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1988
As the 1987 edition did not include the Laws for space reasons, Graeme Wright did not dare leave them out again after a year which was "threatened by malevolence and near-anarchy". Wright added that "sport was not meant to be a war substitute, and cricket must not find itself being forced into that role". Deliberately slow over-rates, blatant dissent on the field, biased umpiring and a lack of leadership in the game, especially in England, all came under his fire. However, to provide some order and sanity, the straight-talking Geoffrey Boycott and the cunning Derek Underwood were both featured. As was Graeme Pollock, who retired after playing only 23 Tests, and who to most was sadly "little more than a name".
Editor Graeme Wright
Pages 1296
Price £14.50

Notes by the Editor
A wet summer but no sticky dogs and more, 1988
150 years at Trent Bridge
Notts anniversary heralded by the Championship, 1988
A coach's viewpoint
County cricket has lost the art of bowling sides out, 1988
Derek Underwood - an appreciation
Took pleasure in his craft but placed craft above all, 1988
Graeme Pollock - a retrospective
A 'genius' of a batsman, 1988
The master craftsman
A study of Geoffrey Boycott, 1988

Champions Trophy, 1986-87
Report |
Matches
England in Australia 1986-87
Report |
Matches
Sharjah Cup, 198687
Report |
Matches
The Australians in India, 198687
Report |
Matches
The New Zealanders in Sri Lanka, 198687
Report |
Matches
The Pakistanis in England, 1987
Report |
Matches
The Pakistanis in India, 198687
Report |
Matches
The Sri Lankans in India, 198687
Report |
Matches
The West Indians in New Zealand, 198687
Report |
Matches
The West Indians in Pakistan, 198687
Report |
Matches
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