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Cricket's Great All-Rounders. Kersi Meher-Homji OAM is an Australian journalist, author and biographer. He writes often for The Sydney Morning Herald, and his most notable biography is The Waugh Twins (1998), about Steve and Mark Waugh. He is of Indian Parsi descent and the nephew of former cricketer Khershed Meherhomji.
One of the talking points that Rick Allen of The Sydney Morning Herald mentioned was Brett Schultz, who had taken twenty wickets in the Sri Lankan tour but a knee injury had forced him out of the series. [5] In the preview to the test series, the media saw as a battle between the pace of South Africa and the spin duo of Warne and Tim May. [6] [7]
The Sydney Morning Herald was less charitable towards England's performances to date, with Patrick Smith claiming that "Wisden should count England wickets as just a half", and deploring Atherton's lack of aggression in the field. He also derided Gooch, Gatting and Hick, and picked out the way that the visitors' batsmen got themselves out so ...
The leadup to the third test between Australia and Pakistan at David Warner's home Sydney Cricket Ground was always going to be about the opening batter himself playing his final test in the sport ...
According to the Sydney Morning Herald, Cowan "has a commerce degree, written a warts-and-all diary about life as a cricketer, grows his own vegetables, immerses himself in novels, and appreciates modern art and loves music." [16]
He has held a number of positions at Sydney Morning Herald including chief cricket correspondent (1996–99), assistant sport editor (1999–2000) and literary editor (2002–06). [1] As literary editor, he broke the story of the fake Jordanian memoirist, Norma Khouri , which won him a Walkley Award (Investigative Journalism category) in 2004 ...
This is a list of notable media commentators and writers on the sport of cricket from around the world. A number of famous players have had a second career as writers or commentators. However, many commentators never played the game at a professional level, yet they have gone on to become famous names associated with the game.
cricket.com.au; Decent, Tom (9 October 2021). "Bouncers and sledges: The day a 14-year-old future female cricket star took on the men and won". The Sydney Morning Herald; Jeffery, Nicole (1 October 2024). " 'Game-changer' Phoebe Litchfield rediscovers the fun – and form follows". The Guardian