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Once a relationship becomes strained, cricket rarely seems able to offer a compromise. Recently, Darren Gough, Graham Thorpe, Mark Butcher and Dominic Cork have all seen their marriages break up while on England duty. |
Occasionally, special cases are allowed. Not wanting to miss the birth of his second child, Nasser Hussain settled his wife Karen and toddler Jacob in Perth just before the start of the 2002-03 tour of Australia. |
The problems appear
both generational and cultural, with the majority of divorces occurring
in England, though a quick check reveals that nowhere is immune. India,
to pick a country with different social mores, has its marital
casualties: before he was ever accused of match-fixing, Mohammad
Azharuddin caused a scandal by walking out of an arranged marriage and
settling down with a Bollywood actress. Javagal Srinath's marriage broke
up and Sourav Ganguly's touched breaking point when he was photographed
at a temple with another filmstar. Other cricketers caught in the full
glare of Indian celebrity have been tempted, though many feel it is a
honey-trap used by underworld figures hoping to blackmail players into
fixing matches.
The absenteeism is felt
far more in England, where little more than a few weeks separate the
hectic six-month home season and the moment wives wave their husbands
off on tour in October. It would not be sanctioned now, but on the
1982-83 tour of Australia and New Zealand, Chris Tavar`E9, who had
recently married, brought his wife Vanessa along for the entire 148-day
trip. What none of the team knew at the time was that Vanessa had
phobias about flying and heights, both of which required heavy sedation.
With 23 flights and most of the hotels set in downtown skyscrapers, a
lot of sedative was needed. If Tavar`E9 was unhappy he never showed it.
It wasn't until the Fourth Test in Melbourne that he played his first
shot in anger.
Once a relationship
becomes strained, cricket rarely seems able to offer a compromise.
Recently, Darren Gough, Graham Thorpe, Mark Butcher and Dominic Cork
have all seen their marriages break up while on England duty. In
Thorpe's case, the public saw it too: he flew home from India at the
beginning of a Test match in an attempt to save his marriage, appeared
on his doorstep in Surrey to talk frankly about it, and later played for
England at Lord's when clearly not himself during a custody battle over
his two small children. He retired from one-day internationals with the
World Cup looming to spend more time with the children, giving up a
sizeable income as a result.
Others are doing the
sums, and players who spent last winter with both the Test and one-day
sides in Australia and the World Cup in South Africa did not see their
own beds for 140 nights. Missing the kids growing up is a regret many
cricketers cite as a downside of their job, but it is one that most do
little about. On the same 1982-83 tour as the Tavar`E9s, the England
team were sponsored by JVC. Getting some of their products was part of
the deal; while most of the players chose hi-fi, Derek Randall picked a
fussy-looking video camera. He said it was "for the missus",
so she could film the kids growing up for him.
Keith Fletcher's
playing career with Essex and England lasted more than 20 years from
tentative newcomer to wise old guru. He was married throughout,
and still is, to Sue, and they have two grown-up daughters, Sarah and
Tara. Sue doesn't feel she or the children suffered unduly as a result
of his absence. "I certainly don't look back with resentment, and
the girls grew up thinking it was the norm," she says. "I
don't feel it has affected them in any way and they both have a great
relationship with their father."
An itinerant father can
confuse young children. In his diary of the 1997-98 West Indies tour,
Phil Tufnell's last entry tells of arriving back at Heathrow to be
greeted by his three-year-old daughter Poppy waving and shouting:
"Bye-bye, Daddy."
Being away for long
periods does not just affect wives and children. Players spending half
their year in hotel rooms become lonely and frustrated. When that
happens, temptation to stray can be hard to resist and public
disclosures of affairs have, in some cases, precipitated the split. Fame
has always been a potent aphrodisiac.
In England, marital
break-up among cricketers has increased steadily, a trend in step with a
wider society that has seen the divorce rate treble in a generation.
Research recently commissioned by the Lord Chancellor's department found
many of today's generation "selfishly pursue careers and other
interests at the expense of marriage or long-term relationships".
Cricketers, like most professional sportsmen, have probably just been
selfish for longer.
Before the 1990s, the
situation was largely tolerated, though not by Phillip DeFreitas's first
wife, who made it clear she considered her own career far more important—thanks
to its relative longevity—than her spouse's. These days, wives with
children expect husbands to contribute more than a pay packet. Many
cricketers struggle to deliver, and not only because of their absence.
Cricket dressing-rooms act as quasi-family units, though ones where
responsibility, beyond the immediate task of scoring runs or taking
wickets, is often lacking.
The laddish bonhomie
and sporting drama that come with the job do not prepare players for the
raw emotions of life. But while an upset on the pitch can be sorted in
the nets or by having a chat with the coach, a failing relationship with
a loved one is not so easily remedied, especially when the player is a
few time zones away.
The fact that players
now move county more frequently than in the past means that traditional
support networks for wives, such as aunts and grandmothers, may no
longer be within easy reach. Where children are settled at school, many
simply refuse to move, leaving players to live like the blokes in Men
Behaving Badly for virtually the whole season. Part of the problem
stems, as one wife of a well-known player confirms, from the women not
thinking the whole deal through before they settle down with a
professional cricketer. Often, they meet their man before he has been
picked for international duty. Only when the merry-go-round of touring
meets the treadmill of county cricket does the anti-social nature of the
whole business hit them.
There is a distinct
generation gap. Sue Fletcher, a stoic by nature, recalls the England
wives of the late 1960s and early 70s being a close-knit group that was
more like a self-help collective than a bunch of disillusioned
housewives. "We knew what the form was about looking after the
kids; our husbands made that clear from day one," she says.
"When they were on tour, and they were long tours in those days,
the wives used to visit each other back in England. It helped that we
all got on well and had children roughly the same age. But we rallied
round and got on with it because that's how it was."
In those days, families
were allowed to tour but were not encouraged. As at the gentlemen's
clubs of the time, women were seen as a distraction and rather too
civilising for cricketers sent to win important battles on foreign soil.
The Test and County Cricket Board used to control visits, which players
had to pay for, including flights and hotel rooms.
These days, there are
still limits, but they are less strict. Provided a player is abroad for
more than 60 days, the England and Wales Cricket Board allow 30 days'
family provision for players who are in both the Test and one-day sides
and 16 for those in one or the other. The board also pays for return
flights (in economy) for wives and children under 18, all accommodation,
some internal travel and a modest daily meal allowance.
The timing of visits is
still controlled and has to be agreed in advance by the captain and
coach. Usually the period falls around Christmas and New Year, just as
the Test series is coming to a climax, a situation that can add to the
tension, especially when families come to realise that Daddy is not on
holiday too.
Occasionally, special
cases are allowed. Not wanting to miss the birth of his second child,
Nasser Hussain settled his wife Karen and toddler Jacob in Perth just
before the start of the 2002-03 tour of Australia, a first for an
England captain. He flew out ahead of the team and was given a few days
off after the First Test so he could be there for the birth, which was
even timed to fit into his schedule: as he chivalrously put it in his
newspaper column, "we had her induced".
Top-level sport is
accompanied by self-analysis and narcissism, which do not lend
themselves to the give-and-take required in most long-term
relationships. The endless insecurity tends to propel most cricketers up
the aisle by their early twenties, before life skills have been
acquired. Some, like Imran Khan, David Gower and Mike Atherton, wait
until their careers are all but over before starting a family, but they
are unusual.
Darren Gough, who moved
out of the family home last year into a bachelor pad in Milton Keynes,
said he felt playing cricket for England was becoming a single man's
game. Given that the international programme has doubled in the last
decade, he may be right, but it would be sad if the game's player-power
were further compromised.
The hike in matches has
come at the behest of television, which bankrolls the modern game. Until
that is addressed, something the ICC has yet to do despite the pleas of
senior Test captains like Nasser Hussain and Steve Waugh, cricket's
biggest battle will be on the home front.
— Courtesy: Wisden
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