Cricket Pitch Invasions: Contrasting Reactions in Different Times – By Michael Roberts

Cricket Pitch Invasions: Contrasting Reactions in Different Times – By Michael Roberts

Michael Roberts

Source : thuppahis

If memory serves me right Terry Alderman injured himself when he tackled a lone Aussie pitch-invader on one occasion. Johnny Baisow isa sturdy Yorkshireman and he had no problems carting off …..yes “carting off” …. a slim intruder at the holy-of-holies ground known as “The Lords.”

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When Terry Aldermand tackled an Aussie intruder at …. he was not as efficient: he injured himself.

Both these energetic policing actions stand in contrast to the calm, cool and collected responses of fielders, umpires and batsmen at the Kennington Oval when a bunch of Sri Lankan Tamil protestors (migrants all) rushed onto the grounds in display of their political cause on the 11th June 1975.

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ph above. The umpires were (are) as calm as can be. So, too, are the Sri Lankan fielders and Aussie batsmen. Indeed, Mevan Pieris and Bill Lawrie left their trenches and proceeded to have a convivial chat.

There was, then, no media coverage of the calibre we have today. But the cartoonists and commentators of that era had their media ‘bites;’ and the ESPNcricinfo’s pictorial shots are quite graphic and illuminating.

The leaflet distributed by the Tamil activists was collected and kept by that great cricketing archivist, the late SS Perera. It is reproduced  in my book Crosscurrents. Sri Lanka and Australia at Cricket,  Sydney, Walla Walla Press, 1998, p. 91.Ironically, the fierce and relentless  pace bowler, Geoff Thomson, was a greater danger to the Sri Lankan cricketers than the Tamil activists. Sunil Wettimuny and Duleep Mendis were carried off with injuries and hospitalised. Accounts of th match from alan Gibson and Mervyn Pereira can be seen in Crosscurrents, pp. 88-94.

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