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Helen伦敦杂记--Lord's Cricket Ground [复制链接]

1#
伦敦(Lord's Cricket Ground) The Lord's Cricket Ground被称为home of cricket, 也是板球运动的“精神中心”。这里是Middlesex Cricket Club的主场,也是英格兰队的主场。每年夏天到了比赛季节,会有England vs Australia的the ashes和six nations的比赛!(激动下)虽然以前对板球的印象仅仅停留在bat and bowler,打一场tester要好几天和属于上流社会人群参与的项目外,几乎一无所知,前去参观的目的也是为了某人的“实地考察”。但是去看了还是觉得很不错啊,跟足球的纯商业化有很大不同(一家之言,莫拍啊::z2 )。Lord's位于city of westminster,地点很好,坐46路到lord's cricket ground这站下车,再走几分钟就可以看到著名的media centre。事实上我们一共去了两次,第一次是在新年之前,前一天晚上刚在网上订了票,却没有打印confirmation,结果花了好多时间到了那里却被告知一定要持票入场参观,因为他们刚开始实行网上订票,所以没有电子版的留底::18 。无奈只好等纸质参观券寄到家再去了。一晃就是3月拉,再不去到了3月底票就要作废了。。所以我们又来到了Lord's,准备一睹芳容。::z4 上图咯: 看台的外面 通往上层看台的楼梯 还是楼梯,非比赛季都关门呢 参观者大多是英联邦国家的,印度人最多了(还有一堆小孩子),其次是英国人和澳洲人 下层看台,这座椅可不怎么样,据说会换软座的。 这就是the famous investec media centre.倾斜的蓝色玻璃不晃球员眼睛 看台的下面挂满了这种"xx holds a xx record"的条幅 通往media centre的楼梯,还挺陡的,走起来声音非常响。 这是nursery ground,也就是训练场和青年队比赛处 。 那个大圆柱里面是电梯。可惜只给活动不方便人士乘坐。 解说员大叔。真是非常enjoy his job. media centre里面还是很舒适的。 这个楼梯看得很赞。 照片到此结束。回头整理照片的时候发现博物馆和最重要的那些房间比如Long Room和主队更衣室等居然没拍什么可以看的照片。好可惜呀。 最后做个广告: tour of the Lord's: 学生8磅(今年涨了1磅,原来是7磅) 这个是tour的介绍,上面有张long room的照片,想象一下女王陛下和菲利浦亲王在这里跟club member一起看比赛的场景。 http://www.lords.org/data/files/lords-tour-leaflet-for-website-9982.pdf
本主题由 超级版主 37°2 于 4/26/2009 1:19:31 AM 执行 设置高亮 操作


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2#

沙发是我的。。


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3#

所以我一场现场没看过。。票价倒是不贵的。。40左右


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4#

所有印度人来这里最多


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5#

话说在这地方打球的队员中还有好几个同时是阿森纳和英格兰足球队的


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6#

回复 12# 鹿丸 的帖子

我去找找看。


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7#

这也是黑色。。


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8#

回复 17# johnchen01 的帖子

解说员大叔说,有个选手头一天为英格兰板球队打了比赛,第二天代表阿森纳踢了足总杯决赛。。我之前查过,不只一个。。


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9#

Dennis compton played cricket for middlesex and england and played football for arsenal and england. 各位google之。。 还有一位进入arsenal史上50大球员第43位的,叫做Andy Ducat。 原文链接:http://www.arsenal.com/news/news-archive/gunners-greatest-players-43.-andy-ducat Andy Ducat's name won't ring any bells with many Arsenal fans - but he was an incredible sportsman. Years later, Arsenal's Denis Compton would represent his country at cricket and his brother Leslie, also a cricketer, would play football for Arsenal and England. That takes some doing but Ducat trumped them both. He was good enough to earn England caps in both sports. Ducat the cricketer hit 52 centuries for Surrey and played one Test against Australia in 1921, a year after being named as one of the Wisden Cricketers of the Year. Ducat the footballer made six appearances for England over the space of 10 years.


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Denis Charles Scott Compton CBE (23 May 1918 in Hendon, Middlesex – 23 April 1997 in Windsor, Berkshire) was an English cricketer who played in 78 Test matches, and a footballer. He spent the whole of his cricket career with Middlesex and the whole of his football career at Arsenal F.C.. Denis Compton was the second son of Harry and Jessie Compton; his older brother was Les Compton. He was educated at an Elementary School and he joined the MCC groundstaff at Lord's in 1934. By the late 1930s he was a leading England batsman and remained at the top of his profession for almost three decades. His dashing approach to batting and the sheer enjoyment he exuded endeared him to a generation of cricket lovers. As an all-rounder Compton was a right-hand bat and a slow left-arm Chinaman bowler. In 1947 he thrilled a war-weary English public by breaking record after record in scoring 3816 runs; he scored 18 centuries. 753 of those runs came against the touring South Africans. This season was the summit of a glittering career that began on the ground staff at Lord's; selection for Middlesex followed in 1936 and England the following year. He scored his first Test century as a precocious 19-year-old in 1938 against Don Bradman's touring Australians. Later in the same series he scored a match-saving 76 not out at Lord's; this innings was scored on a rain-affected pitch and greatly impressed Don Bradman. In 1939 he scored 2468 runs for the season, including 120 against the West Indies at Lord's. As with many other sportsman of his generation he lost some of his best years to the Second World War, during which he served in the army in India. It was in India, however, that he began his close friendship with his Australian counterpart as Test cricketer, footballer and national hero, Keith Miller. They played against each other in the match at Calcutta between the Australian Services team and East Zone. The match was interrupted by rioting when Compton was on 94 and one of the rioters who had invaded the pitch ran up to Compton and said "Mr Compton, you very good player, but the match must stop now", which Miller gleefully repeated whenever Compton came to the crease subsequently. In recognition of their friendship and rivalry, the ECB and Cricket Australia decided in 2005 that the player adjudged the Player of the Series in the Ashes would be awarded the Compton-Miller medal. In 1946, England toured Australia and although beaten by the powerful Australian team, Compton distinguished himself by scoring a century in each innings of the Adelaide Test. Back in England in 1947 he had his glorious season, thereafter he remained a wonderful adornment to the game of cricket until his retirement in 1956/1957. Two of his finest innings were played against the formidable Australian side of 1948. In the First Test at Trent Bridge he scored 184 in the second innings after Australia had established a first innings lead of 344, and it looked as though he might save the match for England until he lost his balance to a short-pitched ball from Miller and hit his wicket. In the Third Test at Old Trafford, he made 145 not out in the first innings, when no other batsman made more than 37. Early in his innings he tried to hook a Lindwall bouncer, but edged the ball onto his head. He had to retire hurt, and needed two stitches, but returned to the crease at 119-5 and enabled England to reach 363. This was the only match that England did not lose, and if so much time had not been lost to the weather they might have won it. In the series he made 562 runs at 62.44, against fierce fast bowling from Lindwall, Miller and Johnston, On the MCC tour of South Africa 1948-49 he scored 300 against North-Eastern Transvaal in just a minute over three hours - still the fastest triple-century ever in first-class cricket. His first hundred took 66 minutes (he said, "I was getting a sight of the bowling"), his second 78 minutes (he was not out overnight and had to play himself in again next morning), and his third hundred took just 37 minutes. Reminiscing about the match later, Compton compared the South Africans' bowling with a decent county side, but criticised their catching (he had been dropped before he reached 20)[1]. Compton finished his cricket career after playing 78 Test matches with 17 centuries at an average of 50.06. In all first-class cricket he scored 123 centuries. Compton also played football, beginning his career at non-league Nunhead F.C. during the 1934/35 season before joining Arsenal. A winger, he made his debut in 1936, and won the League in 1948 and the FA Cup in 1950. However, the latter part of his sporting career was dogged by knee trouble, the knee had been damaged in a collision with the Charlton goalkeeper; he was limited to 60 official (i.e. non-wartime) appearances and 16 goals. He represented England in wartime 12 times, but never in a full official match. Compton jointly captained Middlesex CCC between 1951 and 1952, with W.J.Edrich. They were honoured with the creation of the Edrich and Compton stands at the Nursery End in Lord's Cricket Ground. He was also honoured with the naming of the Shenley Cricket Centre, where the main pitch is named the Denis Compton Oval. Interestingly this is where his grandson, Nick Compton, set the Middlesex record for the 6th wicket partnership in List A cricket (142* BL Hutton & NRD Compton v Lancashire at Shenley 2002). Compton's absent-mindedness was legendary. Colin Cowdrey writes that Compton turned up for the Old Trafford Test of 1955 against South Africa without his kitbag. Undaunted, he sauntered into the museum and borrowing an antique bat off the display, went on to score 155 and 79 not out. This absent-mindedness was particularly obvious in his tendency to run out his partners at the crease; Trevor Bailey declared that 'a call for a run from Compton should be treated as no more than a basis for negotiation.' Typically, at his brother Leslie's benefit match in 1955, he managed to run him out before he had faced a single ball. Peter Parfitt, the Middlesex and England batsman, was a speaker at a major celebration in London for Compton's 70th birthday. He claims that the chief guest was called to the telephone by a lady who had heard about the dinner: eventually, he agreed to take the call. "Denis," she said, "it's me, your mother. You're not 70, you're only 69." After retiring from sport, Denis Compton became a journalist and later a commentator for BBC Television. He was made a CBE in 1958. He became the first former professional cricketer to be elected President of Middlesex CCC in 1991. He served two terms, until a week before his death from septicaemia in Windsor, Berkshire aged 78. With his contemporary the footballer Stanley Matthews Compton was the first British sportsman to make a substantial living by exploiting his sporting reputation to provide advertisements and endorsements. For many years he was the public face of the Brylcreem range of men's haircare products (for an example see page viii of the 1955 edition of Wisden Cricketers' Almanack). His elder brother Leslie also played cricket for Middlesex and football for Arsenal and England. He was married three times with three sons (Brian and the Natal cricketers Patrick and Richard) and two daughters. His grandson Nick is currently playing for Middlesex.


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