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December 8, 2006

Posted by Gideon Haigh on 12/08/2006 in Notes

A Word from AB

I’m declaring this Casual Friday at ‘Eye on the Ashes’, in order that I might share a personal story. Some readers acquainted with my book 'The Vincibles' (2002), a diary of a season at my club the Yarras, may recall our stalwart player AB. Anthony Burnell was the inaugural captain of our Fourth XI, and a better bloke at a cricket club there can seldom have been. Noone stayed later, sank more beers or rolled a bigger spliff; noone obtained more hilarity from committee and selection meetings, this being what they were mainly good for; noone was a better karaoke partner, our duet of ‘Submission’ by the Sex Pistols carrying off the Yarras’ most coveted honour six years ago. His dad Ron, and brothers Mick and Rich also played at the club; Rich is still the only teammate I have seen bat in reflecting shades.

Those who’ve read 'The Vincibles' will also know that AB died in May 2001 in an accident, driving the car he once said contained just enough room for a blonde and his cricket gear. He was 31. Few of our boys had experienced death before, and none of us were left unchanged. The back of the club cap is embroidered with ‘AB 1969-2001’. We still play our friends Sacred Heart CC in the annual AB Shield game. AB’s pads remain in the club kit, while his gloves have been handed down to our youngest player. It’s only a few weeks since Ron came to the launch at our clubrooms of a book I’ve written, and I signed copies for Mick and Rich, both of whom are now fathers themselves

AB and I had overlapping literary and musical tastes, and shared lots of books and records. There is a picture of us padded up waiting to bat, apparently oblivious to the game: AB has his nose buried in the essays of Bertrand Russell; I am reading a life of Shostakovich. He also enjoyed a colossal advantage in the round of musical clues at the Yarras trivia nights I hosted, and savoured no cricket achievement so much as one year identifying the opening riffs of ‘Television Screen’ by the Radiators from Space.

Nonetheless, it was with some shock that I received an email a few weeks ago from an old work colleague, who’d bought in a secondhand bookstore a copy bearing my name of ‘It Never Rains’: Peter Roebuck’s bittersweet diary of a county season, which I hold in high esteem. Its provenance was made more mysterious and tantalising by a note signed ‘AB’: could this, she wondered, be from the great Grumpmeister himself? Nothing so exalted. I had lent the book to Anthony and lost track of it, when I guess it was dispersed among his personal effects. When this was explained, she immediately offered me the book back.

So, after its roundabout journey, ‘It Never Rains’ was awaiting me on my return from Adelaide Oval, as was the note, tucked into the rueful chapter called ‘A Duck and a Swipe’, apparently composed just before I went to cover that year’s Ashes series for The Guardian: ‘Gids. Tell Roebuck I have the same trouble laying back to play forceful shots through point & cover, giving catches to the slips and gully. Have a great time mate. Expect to see in the Test side by the 3rd Test. AB.’ I can hear his droll humour, his confidential voice and his low chuckle; I am playing in his old team tomorrow, and feel how much I miss him.

I wonder what he’d make of this Ashes series. Actually I know. England, he would theorise, are not getting enough sex, drugs and rock ‘n’ roll: more of these were AB’s solution to most things. What a terrible loss - although, also, what a privilege to have known him.

 
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Posted by: ivarrednoug on 12/08/2006

Amidst all the gloating, whinging a very touching and poignant piece.

Posted by: Bill Reid on 12/08/2006

I am an avid Queens Park Rangers fan and when we lose (which is as often as not these days)I cannot bring myself to read any analysis or commentary picking over the bones of another poor display from the fragile defense. I am also a cricket fan and although Scottish I have been a regular Test and ODI attendee for many years. When England lose (if one can use such a small and inoffensive word for what happened at Brisbane)I cann ot wait to read your take on events.
You, Mr. Haig, are quite simply the best sports writer writing in English today - not that I've read any American sports writers, but I can't imagine there are any better. This moving piece you have written here illustrates my point. Thank you for making the pain bearable.

Posted by: Amanda on 12/08/2006

A beautiful tale, Gideon, and one which brings a tear to the eye.

Posted by: Rasputin on 12/10/2006

thanks Gideon, long live AB

Posted by: Cat on 12/10/2006

What class, well written and such a nice guy was AB.
A toast for his memory to you, I hope the game went well.

Posted by: TheBigShip on 12/10/2006

Gideon,

We played the AB shield a couple of weeks ago. It was a fine game, played in great spirit and humour and in honour of AB we "forced" ourselves to stay up til' dawn drinking cold cans and reminiscing on times gone by and anticipating times to come. He would have loved it (he probably would have loved it more if the Yarras had of won of course), but it would not have curtailed his enjoyment of the evenings festivities that followed.

TBS
SHCC

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Gideon Haigh has written sixteen books and edited six more, mainly concerned with sport and business, in twenty-three years as a journalist. He now writes mainly for the Australian current affairs magazine The Monthly. He lives in Melbourne with a cat, Trumper, and is taking time off from his cricket club, the Yarras, to cover the 2006-7 Ashes for The Guardian.
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