It was a match memorable for many reasons – dubious umpiring, a poor pitch, remarkable batting and New Zealand’s first Test win against England – but also curious because its most striking feature was its torturous, painful dullness, most of the blame for which was placed at the feet of the England captain, Geoffrey Boycott – feet that in this match did little running and a great deal of standing exactly where they were.
“Boycott is the top, bottom and sides of the batting which is a situation which seems to bring out the best and the worst in him,” Henry Blofeld wrote in the Guardian, in a prescient preview to the first Test. “He thrives on this kind of responsibility and in any case needs no urging to occupy the crease. But with so little support he at times allows himself to become too introspective and bogged down for his own or his side’s good. [Sometimes] in his determination to stay in he forgets completely that one of his objects is to score runs.”
Source: theguardian
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