Sitemap - 2020 - Jarrod Kimber's Sports Almanac

The second Test for better or worse

Joe Burns' bad day

The politics of batting

Cameron Green and the ghost of Keith Miller

India's day-nightmare

Ashwin's dream start

Cheteshwar Pujara is annoying

It is tough to be an offspinner in Australia

The good bad ball

West Indian Freelancers

Professional Women

CSA shenanigans and what batsmen see

How slow should a slower ball be?

Overarm bowling

One win and a role model

Hitting behind

T20 and the need for change

The history of race in cricket

The birth of the Bosie

Previous pieces

Basil D'Oliveira and cricket selection

The birth of Test Cricket

Rebels and race

Sweet coaching

John Reid did everything for New Zealand cricket

Female Tennis Burn Out

Sport & Order

Will the Australian women ever lose an ODI?

Sport, sport, cello, sport

You can't handle the ball

Keep Smiling, Dean Jones

It's in the blood

A seven-game narrative

Hottest thing on ice: the true story of Cool Runnings

Rise of the openers

Sport, politics and ignorance

Azhar Ali is man-made

The T20 disease

The players' voice

Fawad Alam and his numbers

The generation game

This is not a hoax, this is Shan Masood

The global player's poll

The great pause

Stuart Broad and the tiring chat about greatness

Neil Wagner: The Ultramodernist

The great slow down?

The Buttler paradox

A Test of Patience

Ben Stokes & the Rockets

The all-round battle

Around the world

The first day

Believing in sport

MS Dhoni and the super gut

The week in Women's cricket

The many worlds of Mike Tyson

The new creature called LBW

Sharing sport

Medium pace quickly disappears

Chasing Casuals

Double Century

Sport's death race

Cricket, and other things

The Campbellfield Cricket Club

Are lefties really prettier?

The tough, uncertain life of an assistant coach in T20

A dilemma as old as T20 cricket: Running for running's sake and the last ball of the innings...

Is South Africa's outlook on spin changing?

Why players are listening to commentators more than ever before