Essayer OR - Gratuit
Getting shirty Unearthing lost treasure is easier than finding that red South Africa top
The Guardian
|September 12, 2024
There is a lot that's wrong with cricket at the moment. The longest and oldest format is in a painful death spiral. Franchise leagues are cannibalising the game as the entire ecosystem teeters on collapse. James Vince's cover drive is still not a regular feature of the England side.
But if I held all the power and could change one thing about the sport I love it would be this: I'd make it easier - much easier - to purchase vintage cricket shirts. I know that's a pretty selfish desire, but I can't help it.
Acquiring old sports gear satiates me in a way that only a fellow collector could understand.
There's the nostalgia; jerseys from past decades act as time machines. Simply touching the frayed fabric transports you to a moment in history as your vision is flooded with images from a distant age.
Then there's the sense of ownership. Mark McKinley, the late American psychologist and university professor, who also held the official world record for most clocks owned, said "people who collect 'things' are at the apex of consumerism".
He argued that the "aristocratic collectors" of the 18th and 19th centuries who hoarded fossils, shells and anthropological plunder were motivated by the same neurological tugs as cricket shirt collectors. It's what compels people to spend too much money and effort searching for lost treasure. The only difference is that Terry Herbert had an easier time finding the Staffordshire Hoard than I've had locating my holy grail: the red strip worn by South Africa during the 1997-98 Carlton & United Tri-series.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition September 12, 2024 de The Guardian.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE The Guardian
The Guardian
Garnacho saves sorry Chelsea from shock defeat by Qarabag
Chelsea’s precision is nowhere to be seen when Enzo Maresca rings the changes.
3 mins
November 06, 2025
The Guardian
Lights, camera, tax break The producer churning out flops funded by Treasury
Only the geekiest film buffs will have heard of Alan Latham, but he is one of the UK's most prolific movie producers.
4 mins
November 06, 2025
The Guardian
Academics tell of 'heavy pressure' from China
UK academics whose research is critical of China say they have been targeted and their universities subjected to “extremely heavy” pressure from Beijing, prompting calls for a fresh look at the sector’s dependence on tuition fee income from Chinese students.
3 mins
November 06, 2025
The Guardian
Lammy's luck is facing an opponent who can't count and has lost track of his gotcha moment
He had one job.
2 mins
November 06, 2025
The Guardian
"The money you get in football means the parasites come'
The former West Ham, Chelsea and England footballer, a gifted maverick who always felt a man out of time, playing a game years ahead of most of his contemporaries, smiles when I ask how old he feels now: \"Forty-four. I'm 44 [this Saturday].
6 mins
November 06, 2025
The Guardian
'A true champion' Hope overflows in New York as the outsider candidate claims victory
Zohran Mamdani's election downtown night party in Brooklyn on Tuesday night saw hundreds of his supporters erupt in applause as the democratic socialist from Queens was elected the next mayor of New York City.
4 mins
November 06, 2025
The Guardian
Confusion at the gates Why system can't keep track of inmates
The mistaken release of a second foreign prisoner has forced ministers to once again revaluate their security and release procedures, and will once again shine a spotlight on the well-documented problems at HMP Wandsworth.
2 mins
November 06, 2025
The Guardian
Lammy under pressure after two more prisoners mistakenly freed
David Lammy is under mounting pressure after two more prisoners, including a convicted foreign sex offender, were mistakenly freed days after the justice secretary introduced stringent checks for jails.
4 mins
November 06, 2025
The Guardian
High-speed rail network could cover Europe by 2040, says EU
Breakfast in Berlin, lunch in Copenhagen, with a fast and easy train journey to pass the morning?
2 mins
November 06, 2025
The Guardian
Tale of two city mayors Mamdani joins Khan on divided world stage
While the soon-to-be first Muslim mayor of New York, Zohran Mamdani, was in the final throes of his mayoral campaign on a brisk day in New York, Sadiq Khan, the first Muslim mayor of London, was wrapping up a two-day climate summit in a steamy if overcast Rio de Janeiro.
4 mins
November 06, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
