
Taylor, Mulder show why cricket is called the game of gentlemen
When two teams play in a Test match in white kits – with eleven fielders scattered all over the ground – the view is simply spectacular, especially in a place like England.
England is renowned for its marvellous stadiums with breathtaking views in the backdrop. The overcast condition and blowing wind adds to its charm. The spectators are usually seen wearing a tie and hat, which is seldom accompanied by a stick, giving them a look of an English gentleman.
These gentlemen are often seen in the company of their bella donnas. The fans acknowledge a good shot or a dismissal by gently clapping, irrespective of the team they are rooting for. They never forget to give a standing ovation to a batter who plays a good knock or a bowler who picks up the most wickets without any bias.
But, it is always the players who steal the show when it comes to the discipline, behaviour and respect for the peers and the past greats.
Mark Taylor
Cricket history is replete with such examples when the opposition captain called back a batsman after he was declared out by the umpire to show sportsmanship.
Many instances are found in the history of the game, when bowlers have come to the rescue of batsmen after having hit them with an unintentional bouncer or a beamer. The Incidents became the folklore of cricket fraternity for a kind gesture or apologetic behaviour of a certain player.
But, two instances which stand out among all the kind and good gestures shown by the cricketers till date and will remain etched in the memories of the fans, came from two players from completely different eras, different countries and different backgrounds.
Australia's former captain Mark Taylor and South Africa's stand-in skipper Wiaan Mulder both declared their innings out of respect for the past greats. Taylor, when batting on 334 against Pakistan in Peshawar, declared his innings due to respect for the Australian great Don Bradman, the greatest batsman ever to have graced the game of cricket with an average of 99.96 in Tests.
He declared his innings as he did not want to go past Bradman. He could have gone on to play and may have become the first person to reach the magical figure of 400, which was breached many years later by the West Indian great Brian Lara.
But, he chose to remain on the same score as that of Bradman. After the match, Taylor said that he did not want to go beyond Australia's greatest batsman.
In an interview with cricket cricket.com.au, years later, Taylor revealed his decision.
'I spent hours that night contemplating what to do. I finally got to sleep at about 2 o'clock in the morning. I was thinking about what to do so I certainly didn't crash as well as I'd hoped.I think ideally I would have batted on for 20 minutes just to put their openers out in the field for 20 more minutes before we declared,' Taylor was quoted as saying by cricket.com.au.
'But, I thought if I did that I would then end up on 340 not out or something like that and I think people would have assumed that I'd batted on just for my own glory.
'I didn't want to send that message either so the more I thought about it, I came to the decision that the best thing I can do is declare (and) end up on the same score as Sir Donald, which I'm more than delighted with,' he added. Memories of Taylor's gesture of paying a tribute to a legend were revived when South Africa's Mulder declared his innings while batting on 367 not out against Zimbabwe.
Mulder had a chance to get his name etched in the pinnacle of the sport by breaking the record of Lara. He was just 33 runs short of Lara's 400-run mark. But instead of trying to break the record of Lara, he preferred to declare the innings as a befitting tribute to the great batsman.
After the match, Mulder said in the-match conference, 'Brian Lara is a legend. He got 401 or whatever it was (it was 400) against England. For someone of that stature to keep the record is pretty special.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Al Etihad
an hour ago
- Al Etihad
Ferrari's Leclerc on pole for Hungarian GP
2 Aug 2025 19:50 BUDAPEST (AFP) Charles Leclerc grabbed the first pole position of the season for Ferrari on Saturday for the Hungarian Grand Monegasque driver will share the front row on Sunday with McLaren's Oscar Piastri. McLaren's Lando Norris will start from the second row alongside fellow Briton George Russell, who was fourth for Mercedes."I honestly have no words, it's probably one of the best pole positions I've ever had because it's the most unexpected for sure," said 27-year-old went late in the final minutes of a closely-contested session to clock a best lap in one minute and 15.372 seconds in changing conditions, leaving his rivals frustrated as they failed to improve on their first run took pole by 0.026 seconds ahead of series leader Piastri and by 0.041 seconds ahead of the Australian's team-mate and title rival Norris, with Russell 0.053 seconds adrift in a breathtakingly close finish. It was Leclerc's first pole of the year, his first in Budapest and the 27th of his career. It was Ferrari's first pole in Hungary since Sebastian Vettel in 2017. "The whole qualifying has been extremely difficult, and when I say that I'm not exaggerating," said Leclerc of the windy conditions at the Hungaroring."It was super difficult for us to get to Q2 and Q3. In Q3, the conditions changed a little bit, and everything became a lot trickier, and I knew I had to just do a clean lap to target third. "At the end of the day, it's pole position and I did not expect that."


Gulf Today
9 hours ago
- Gulf Today
McLaren's Norris completes ‘double top' at Hungarian GP practice
Lando Norris completed a commanding 'double top' on Friday with the fastest times ahead of McLaren team-mate Oscar Piastri in practice at the Hungarian Grand Prix. The 25-year-old Briton, who is 16 points behind Piastri in the drivers' title race, clocked a best lap in one minute and 15.624 seconds to outpace the Australian by 0.291 seconds after a tense second session at the Hungaroring circuit. Charles Leclerc was third for Ferrari, adrift by nearly four-tenths, ahead of the Aston Martins of Lance Stroll and Fernando Alonso, and Lewis Hamilton in the second Ferrari. George Russell was seventh for Mercedes ahead of Racing Bulls' rookie Isack Hadjar, Yuki Tsunoda of Red Bull and Kimi Antonelli in the second Mercedes. All this left four-time champion Max Verstappen, grumbling throughout about his car's poor balance and performance, down in 14th place, 1.167 seconds off the pace and three tenths adrift of his team-mate. Lando Norris of Britain prepares for the second free practice. AP To make matters worse for the Dutchman, who described his car as 'undriveable', he faced a likely investigation into his disposal of a cloth towel from his cockpit during the session. From the start, it was clear that the duelling McLaren title protagonists were in no mood to take the session lightly as they traded best laps and, in a final late incident, ran close to making contact as Norris locked up and Piastri swept past him around Turn One. On a bright, dry afternoon, Nico Hulkenberg - who had missed the first session to give reserve driver Paul Aron an outing for Sauber - was first out and within five minutes ran wide and scattered gravel across the track. As Norris and Piastri dominated, endorsing the clear impression that a McLaren intra-team duel was in prospect for Sunday's race, Verstappen was down in 10th, adrift by a second, and reported, when asked about his car's balance, that it was like 'driving on ice'. His teammate Tsunoda was a tenth faster in ninth. Verstappen's pedestrian session was punctuated by an unusual late incident when he was filmed throwing a cloth, or towel, from his cockpit. He was expected to face a stewards' investigation. Lando Norris steers during the second practice in Mogyorod. AFP And showing signs that he was feeling the pressure, Norris endured 'a moment' when he slid wide on the grass at the final corner and recovered with 15 minutes remaining on used softs. Like Piastri, the winner here 12 months ago, he switched back to mediums signalling the fight for fastest lap was over. Piastri has developed into a genuine title contender over the last year. 'I have a lot of confidence in myself that I can do it,' the Australian said of his title chances Thursday. 'The pace in the last few weekends, especially (Belgium), I've been very confident in and very proud of. I'm more than capable of continuing that for the rest of the year.' McLaren can reach some milestones this weekend, with a potential 200th win in F1 for the team. It could also be Piastri and Norris' fourth one-two finish in a row, a feat McLaren last managed in 1988. Piastri took the win last year in Hungary, but only after McLaren had to plead over the radio with Norris to 'do the right thing' and let Piastri past, something the British driver was reluctant to do. Piastri had been leading but McLaren's pit strategy - which would normally favor the leader - had put Norris ahead. Piastri thinks the team can still take positives from that situation. 'I think it underlined the good nature in the team. It was obviously a slightly awkward situation, but it highlighted that we will do the right thing in all circumstances -- well, ideally all circumstances -- when we're on track,' Piastri said. Agencies


Gulf Today
9 hours ago
- Gulf Today
With ‘Ring Ring,' Rubio captures the California she grew up in
Niko Rubio knew she always wanted to be a singer. The hard part was figuring out what she wanted to sound like. The 24-year-old singer-songwriter, who was born in the Los Angeles South Bay and is of Mexican and Salvadoran descent, was always encouraged by her family to pursue her artistic ambitions. When Rubio was a preteen, her maternal grandmother even pushed her to audition for 'La Voz Kids,' the Spanish offshoot of 'The Voice' for singers under the age of 15. She wasn't picked for the show, but it reaffirmed her belief that she was meant to be a singer. 'I'm the first generation that is allowed to sing, that has the opportunity to really not have a baby,' she said. 'To say 'Grandma, grandpa, I'm not going to go to college. I'm going to go figure out how to be a songwriter.'' Like many children of immigrants in Southern California, Rubio grew up listening to music in English and Spanish. Her grandfather Sergio would play Pedro Infante and Shakira, while her mother, Vilma, exposed her to the likes of Sublime and No Doubt. Rubio, who's very close to her maternal grandparents, said they wanted her to sing traditional Mexican music, but it was a piece of advice from her mom that relieved some of the pressure she might have been feeling. In 'Ring Ring,' she does exactly that. The four-track EP, released on July 15 on Atlantic Records, is an expression of her upbringing and explores what it means to grow up bilingual and first generation in this country at this time. Instruments that are staples of traditional Mexican music underpin catchy pop ballads sung in Spanish. 'Baby,' the EP's first track, opens with the accordion before Rubio's sultry voice kicks in. In 'Quisiera Saber,' Rubio beckons to someone she desires but cannot have in a dreamy intonation, channeling Lana del Rey and backed by percussion and strings reserved for boleros romanticos. Rubio began her career in the world of alt-R&B and alt-rock. At 19, she signed with independent label Sandlot Records, founded by songwriter Jacob Kasher, who has written for Britney Spears, Selena Gomez, Maroon 5, Dua Lipa and Lady Gaga. She looks back on her early work fondly, but recognizes she was still learning who she was as an artist. 'I was so young,' she says. 'My first EP [2021's 'Wish You Were Here'] is like a very pop, alt-rock project that I love and I'm very proud of, but I was just too afraid. I didn't have the knowledge or really the understanding of myself.' And though the EP did include a track in Spanish — 'Amor' — her sound was missing a key component: her Latino roots. She wanted to capture a mix of the California she grew up in. 'I had this idea of making this alternative Mexican California beach rock-meets-mariachi romanticos kind of album,' she said. 'I told the whole team, I told my whole label: 'I'm making two projects in Spanish. I'm taking a break from English. This is what I have to do for my family. This is what I have to do for myself.'' She agonized over what it would sound like. 'I didn't want to just be another Latin artist that was making another thing for the void that wasn't going to be special, or say anything, or tell the right story,' she said. She eventually found the perfect collaborator in Grammy Award-winning producer Lester Mendez. Rubio says she admired how Mendez tapped into Shakira's Lebanese and Colombian influences in her 2005 album 'Fijación Oral, Vol. 1.' She wanted something like that for her own work — an eclectic blend of personal influences. The two worked on 'Mar y Tierra,' Rubio's first Spanish-language EP released last September. It features the standout track 'Sirena,' a bossa-nova-influenced romantico duet with Hawthorne-based singer Cuco. Tribune News Service