<b>500 Tests is a mind boggling number, a testimony to Scyld's commitment and passion for the game</b>

Ravi Shastri

<b>Hell of an effort. All round quality</b>

Michael Vaughan

<b>Decades of dedication, 500 Tests of brilliant insight</b>

Mark Wood, England and Durham player

Se alle

<b>A unique account of Test cricket's evolution by one of sport's most distinctive writers</b>

Tim Wigmore, author of Test Cricket: A History

<b>Few can have watched as much cricket as Scyld, and even fewer can have loved the game more. A master-chronicler of the greatest game.</b>

Will Macpherson, The Telegraph

Scyld has been a cricket journalist for 50 years. He's been there and worn the t-shirt as far as writing about Test cricket is concerned. <b>This book is a magnificent look-back. His passion for cricket is unrivalled</b>.

Nasser Hussain, former England captain

<b>There is no one who loves cricket and thinks about it more than Scyld Berry. A genial genius. Congratulations on 500 not out.</b>

Huw Turbervill, editor of The Cricketer

<b>An utter delight, from one of cricket's most original minds.</b>

Lawrence Booth

It is not just <b>Scyld Berry's vast store of knowledge and countless cherishable anecdotes </b>that shine through in this book, but also his <b>abiding and lifelong love affair with cricket.</b>

Richard Whitehead, author of Victory in Australia

<b>Perceptive judgements</b> and <b>unique insights</b>

The Cricketer

A BOOK OF THE YEAR – NEW STATESMAN

‘500 Tests is a mind-boggling number, a testimony to Scyld's commitment and passion for the game’
– RAVI SHASTRI

‘Hell of an effort. All round quality’ – MICHAEL VAUGHAN

LEGENDARY CRICKET WRITER SCYLD BERRY CELEBRATES HIS REPORTING OF 500 TEST MATCHES IN THIS UNIQUE PORTRAIT OF ENGLISH CRICKET CULTURE

Scyld Berry attended his first Test match in a professional capacity in June 1973, as EW Swanton’s ‘amanuensis’. Having reached 500 England Tests – an achievement never reached by any other greats of the cricket-writing world – Berry has watched the sport evolve like no other.

Test cricket is a steady stream: England have had only one winter without Test cricket since 1972, some Test series almost overlap with the next, and players span eras. But the game has changed enormously in the last half-century: helmets, neutral umpires, bigger bats, new shots, data, abolition of rest days, ICC Test Championship, and DRS have transformed this sport on the field. As screens take over, publications shrink and, accelerated by Covid, cricket is increasingly covered remotely, being a newspaper correspondent represents a way of life that is dying out.

500 Declared explores these fundamental changes and developments. From in-depth profiles and explanations to snippets lifted directly from Berry’s notebooks, this is a cricket book unlike any other. It is the culmination of a lifetime watching and writing about this fascinating sport.

Les mer
Legendary cricket writer Scyld Berry celebrates his reporting of 500 Test matches in this unique portrait of English cricket culture.

Prologue
The 1970s
The 1980s
The 1990s
The 2000s
The 2010s
The 2020s

Afterword

Legendary cricket writer Scyld Berry celebrates his reporting of 500 Test matches in this unique portrait of English cricket culture.
Scyld is a respected personality, and the press and media will be keen to salute his achievement.

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781399425865
Publisert
2025-10-09
Utgiver
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Vekt
469 gr
Høyde
238 mm
Bredde
158 mm
Dybde
26 mm
Aldersnivå
00, G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
272

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Scyld Berry joined The Telegraph in 1993 and is currently their Chief Cricket Writer. He was previously the cricket correspondent of The Observer from 1977, and covered England tours from then until 2020. This is his tenth book. He is the author of Cricket Wallah; One Hundred Great Bowlers; Cricket Odyssey; Cricket’s Burning Passion with Rupert Peploe, which won the MCC Cricket Book of the Year, and Cricket: The Game of Life, which won the Cricket Writers Club Book of the Year. He is a former editor of the Wisden Cricketers’ Almanack. @scyldberry