Playing Hard Ball: County Cricket and Big League Baseball
By (Author) E.T. Smith
Little, Brown Book Group
Abacus
1st January 2000
1st May 2003
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Baseball
796.357
Paperback
224
Width 126mm, Height 196mm, Spine 16mm
168g
A cultural comparison of two national games - cricket, English in origin, and American baseball - written from the viewpoint of a top-class practitioner of both codes. Ed Smith - the young Cambridge University and Kent batsman - has spent the winters since 1998 in Spring Training with the New York Mets baseball team. It has enabled him to contrast and compare arguably the two most iconic of sports from the inside. In fact, baseball had a thriving following in Britain until the early part of the 20th century (Derby County's former stadium was called the Baseball Ground; Tottenham Hotspur was at first a baseball club). Apart from learning two very different techniques, Ed learned that the sports' ultimate heroes, the Babe and the Don - Babe Ruth and Don Bradman - might as well have come from different planets, whilst baseball's pristine Hall of Fame in Cooperstown is a far cry from the ramshackle cricket museum at Lord's. The book paints a two-sided portrait of sports' most illustrious "hitting games". Written with the passion and sympathy of a genuine fan, it contains the behind-the-scenes insights of a professional player.
* 'Original.engrossing.lucid and informative' - Christopher Martin-Jenkins, THE TIMES * 'Quite simply it is brilliant' - THE CRICKETER * 'Ed Smith is superb on analysing the different techniques involved in the two activities. He also writes with great insight. excellent on the social and historical contexts of both baseball and cricket.' Sunday Telegraph
Ed Smith is one of England's most promising cricketers, the youngest batsman to score a century on his debut (aged 18 for Cambridge University v Glamorgan). He has written columns for the Sunday Telegraph and The Times.