HomeNewsTrendsFeaturesA blow by blow account, sort of, of cricket’s chewing gum tradition

A blow by blow account, sort of, of cricket’s chewing gum tradition

Until coronavirus forced cricketers and everyone else to turn into wall hangings, there was only one bubble that was associated with the sport – the one made from bubble gum, or sometimes with chewing gum.

September 06, 2020 / 11:56 IST
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Bio-bubbles, no relation to Michael Jackson’s pet chimp Bubbles, are everywhere. The IPL players are currently in one in the UAE. The other day, Virat Kohli reminded players, perhaps itching to get out and about in Dubai, “We are all here to play cricket…The bio-bubble needs to be respected at all times for the tournament to happen eventually. We are not here to have fun and roam around and you know say that ‘I want to hang out in Dubai’,” the Royal Challengers Bangalore and India captain said.

Until coronavirus forced cricketers and everyone else to turn into wall hangings, there was only one bubble that was associated with the sport – the one made from bubble gum, or sometimes with chewing gum. All bubble gum is chewing gum. All chewing gum isn’t always bubble gum. This is an important fact of life we must recognise at this crucial juncture in human history.

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No cricketer made gum as fashionable as Viv Richards, of course. The West Indian legend seemed to say to bowlers I’m going to do to you what I’m doing to this strip of Wrigley’s. It also helped him settle his nerves. In fact, he felt the gum was his companion.

“I always enjoyed my chewing gum. You have 11 men out there and the umpires -- you felt outnumbered. And that was my little piece,” Richards once said. “It made me sort of look cool, calmed me down, it gave me sort of a rhythm. That was a companion for me at the time. It got a bit stale if you are batting long enough but it was all good.”