and even anticipated the phenomenon of match-fixing. When people called him the Big Ship, they meant he was unsinkable. This is a biography of the spiritual forefather of Steve Waugh and his present-day all-conquering Australians, and a literally giant figure in the history of modern cricket.
 

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User Review  - MiaCulpa - LibraryThing

Warwick Armstrong was a big unit. Maybe not during his Australian rules football career but by the time of the 1921 Ashes tour Armstrong's nickname "The Big Ship" was apt. As well as being a large man ... Read full review

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About the author (2012)

Born in London and based in Melbourne, Gideon Haigh has been a journalist almost thirty years, and written widely on business, sport, both and neither. He is the author of twenty-five books.

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