This collection of Gideon Haigh's previously published articles distils from his daily reporting the essence of the 2017-18 cricket season, from victories and celebrations to the controversy that captured the world's attention.
The Australian men's cricket team arrived in Bangladesh in mid-August 2017 and departed South Africa in mid-April 2018, having deployed thirty-seven players in eleven Tests, ten one-day internationals and seven T20 internationals. They came from behind to draw a series in Asia;
they regained the Ashes, rising from fifth to third in the world's Test championship; they slipped to fourth on the ODI table and rose to second in the T20I rankings. But the souring of the achievements began around
3pm on 24 March 2018 at Newlands, when umpires summoned Cameron Bancroft to discuss attempts to alter the condition of the 42-over-old ball to which they had been alerted. Ten weeks earlier, Bancroft had posed on a stage at the Sydney Cricket Ground celebrating victory over England; within two weeks, he and three of his fellow
revellers, captain Steve Smith, vice-captain David Warner and coach Darren Lehmann, had become casualties of perhaps the angriest and suddenest sports controversies of the century.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR Born in London, raised in Geelong, resident in Melbourne,
Gideon Haigh has been a journalist since 1984, contributed to more than 100
newspapers and magazines, written thirty-two books and edited seven others.
He has been a regular panellist on the ABC's Offsiders since 2005, and reported
the 2017-18 Ashes for The Australian and The Times. He is the author of An Eye on
Cricket (Wilkinson Publishing, 2017).