What a great fact, you sure the urn is not at HQ?
"It was kept at his family home in Kent and was only presented to Lord's, where it remains ..."
What a great fact, you sure the urn is not at HQ?
Well there wouldn't have been 20-20 games, and maybe there were fewer one day games, so did we play tests against them more often than once every two years?
"It was kept at his family home in Kent and was only presented to Lord's, where it remains ..."
Oh ok.I'm not sure that it was created by the English. It was some young Australian women who presented it (and, as I said, Bligh married one of them). Why Aussie women did this, I've no idea.
That's odd. Surely it was to be a trophy for the winning team, presented to the winning captain (like any other trophy in team sport), but you wouldn't expect the captain to take ownership of it.And the urn itself was not presented to England but to Bligh personally.
No idea where I've made that up from.No mate, never.
Thanks. Can't believe Nomad made me doubt myself. Last bloody time I listen to him.Yes, for the Ashes series of 2006/7 - why? I don't know
I think the last one NOT to be an Ashes series was 1979-80, which was a three test series (which is why the Ashes weren't at stake). We lost it 3-0, so it was just as well
Was that something to do with Packer?
Well there wouldn't have been 20-20 games, and maybe there were fewer one day games, so did we play tests against them more often than once every two years?
It seems everything is ironed out nowadays. I remember six tests series between us and the Sandpaper merchants and I believe the WIndies.
Was that something to do with Packer?
No, Packer had nothing to do with or influenced anything to do with the Ashes.
Yes, the aforementioned 79/80 series was just after the 78/79 series. Australia played both England and the Windies over 6 tests, They played two series in successive years as the Packer players had returned to the fold. That's why England won 5-1 in 78/79 and lost 3-0 a year later - having Lillee, Thomson, Chappell and Marsh back made a difference ... who knew?
You can tell that one of my specialist subjects for Mastermind was The Ashes ... I wasn't allowed to choose it though
Yes, the aforementioned 79/80 series was just after the 78/79 series. Australia played both England and the Windies over 6 tests, They played two series in successive years as the Packer players had returned to the fold. That's why England won 5-1 in 78/79 and lost 3-0 a year later - having Lillee, Thomson, Chappell and Marsh back made a difference ... who knew?
You can tell that one of my specialist subjects for Mastermind was The Ashes ... I wasn't allowed to choose it though
Yes, for the Ashes series of 2006/7 - why? I don't know
The obvious retort, you were on Mastermind?
I was ... but did really badly,
I replaced the Ashes with the history of Sussex cricket but it was my second subject and didn't get past the first round.
Thankfully it was long ago and only El Presidente, who was in the audience, will remember my failure
Just reading some wiki, and although the term was first coined as a piss take by the Aussies after winning at the Oval (being the ashes of English cricket), a 1908 newspaper report said the ladies presented 'a tiny silver urn, containing what they termed 'the ashes of Australian cricket.' to Bligh (the England captain).It's a bit weird really, if the two teams are playing for the ashes of English cricket, which died at The Oval.
Just reading some wiki, and although the term was first coined as a piss take by the Aussies after winning at the Oval (being the ashes of English cricket), a 1908 newspaper report said 'a tiny silver urn, containing what they termed 'the ashes of Australian cricket.' to Bligh (the England captain).
But the urn is made of terracotta, not silver? Confusing.
You know that our only hope was for us to write them off.One thing I do know, I was saying on Friday/Saturday burn the bails again. What do I know?!?!
Just reading some wiki, and although the term was first coined as a piss take by the Aussies after winning at the Oval (being the ashes of English cricket), a 1908 newspaper report said the ladies presented 'a tiny silver urn, containing what they termed 'the ashes of Australian cricket.' to Bligh (the England captain).
But the urn is made of terracotta, not silver? Confusing. [MENTION=25]Gwylan[/MENTION]?
The report was written in 1908, about the urn that was presented in 1883.The urn is terracotta and it was presented in January 1883 not 1908
I wouldn't believe everything you read on wiki
After England had won two of the three Tests on the tour, a small urn was presented to Bligh by a group of Melbourne women including Florence Morphy, whom Bligh married within a year.[2] The contents of the urn are reputed to be the ashes of a wooden bail, and were humorously described as "the ashes of Australian cricket".[3] It is not clear whether that "tiny silver urn" is the same as the small terracotta urn given to the MCC by Bligh's widow after his death in 1927.
You know that our only hope was for us to write them off.
They did go to Australia a few years back didn't they?
Looks like they've been twice:Yes, for the Ashes series of 2006/7 - why? I don't know