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David Robson

By

David Robson,

David Robson

Opinion

A game of two (beigel) halves

June 24, 2013 09:01
2 min read

Cricket isn't a very Jewish game. I doubt if Ian Botham, dropping the ball while he was running in to bowl, ever yelled "oy vey" as one of my team once did. The fearsome fast bowler Fred Trueman, who turned out to have a Jewish grandmother, probably never yelled to his teammates: "I'm going to skittle these shleppers and finish this whole bloody misheberuch." Jim Laker, who took 19 wickets in a Test match, married into a Jewish family. His mother-in-law probably said "nu, what was wrong with the 20th wicket?" Chaim Potok's novel The Chosen opens with a 25-page description of a ferociously fought softball game between two New York yeshivot. We can take it there is no such grand account of a Jewish cricket match.

Harold Pinter, the outstanding Anglo-Jewish literary figure of the past century, loved cricket and had his own (largely non-Jewish) team. He said "cricket is the greatest thing God created on earth. Certainly greater than sex, although sex isn't bad either." He wrote a poem about his hero: "I saw Len Hutton in his prime/Another time, another time." He sent it to his friend, the playwright Simon Gray. A few months later, he asked Gray what he thought of it. Gray replied: "I haven't had time to finish reading it." Oy!

My own recent batting performance had a special degree of yiddishkeit about it. It was in north London, at the old boys' ground of Highgate School.

I was the opening batsman and my strategy was dictated not by the state of the pitch or the quality of the bowling but by my concern about what time the beigels would arrive. I had mentioned to my girlfriend that beigels would be good for lunch and she was going to collect some en route to the ground. She chose Beigel Bake at the top of Brick Lane in the East End, a magnificent establishment open 24 hours a day. Their beigels are not only good, they are extremely cheap. Fill your car with them, go to Hendon or Golders Green, undercut the shops there by half and still make a healthy profit.