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Exhibition at Lord’s tells the story of how cricket became a global sport

The exhibition ‘MCC and the Empire of Cricket’ showcases how MCC lost its imperial hubris, but also reflects its effort to promote goodwill and mutual understanding today.

June 11, 2023 / 15:29 IST
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Don Bradman posing with his "Don Bradman" Sykes brand bat in 1932 (Source: State Library of New South Wales); and a studio portrait of Ranjitsinhji made in 1900. (Photos via Wikimedia Commons)

The World Test Championship is being held at The Oval, but cricket aficionados’ visit to London is incomplete without a peak into Lord’s. The Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) which owns the Lord’s stadium has on display thousands of items ranging from Ranjitsinhji’s bat to Donald Bradman’s baggy green cap, and memorabilia associated with the 1886 all-Parsi cricket team tour to MCC to the infamous 1933 Bodyline series. At the Lord’s cricket stadium, known as the home of world cricket, its famous museum is hosting an exhibition ‘MCC and the Empire of Cricket’ which has been put together by experts and scholars including Prof Prashant Kidambi, who teaches at the University of Leicester.

“The purpose of the exhibition is to use the MCC archives to tell the story of cricket from a global and not just an Anglo perspective. The exhibition focuses on MCC’s imperial entanglements and post-colonial legacies,” says Kidambi, who is the author of Cricket Country: An Indian Odyssey in the Age of Empire. At the heart of the exhibition is the attempt to show how cricket became a global sport. It is thus no surprise that I learnt of cricket being played in Egypt, Fiji, Argentina, East Africa, Brazil, Malaya, Holland, Hong Kong and Samoa.

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Kidambi, in particular, found the 1868 Australian Aboriginal tour of MCC the most fascinating. At that time the team was described as “conquered natives of a convict colony” in the English press. They played 47 matches over six months, winning and losing 14 each, while drawing 19 matches. “The Aboriginal tour of England represented the earliest emergence of non-white cricket. There are several objects relating to them including a leangle which was used at the conclusion of a match for entertainment.” The leangle, which looks more like a hockey stick than a cricket bat was used to entertain the assembled crowd after the match by accepting bets to dodge the swarms of balls thrown at them.

One key highlight in the exhibition is the bat used by Don Bradman, arguably the best batsman in the world, which was sponsored by Sykes.  Much before the commercialization of cricket, Bradman’s bat had his name along with the sponsor’s. That perhaps makes him the earliest cricketer to have his bat sponsored. Bradman was also the prime target during the 1932-33 Ashes series in Australia now remembered as the Bodyline series. English bowlers targeted Australian batsmen with devastatingly fast, short-pitched deliveries which injured several of them.