Oborne & Heller on Cricket

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Cricket #61

Cricket authors (and obsessives) Peter Oborne and Richard Heller have launched a new podcast to help deprived listeners endure a world without cricket. They will chat regularly about cricket topics – hoping to keep a good line and length but with occasional wides into other subjects.

Recent Episodes
  • World Cricket And All That Shapes It Covered By Wisden Editor Lawrence Booth
    May 3, 2023 – 55:49
  • Sovereigns, stars, stewards, scorers, statisticians … Steven Lynch on this year’s Wisden obituaries
    Apr 18, 2023 – 54:18
  • From teenage record breaker to players’ champion: James Harris of Glamorgan and the PCA
    Mar 28, 2023 – 56:57
  • The weird genius who revolutionized cricket history
    Mar 21, 2023 – 01:02:18
  • Two testaments of cricket and war
    Mar 14, 2023 – 55:27
  • A story made for the movies – Pakistan women’s cricket
    Mar 1, 2023 – 49:33
  • After a hard day in Nagpur, the great cricket writer Mike Coward gives a masterclass on Australian cricket
    Feb 14, 2023 – 45:00
  • An elephant never forgets India’s first Test victory in England
    Feb 7, 2023 – 54:47
  • How professionals save soccer – but not cricket – from public school amateurs, explains sports historian Richard Sanders
    Jan 24, 2023 – 01:00:06
  • Cricket, diplomacy and a fierce despatch from Freddie Flintoff
    Dec 13, 2022 – 55:55
  • England versus Pakistan – the first seventy years with historian Najum Latif
    Dec 7, 2022 – 01:00:56
  • Another thrilling spell from fast bowling legend Wes Hall
    Nov 29, 2022 – 57:11
  • Before D’Oliveira – the glories and the shame of England’s Tests against South Africa
    Nov 22, 2022 – 01:04:17
  • A select offering from Ed Smith
    Nov 15, 2022 – 52:51
  • From the captains’ table – cricket in two village communities
    Nov 8, 2022 – 53:17
  • The cricketing car park of Beirut
    Nov 1, 2022 – 43:23
  • Wendy Wimbush – fifty years of keeping but never settling scores
    Oct 25, 2022 – 47:50
  • Mike Coward - sixty years of great cricket writing
    Oct 18, 2022 – 56:54
  • At the wonder house of cricket books
    Oct 11, 2022 – 49:48
  • Geoff Boycott celebrates yet another century
    Oct 4, 2022 – 01:02:35
  • High performance or last performance? Campaigner Alan Higham dissects the ECB review of English cricket
    Sep 27, 2022 – 51:33
  • Can serious cricket survive pornography asks Simon Heffer
    Sep 13, 2022 – 52:26
  • Rebuilding Ukraine cricket and children’s lives – despite the ICC
    Sep 6, 2022 – 01:01:42
  • The joy of Sri Lankan cricket, expertly distilled
    Jul 5, 2022 – 49:59
  • Dutch cricket – and when it can be dangerous to watch
    Jun 21, 2022 – 44:11
  • Writing and cricket: two matching crafts for Harold Pinter
    Jun 7, 2022 – 48:07
  • Cricket – a prisoner of market forces?
    May 31, 2022 – 57:44
  • Charles Sale digs deep into the tunnels at Lord’s
    May 24, 2022 – 53:33
  • Non-racial sport: its slow journey with English cricket in the rear
    May 17, 2022 – 49:54
  • Writer, broadcaster, cricketer Isabelle Westbury celebrates the upward trajectory of women’s cricket
    May 10, 2022 – 56:07
  • Haringey Cricket College – a missing engine of opportunity in English cricket
    May 3, 2022 – 47:29
  • Wisden’s obituary section, a tapestry of cricket, by their master weaver Steven Lynch
    Apr 26, 2022 – 48:05
  • Wisden 2022, the global publishing event of the year, and its editor Lawrence Booth
    Apr 20, 2022 – 52:52
  • Suing the ECB? Former board member and Somerset chairman Andy Nash suggests how to resist its destruction of English cricket
    Apr 12, 2022 – 55:29
  • Some searing yorkers at wreckers of cricket
    Mar 29, 2022 – 47:08
  • A classic cricket book republished for a new generation
    Mar 22, 2022 – 49:01
  • Great cricket writers – and capping the Pope
    Mar 15, 2022 – 55:18
  • Escape from Kyiv; the Modi grip on India’s cricket ball
    Mar 8, 2022 – 46:10
  • Waiting for the Assault on Kyiv
    Feb 28, 2022 – 39:27
  • Reporting the whole world of cricket: Osman Samiuddin
    Feb 22, 2022 – 56:45
  • English cricket’s biggest and longest crisis: economic inequality
    Feb 15, 2022 – 44:34
  • Class and the myths of English cricket analysed by historian Duncan Stone
    Feb 8, 2022 – 01:00:18
  • The shocking sight of a dive in the field: Micky Stewart remembers highlights of a vanished world of cricket
    Feb 1, 2022 – 51:49
  • The Graces CC, the club which opens up cricket to LGBT people
    Jan 11, 2022 – 46:54
  • Two festive offerings from Henry Blofeld
    Dec 14, 2021 – 57:58
  • Tanya Aldred and the global pressure to save cricket from climate change
    Dec 7, 2021 – 44:32
  • Scyld Berry – England’s greatest cricket-watcher – shares highlights from over forty years of England on tour
    Nov 30, 2021 – 56:46
  • The great commentator Fazeer Mohammed brings up to date the stories of BlackLivesMatter and West Indian cricket
    Nov 23, 2021 – 46:06
  • Seventy years of revolution in English women’s cricket
    Nov 16, 2021 – 48:00
  • Tantrums and turmoil, racism and riots, class conflicts and colonialism – and some great cricket – in a historic tour
    Nov 2, 2021 – 51:20
Recent Reviews
  • MAK Jardine-Ponting
    A refuge from the sirens of New York
    Listening from New York I so enjoy this podcast - it is an expression of England and its relationship to the world in the best way possible. I don’t watch cricket at all much anymore but I used to fanatically - I now just love the history of the game. My only criticism is please get somebody to talk about Australian cricket, West Indian cricket and African Kenya, Zimbabwe, S Africa cricket the way that you have India andPakistan- Sri Lanka too would be great I understand just how important it is to preserve the traditions of English cricket about which Oborne and Heller are so very passionate and I like hearing about it because it’s much neglected. As an avid listener I ask that you occasionally increase your geographic reach - I’d be even more of a fan of this thing - I loved the episode with ram Guha and the latest one too. I Westbury also so interesting to listen to on the women’s game - it’d be great to hear about that tradition Thank you!
  • harry b11
    Just about perfect
    Osborne and Heller both have gorgeous radio voices and a total command of the language. They love and know cricket but understand CLR James’ dictum that ‘what do they know of cricket who only cricket know?’ Excellent guests whom they know how to bring the best out of. I found the Peter Hain episode deeply moving: just old enough to remember the fuss in the background but no sense at all of what hain went through until hearing that episode (then reading his book). (It made me proud of my own tiny role fighting for divestment on the campus of a private us university in the eighties). But every episode teaches us something new. I want to spend some days at some county matches sitting with my 81 year old dad and our mate Bob watching joyfully and listening to these chaps in the car and during the breaks. (Normally we discuss education policy!). Anyway. Outstanding. Another gift that the pandemic has brought. (Alongside antique dust and teaching in person on an otherwise deserted campus!)
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