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      Geoff Boycott

      A Cricketing Hero

      Leo McKinstry

      This book is dedicated to David Robertson, another great Yorkshireman

      Table of Contents

       Cover Page

       Title Page

       10 Disciple of Hobbs

       11 Master of His Own Destiny

       12 A Question of Captaincy

       13 ‘The Worst Win for English Cricket’

       14 ‘I Just Want to Play for Yorkshire’

       15 Achieving the Impossible Dream

       16 ‘Go and Run the Bugger Out’

       17 The Worst Months of My Life’

       18 Return of the Master

       19 Constructing the Image

       20 ‘Look, Ma, Top of the World’

       21 Boycottshire

       22 The End of an Era

       23 A New Beginning

       24 ‘Just a Dad’

       25 Before the Fall

       26 En Grasse

       27 To Hell and Back

       Statistical Appendix

       Bibliography

       Index

       About the Author

       Praise

       Also by Leo McKinstry

       Copyright

       About the Publisher

       Preface and Acknowledgements

      Geoffrey Boycott has been a presence in my life since I first fell in love with cricket as a Belfast schoolboy in the early seventies. For me, his appeal lies in the way he embodies a heroic ideal. His struggles to overcome the social disadvantages of his background, the limitations in his natural talent and the contradictions in his own nature are almost epic. He set himself a goal, to become one of the greatest batsmen in the world, and in the face of numerous obstacles – many of his own making – he ultimately achieved it. His story is, rightly, the stuff of legends.

      Like most heroic tales, however, accounts of his life have always varied in the telling. It has therefore been my aim to look beyond much of the mythology that surrounds Boycott and build a more balanced and realistic portrait. Using extensive research and interviews with Boycott’s colleagues, friends and family, I tried to provide a deeper understanding of this flawed but compelling sporting personality. In particular, I have sought to place Boycott in a wider context than just that of Yorkshire cricket, the subject that dominated the two previous – and partisan – biographies of Boycott, one (the pro-Boycott version) by Yorkshire Evening Post journalist John Callaghan, published in 1982, and the other (the anti-Boycott version) written by the late Don Mosey, published in 1985. ‘Only a Yorkshireman can properly comprehend the character and characteristics which have given the Boycott story its unique place in the history of English cricket,’ Mosey wrote. If that were true, then I, as an Ulsterman living in Essex, have laboured in vain. Yet I believe that this robust view has been part of the problem of interpreting the Boycott phenomenon. By focusing narrowly on Yorkshire, such an approach ignores the truth that Boycott has always been much more than a Yorkshire cricketer. He has also been one of the all-time greats of Test cricket, an England captain, a brilliant coach, a widely read columnist, an iconic broadcaster, and an international celebrity.

      Despite my admiration for Boycott, this is not, in any sense, an authorized biography. Boycott politely refused my requests for an interview, though I must record my thanks to him for his assistance in checking facts and in expediting interviews with several of his friends. In the foreword to his 1985 book, Don Mosey wrote of a ‘conspiracy of silence’ from Boycott’s supporters. I am grateful to say that I encountered no such difficulty.

      I owe a huge debt of gratitude to all those many first-class and Test cricketers who generously gave me the benefit of their views: Dennis Amiss, Geoff Arnold, Mike Atherton, Bill Athey, Chris Balderstone, Jack Bannister,

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