Saturday at Lord's - still a special occasion
A ´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio 5 Live phone-in a few weeks ago asked its listeners to identify the best English sporting occasion.
While facing obvious competition from the likes of the FA Cup final, the men's final at Wimbledon and the Grand National, I was pleasantly surprised to hear the Saturday of the Lord's Test getting its fair share of mentions.
This year, its reputation as a very special event climbed up another rung on the ladder with England playing unexpectedly well against a very decent South African side.
The showers stayed away, England's bowlers made regular inroads and the fascinating nuances of Test cricket proved a welcome distraction from the latest grim statistics about knife crime and the economy.
I met an old university friend at lunch in the Coronation Garden. His father had set up two picnic tables, around which a strange assortment of cricketing eccentrics had assembled.
I was soon introduced to the members of Cornel Cymraeg. I won't need to translate to fluent Welsh speakers, but it means "Welsh Corner".
One of its members, the splendidly moustachioed Keith Jones, told me: "There were three or four doctors from Rumney in south Wales who came up to watch in 1948. They had such a good time over the three days that they said we must come back here every year.
"They've all passed on now, but two of the sons still come and are regular attenders here, and we have a new generation of people who do the same thing, coming here for three days every year, and we always meet in this corner of the Coronation Ground."
They are such a part of the tapestry of the Lord's Test, in fact, that MCC secretary gladly accepted an official Cornel Cymraeg tie earlier in the day.
If you had time, between watching South African wickets falling and enjoying the other attractions at Lord's, there was a great deal of celebrity spotting to be done.
Ronnie Corbett, Stephen Fry, Michael Parkinson, Greg Dyke, , her boyfriend Piers Morgan and Jeffrey Archer were all in attendance.
While they spent much of their time in a sponsored box, I saw a certain ex-England and Arsenal defender walking by apparently unnoticed.
Bizarrely, he was in a small group with a cousin of mine, who I promptly stopped to say hello to. And a true giant of English football shook my hand and said: "Hello, I'm ."
Comment number 1.
At 12th Jul 2008, Tedson wrote:Piers Morgan and Jeffrey Archer sat next to each other. A nice target to aim for, sadly the South Africans couldn't quite pick them out!
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Comment number 2.
At 12th Jul 2008, Fletchcrik wrote:A nice social occasion for the rich and famous but what about the genuine cricket fans. I saw my first test match in 1951
England v S.Africa and it was a real treat not a social junket. I'm afraid that as an OAP I now can't afford £75 a day for a ticket. With travel, food, drink etc it would be well beyond my reach or justification for a day out. And as long as Lords remains full it will only get worse. It's just about money now.
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Comment number 3.
At 13th Jul 2008, RobertBenchley wrote:I imagine sitting next to Piers Morgan and Jeffrey Archer would make cricket seem quite interesting.
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Comment number 4.
At 13th Jul 2008, FluterG wrote:Who's Celia Walden?
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Comment number 5.
At 13th Jul 2008, betting_guru wrote:Robert - she's a journalist and author. Here's a link:
Probably only a borderline celebrity, I guess
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Comment number 6.
At 13th Jul 2008, twinspinners wrote:As the universuty friend mentioned I may be biased, but I wholeheartedly agree that it was a specail day yesterday.
Copious alcohol helps of course, so does Monty et al taking wickets.
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Comment number 7.
At 13th Jul 2008, Fletchcrik wrote:Celia Walden ? - probably knows nothing about cricket but heck what does that matter if she's one of the "beautiful" people.
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Comment number 8.
At 13th Jul 2008, mediamofo wrote:Splendid for anyone who is a child of privilege. Actually, I bet everyone there was bored senseless and was just pretending to like each other - big ego crowd.
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Comment number 9.
At 13th Jul 2008, RobertBenchley wrote:Judging from the expressions I think Piers has just let loose another Wildean quip,
"Better an ex-con than never to have conned at all."
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