FB thinks of those skippers who have tried to persuade him that to play leg spin bowling he should avoid closing his eyes; those who have commanded him to field short leg to a bowler who has an uncertain grasp of length and have queried his taking cover behind the square leg umpire; those who invite admiration of field settings which randomly distribute all available fielders between the arc of cover and mid on and then wonder why so many runs are being scored behind the wicket. There are even skippers so radical that they invariably bat on winning the toss. Generally FB has found those last to be untrustworthy.
The challenges have been enormous. But FB has faced up to them and done his best. More than often it hasn't been good enough, but that is another story.
His brushes with radical captaincy may have left FB scarred, but he begins to think that he may have got off lightly. Generally there has been room in the dressing room for the team, their kit and the skipper's ego. He has never had to put up with a skipper whose conceptual thinking brings him to the view that the cricket match is an opportunity to mount his personal critique of a corrupt and corrupting political regime. He and his team mates have never been asked to dress in Nazi or similar costume to reinforce the skipper's limp concept. His skipper has never insisted that FB should conduct his bowling spell in the nude. He has never been asked to bat in women's clothing, even against leg spin bowling. Gallons of gore have never followed him being triggered LBW. He has never had to work with a skipper who insists on acts of simulated rape or other sexual degradation at the fall of every wicket. He has got off lightly.
A scene from Cosi without simulated rape |
Why? The lower league cricketer might well ask. It is a very good question. FB gets the point - the story of Cosi Fan Tutte has its dark side - and the manipulative character of Don Alfonso may well be a left arm over the wicket bowler. Oh, and Mussolini was a bad guy (and not only because he had no interest in cricket). FB gets all that - but how heavy handed does it all have to be? One over of leg spin would have been enough - this was constant from both ends.
FB was forced to conclude that this director would have no hesitation on batting on winning the toss.
If Mozart's light-hearted comic opera can be given the dark Fascist treatment then a Nazi-themed cricket match should present no great obstacles. The scorers would have to be alert though - was the umpire signalling a no-ball or merely saluting the Fuhrer? Jackboot-before-wicket decisions might be tricky. Batting orders must be obeyed at all times and pitch invasions encouraged to ensure victory. Definitely an idea for Carlton's next season.
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