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Gideon Haigh

    Gideon Haigh est un journaliste et auteur respecté dont le travail offre des aperçus profonds dans les domaines du sport, en particulier du cricket, et des complexités des affaires. Son approche analytique plonge au cœur de ses sujets, qu'il s'agisse de disséquer des événements historiques dans le cricket ou d'examiner de manière critique les pratiques commerciales contemporaines. Haigh remet sans crainte en question les mythes établis et révèle les motivations cachées, offrant aux lecteurs des récits pénétrants et stimulants. Sa prose se caractérise par sa précision et son argumentation persuasive.

    Asbestos House
    On Warne
    The Vincibles
    An Eye on Cricket
    Many a Slip
    Second XI
    • Second XI

      • 224pages
      • 8 heures de lecture
      4,4(15)Évaluer

      As the world's second most popular sport, cricket is much richer and more diverse than many realise. Globally, passionate players make sacrifices to play for their country. These extraordinary tales of cricket in Afghanistan and Ireland, Kenya and the Netherlands resonate far beyond cricket, touching on war, sectarianism and even women's rights.

      Second XI
    • Many a Slip

      • 160pages
      • 6 heures de lecture
      4,3(47)Évaluer

      Every summer weekend, in every village and local park, thousands of amateur cricketers don their whites and turn out for their club. The weather may be threatening rain, the wicket treacherously green, the team composed of too many last-minute selections, but a day of fiercely contested club cricket is a timeless, indestructible tradition. Gideon Haigh is one such cricketer. As well as being the author of critically-acclaimed and award-winning cricket biographies such as Mystery Spinner he is, as readers of the Guardian know, not only a keen member of the Yarras Cricket Club in Melbourne Australia but also chairman of the selection committee for its Fourth Eleven. Now, the columns he has written have been collected to form a humorous diary of the Yarras' season, and a portrait of club cricket that weekend cricketers the world over should recognize.

      Many a Slip
    • An Eye on Cricket

      • 288pages
      • 11 heures de lecture
      4,2(5)Évaluer

      A collection of Gideon Haigh's writing on Australian Cricket.

      An Eye on Cricket
    • The Vincibles

      • 196pages
      • 7 heures de lecture
      4,0(2)Évaluer

      Set against the backdrop of Australia’s vibrant club cricket scene, the narrative follows the Yarras club through a memorable season, narrated by Gideon Haigh, who wears many hats within the club. The story highlights the camaraderie and quirks of amateur cricket, showcasing themes of community, love for the game, and the humor in both winning and losing. With memorable characters and a lighthearted approach, it captures the essence of local cricket culture, emphasizing that the spirit of the game thrives in suburban parks.

      The Vincibles
    • Australia's greatest cricketer by one of the world's most celebrated cricket journalists

      On Warne
    • Asbestos House

      • 448pages
      • 16 heures de lecture
      3,5(2)Évaluer

      Founded in 1888, James Hardie Industries is one of Australia's oldest, richest and proudest corporations. And its fortunes were based on what proved to be one of the worst industrial poisons of the twentieth century: asbestos.Asbestos House, the name of the grand headquarters that Hardie built itself in 1929, tells two remarkable tales. It relates the frantic financial engineering in 2001 during which Hardie cut adrift its liabilities to sufferers of asbestos-related disease, the public and political odium that followed, and the extraordinary deal that resulted. It is also the story of how the company, forgot how, even as fibro built a nation, the asbestos fibre from which it was made condemned thousands to death.Reconstructed from hundreds of hours of interviews and thousands of pages of documentation, Asbestos House is a saga of high finance, industrial history, legal intrigue, medical breakthrough and human frailty.

      Asbestos House
    • The brilliant new book from acclaimed writer Gideon Haigh about Australia's iconic cricketer Victor Trumper

      Stroke of Genius
    • Cricket 2.0

      • 320pages
      • 12 heures de lecture
      4,0(19)Évaluer

      Cricket 2.0 tells the story of how an old, traditional game was transformed by Twenty20 and how this format moved from being a gimmick to the face of modern cricket The iconic captain Brendon McCullum, England's T20 visionaries Eoin Morgan and Jos Buttler and Trinidad's Kieron Pollard and Sunil Narine, who rose to become among the first T20 millionaires, explain how they shaped T20 - and how it shaped them. Test greats Rahul Dravid and Ricky Ponting recount what a sea-change T20 represented and decode T20 strategy. AB de Villiers explores the limits of modern batting. The Afghan phenomenon Rashid Khan shows that T20 superstars can now come from anywhere. Venky Mysore, the cricket revolutionary you have never heard of, reveals how the game is changing off the field. Told through compelling human-interest stories and featuring interviews with more than fifty players and coaches, Tim Wigmore and Freddie Wilde examine how a cocktail of globalisation, new aggressive tactics and huge investment are changing the sport faster than ever before, while analysing the myriad ways in which a traditional game has been revolutionised forever, both on and off the pitch. This is the extraordinary and previously misunderstood story of Twenty20 cricket - told by two people who have chronicled the revolution

      Cricket 2.0
    • A Corner of Every Foreign Field

      • 320pages
      • 12 heures de lecture
      3,8(5)Évaluer

      A Corner of Every Foreign Field is an innovative and thought-provoking take on the history of cricket, looking beyond the scorecards to the pivotal issues of class, politics and imperialism that have shaped the game today. Author Tim Brooks skilfully delves into the past while providing a unique vision for the future of cricket.

      A Corner of Every Foreign Field
    • The Cricket War

      • 368pages
      • 13 heures de lecture
      4,0(73)Évaluer

      One of The Times' 50 Greatest Sports Books In May 1977, the cricket world awoke to discover that a thirty-nine-year-old Sydney Businessman called Kerry Packer had signed thirty-five elite international players for his own televised 'World Series'. The Cricket War is the definitive account of the split that changed the game on the field and on the screen. In helmets, under lights, with white balls, and in coloured clothes, the outlaw armies of Ian Chappell, Tony Greig and Clive Lloyd fought a daily battle of survival. In boardrooms and courtrooms Packer and cricket's rulers fought a bitter war of nerves. A compelling account of the top-class sporting life, The Cricket War also gives a unique insight into the motives and methods of the man who became Australia's richest, and remained so, until the day he died. It was the end of cricket as we knew it – and the beginning of cricket as we know it. Gideon Haigh has published over thirty books, over twenty of them about cricket. This edition of The Cricket War, Gideon Haigh's first book about cricket originally published in 1993, has been updated with new photographs and a new introduction by the author.

      The Cricket War