Reverse Swept Radio - a cricket podcast

Follow Reverse Swept Radio - a cricket podcast
Share on
Copy link to clipboard

Every two weeks, Andy Ryan and Toby Chadd sit, with unreliable microphones, unreliable laptop and reliable bottles of beer, and chat about cricket. Cricket that's happening now, cricket that's going to happen next week, cricket that happened a very long time ago, cricket books, cricket journalism an…

RS Radio - A Cricket Show


    • Jun 23, 2025 LATEST EPISODE
    • monthly NEW EPISODES
    • 31m AVG DURATION
    • 83 EPISODES


    Search for episodes from Reverse Swept Radio - a cricket podcast with a specific topic:

    Latest episodes from Reverse Swept Radio - a cricket podcast

    Reverse Swept Radio 187: Ajit Agarkar's unlikely century, Andy's new mug, and Benaud's shoes

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2025 36:44


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Andy has a new mug - with a deep cricket backstory, and Toby plays an unconventional game of T20 "If at any point you see me, I'll likely be drinking or making tea." FROM THE ARCHIVES (11'20): Ajit Agarkar's debut century - England vs India, Lord's, 2002 "Agarkar had recently returned from an Australian tour where he had been taunted as Bombay Duck after recording seven consecutive wicketless innings." THE REVIEW (23'40): Richie Benaud's Blue Suede Shoes: The Story of an Ashes Classic by David Kynaston and Harry Ricketts (2024) "A drunk Walter Robins, former all rounder and England selector, came into the dressing room and commanded England to play a certain way - and Peter May, to get rid of him, agreed." Recorded 22 June 2025

    Reverse Swept Radio 186: the annual RSR away day at Lord's, Alex Tudor's nightwatchman heroics, and reviewing Cape Summer

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2025 33:28


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Andy and Toby head to Lord's for the annual Reverse Swept Radio day in the Pavilion "You gave me false advice with just the right amount of confidence to truly screw me." FROM THE ARCHIVES (10'33): Alex Tudor's Nightwatchman Heroics - July 1999  "Thorpe comes back to the dressing room, fresh from being abused by the crowd, to the abuse of his team-mates." THE REVIEW (20'40): Cape Summer (2009) "What part of the touring life would resonate? Well, there's a trip the gold and uranium mine." Recorded 1 June 2025

    Reverse Swept Radio 185: the greatest English keeper, re-discovering memorabilia, and Stump Cricket

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2025 33:43


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Andy puzzles over a forgotten childhood poster, and Toby applauds Wisden taking the gloves off. "Mind you he wasn't massive, so you could probably print him on A3." FROM THE ARCHIVES (09'20): Stump Cricket, or Podex "At its core this is an issue with the length of time you spent pulling out tree roots." THE REVIEW (19'00): Godfrey Evans: A Biography by Christopher Sandford (1990) "After getting hit by a car, Evans gets up, shrugs it off and walks off. And I thought 'this is a book I need to read.'" Recorded 28 April 2025

    Reverse Swept Radio 184: farewell to the Gabba, a new documentary on Afghan's women, and a wallchart arrives

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2025 28:38


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: An announcement about the next chapter in the history of the Gabba (play Olympic cricket there, then knock it down); Andy's summer begins when his county wallchart arrives. "My oldest daughter made a move for it, and while I am usually tolerant of her playing with my dearest property, in this case I had to say 'No, this is sacred stuff.'." FROM THE ARCHIVES (08'45): The India vs Pakistan bowl out - Kingsmead Oval, September 2007, inaugural T20 World Cup "It's a world cup match between two great rivals, but this whole bowl out has the air of a beer match." THE REVIEW (18'45): Cricket's Forgotten Team (2025) "When the Taliban took power, they had to find and destroy their scorebooks. No longer were these books a proud way of memorialising achievements of the past; they were incriminating documents that would lead to punishment." Recorded 25 March 2025

    Reverse Swept Radio 183: a cricketing kidnap, a delicious memoir, and a new father gets back into the game

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2025 32:00


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Andy's brother revives a promising career, and Toby wonders whether cricket and politics can ever be entirely separated. "It may astonish you, but he's actually better than me." FROM THE ARCHIVES (08'04): The Curious Tale of Billy Midwinter - The Kidnapped Cricketer "WG Grace dragged him bodily out of the Lord's pavilion and over town to the Oval." THE REVIEW (19'52): Cricket Calling by Roland Ryder (1995) "Has the modern crowd got the skill to Sardine a Jardine?" Recorded 16 Feb 2025

    Reverse Swept Radio 182: Frank Worrell, bespoke girls' kit, and the last day of the 2010 County Championship

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2025 30:22


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Maiden's new female cricket kit, and encounters with the game in Vikram Seth's A Suitable Boy “I will absolutely be selling my daughters on the idea that cricket is the finest way to waste a large chunk of one's life, but it's far better when that message is being communicated by their peers ." FROM THE ARCHIVES (10'10): The final day of the 2010 County Championship “Notts were presented with an imitation trophy - which apparently was lost later that night in a nightclub" THE REVIEW (19'30): The Documentary: Sir Frank Worrell (BBC World Service) “Initially I thought we needed a bit more on Worrell - but eventually I realised that this lands him as a historical figure." Recorded 19 Jan 2025

    Reverse Swept Radio 181: innovative methods to dry cricket pitches, and Darren Lehmann's move to county cricket

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2024 31:09


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Darren Lehmann embarks on a County Cricket chapter, and Toby attempts to pass on the flame to a new generation “We're recording 60 years to the day since possibly the most one-sided match in first class cricket history: a victory by an innings and 851 runs." FROM THE ARCHIVES (10'15): The strange beginnings of the super sopper “Does it just make a huge mess? That's actually a really good question." THE REVIEW (20'10): Bowler's Turn by Ian Peebles (1960) “‘What matter if it doesn't land quite in the right place? So long as it bursts like a bomb in a beehive. This is art for art's sake.'" Recorded 4 Dec 2024

    Reverse Swept Radio 180: a touching message, green-washing cricket, Karachi 2000, and a Sandpapergate documentary

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2024 34:31


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Andy receives a message from a listener, and Toby ponders whether cricket's efforts to reduce carbon emissions may have some unintended consequences "As a podcast host, it makes you feel very differently about the whole enterprise." FROM THE ARCHIVES (12'00): England's victory in the dark: Karachi 2000 "England would later celebrate in the dressing room with a chorus of “Who let the dogs out?”,  Duncan Fletcher reportedly woofing along." THE REVIEW (22'00): Crossing the Line (2018, SuperSport) "Warne has the immortal line “Steve Smith is not Pablo Escobar.”" Recorded 27 September 2024

    Reverse Swept Radio 179: fantasy cricket, the Canterbury Lime, and a delightful slice of nostalgia

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2024 33:55


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Andy plays fantasy cricket, and Toby comes across some retro technology on the train  "I went to take out my headphones, and then my ear was caught by the message coming out of his phone." FROM THE ARCHIVES (10'15): The Canterbury Lime: Cricket's most famous tree "That particular rule is completely rational, but something of a shame." THE REVIEW (22'40): Herbert Farjeon's Cricket Bag, published 1944 "'Is there a grown man in the grandstand whose maturity isn't a little saddened that after all, he is just a grandstand man?" Recorded 29 September 2024

    Reverse Swept Radio 178: cricket in Larkin, an Indian cricket scam, and donating Cricketers to a good cause

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2024 29:27


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Andy donates his Cricketers to a good cause, and Toby ponders the Shakib al Hasan scandal. "There's a bandaged batsman sitting in hospital leafing through my old magazines." FROM THE ARCHIVES (08'54): Cricket in the poetry of Philip Larkin "'...an Odeon went past, a cooling tower, and someone running up to bowl...'" THE REVIEW (19'00): The Great Cricket Con (BBC Radio 4 / BBC Sounds), 2024 "When you step back, you're talking about organised crime, people smuggling..." Recorded 6 September 2024

    Reverse Swept Radio 177: banning left-handers, overhearing discipline in action, and Duncan Hamilton's latest book

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2024 36:52


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Andy overhears a conversation about cricket discipline; Toby plays in a family grudge match "The pavilion had the most perfectly positioned loo." FROM THE ARCHIVES (10'00): When Left-Handers were in danger of being banned from the game "Most things you Google, you get pages and pages of results. For the Academy of Statistical Studies, you get just three hits." THE REVIEW (21'50): One Long and Beautiful Summer: A Short Elegy for Red Ball Cricket by Duncan Hamilton (2020) "At its best, it makes you think about how *you* watch cricket." Recorded 12 August 2024

    Reverse Swept Radio 176: a day in the Lord's pavilion, Derek Underwood's finest moment, and a T20 hitman

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2024 32:49


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Andy and Toby spend a day in the Lord's pavilion "We can't let this go without talking about the picnic provision." FROM THE ARCHIVES (08'30): Underwood triumphs in the nick of time - 5th Ashes Test at The Oval, 1968 "There were apparently knitting needles being used to dig holes for drainage." THE REVIEW (19'20): Hitman for Hire: A Year in the Life of a Franchise Cricketer (2024) "He wins the Pakistani T20 competition, and has ten minutes to celebrate the victory before he heads to the airport, so that he can see his family for four days before going to the IPL." Recorded 28 June 2024

    Reverse Swept Radio 175: the Lord's long room, Felix White's cricketing memoir, and the precursor to DLS

    Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2024 34:17


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Andy makes his debut in the Long Room, and Toby reflects on Jimmy Anderson's retirement "Harry Brook came past joking about handwarmers. This was an April day much more winter than spring." FROM THE ARCHIVES (10'28): The Precursor to DLS: the Average Run Rate Method "Under the Average Run Rate Method, the target was 61. If DLS had been used, it would have been 131: more than double the number of runs required." THE REVIEW (21'51): It's Always Sunny Somewhere by Felix White (2021) "A particular gem was Ashley Giles reminiscing about his days in a Shell garage, and a rude customer making him think 'I'd better get the cricket going again'." Recorded 20 May 2024

    Reverse Swept Radio 174: French cricket's ghost leagues, Liam Dawson stops trying, Sonny Ramadhin is stopped

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2024 35:31


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: French cricket levels up, and Liam Dawsons resigns from trying to play test cricket "The Ghost Cricket Leagues of France - a superb title for anything, really." FROM THE ARCHIVES (10'50): The Unstoppable Sonny Ramadhin is stopped "His 588 deliveries over 98 overs remain the most balls bowled in a first-class innings." THE REVIEW (21'20): Cricket's Greatest Game (2022) "We need more people who find Trevor Bayliss sexy." Recorded 1 April 2024

    Reverse Swept Radio 173: an English leggie in Zimbabwe, the first tied test, and an insider account of Aus vs India

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2024 36:48


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Andy reports back from the Logan Cup, and Toby enjoys the small (and futile) parts of Sunday cricket "Clearly the Reverse Swept Radio coffers will be extensive enough to fly me back to Australia every three weeks to record the podcast?" FROM THE ARCHIVES (11'00): the Tied Test between Australia and India, 1960 "Richie Benaud walked onto the outfield as Australia begins their chase, and sees clover flowers all over the outfield." THE REVIEW (24'30): The Miracle Makers: Indian Cricket's Greatest Epic, by  Bharat Sundaresan with Gaurav Joshi (2023) "It was on trend to hear that Justin Langer screams "Warrior! Warrior!" to Steve Smith in the nets." Recorded 3 March 2024

    Reverse Swept Radio 172: cricket under the bedclothes, trying to save a painting for the nation, and Warne at Hampshire

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2024 34:36


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Reflecting on the West Indian victory against Australia "So I woke up last Sunday morning in a Gothic temple, as you do." FROM THE ARCHIVES (10'50): Benjamin West's The Cricketers, and the battle to take the painting to the US "One bat is being leant on like a walking stick, the other has been discarded on the floor." THE REVIEW (21'55): Shane Warne: A Hampshire Love Story (BBC Radio Solent, hosted by Robbie James) (2023) "If you're doing a radio show about Warne, generally you talk to the people who like him of course." Recorded 4 February 2024

    Reverse Swept Radio 171: Aus v Pak at the SCG; the story of the fourth stump; and cricket in South America

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 8, 2024 34:54


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Andy ponders the lot of the groundstaff of waterlogged British pitches; Toby reports back from day 1 of the SCG test "You presumably need a super super blotter, when it comes to a flood." FROM THE ARCHIVES (10'50): When Cricket Added a Fourth Stump: the innovations of Cricket Max "This is a niche question: where do you take guard when you've got four stumps?" THE REVIEW (22'40): Evita Burned Down our Pavilion: A Cricketing Odyssey through Latin America by James Coyne and Timothy Abraham (2021) "Pablo Escobar's son was sent to an English school, where as a wicket keeper he would put a match under the bails, attached to a piece of thread, which he would pull to claim a bowled." Recorded 9 January 2024

    Reverse Swept Radio 170: a walk-out after one ball, Mark Butcher on the history of Black English cricketers, and the most miserable innings

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2023 32:19


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Andy becomes a Middlesex member, and Toby finds himself hopelessly out of his depth "We have a running joke that our shirts are our best player. This has come back to bite us in the arse: bonus points for wearing the same shirt got us promoted up a division." FROM THE ARCHIVES (11'10): The One Ball Walkout: Transvaal vs the Rest of South Africa, 3 April 1971 "We create so many assorted reasons for play to stop, that you do become slightly immune as a spectator..." THE REVIEW (20'35): You Guys are History: The Story of England's Black Cricketers (2021) "Phil DeFreitas talks about getting ready to bowl and thinking about the sniper threatened by The National Front." Recorded 10 December 2023

    Reverse Swept Radio 169: a summer without cricket, the finest Australian you've never heard of, and a new Harry Pearson book

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2023 40:27


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Andy reflects on a rare summer without cricket, and Toby enjoys Mark Ramprakash's insights into England's woeful World Cup "To lose me and Sir Alastair in just a few weeks would be a lot for the nation to take." FROM THE ARCHIVES (13'48): The Greatest Australian Cricketer you've never heard of: Greg Mail "Perhaps the secret to his success is not being quite good enough." THE REVIEW (26'18): First of the Summer Wine by Harry Pearson (2022) "A breeder of canaries and pigeons, and a champion clog dancer, as a keeper he often purred 'Well bowled, Honey' from behind the stumps." Recorded 5 November 2023

    Reverse Swept Radio 168: New Zealanders in Bristol, Warne vs Dravid, and a Bodyline radioplay

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2023 34:25


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Andy makes a first-time visit to Bristol, and Toby reflects on post-captaincy careers "In my head, Misbah-ul-Haq had to go for it. In reality, he could have done it in singles." FROM THE ARCHIVES (12'10): When Warne and Dravid met by the Solent "He is eventually undone by legspin - but not by Warne." THE REVIEW (22'10): The Englishman Abroad - BBC radioplay by Christopher Douglas "Much like that Australian top order, I might have had enough of Bodyline by this point." Recorded 24 September 2023

    Reverse Swept Radio 167: Cricket in Japan, cricket in a field, and cricket in a timeless test

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 29, 2023 29:38


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Andy plays cricket in a field in Kent, and Toby enjoys Afghanistan v Pakistan  "The other great advantage: compared to a proper game, the wait for a post-match pint is much shorter." FROM THE ARCHIVES (07'50): A potted history of cricket in Japan "And then the penny dropped, and I realised that all along he had been talking about croquet, while I had been talking about cricket." THE REVIEW (17'15): Edging Towards Darkness: The Story of the Last Timeless Test by John Lazenby "We were disappointed to be robbed of the opportunity [to win], but at the end of the day I'm afraid few of us cared what happened." Recorded 27 August 2023

    Reverse Swept Radio 166: The Lord's Hum, rediscovering a Bazball innings from a century ago, and reviewing Stumped the play

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2023 33:43


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: For the third episode in a row, Andy visits Lord's, and Abdullah Shafique pulls off an impossible catch "Maybe short legs around the world are cursing Shafique for resetting expectations for what short legs can be." FROM THE ARCHIVES (11'20): Ted Alletson's 189 in 1911 "Play restarted at 2:15 and Alletson was out at 2:55. In those forty minutes, he scored 142 runs." THE REVIEW (21'40): Stumped (2022) by Shomit Dutta "We've all played in games of cricket that don't really matter, but they do matter to us. And so it's extraordinary to watch a Nobel prize winner anxious about scoring runs in an amateur village game." Recorded 23 July 2023 

    Reverse Swept Radio 165: a delightful Twitter story, the ”most exciting cricket match”, and cricket historical fiction

    Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2023 29:32


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Andy visits Lord's again, and a vintage cricket story on Twitter "This is the most awful team I have ever had, the batting is awful and the bowling, my god. I have not got a bowler. . . . If anyone would like to take on my job they can have it. . .  I hope it rains for the rest of the season." FROM THE ARCHIVES (10'00): Fowler's Match: Eton vs Harrow, 1910 "In the whole history of cricket, there has been nothing more sensational" - The Times THE REVIEW (19'15): Gilbert: The Last Years of WG Grace, by Charlie Connelly (2015) "It'll be a while until the next episode of Reverse Swept Radio, while Andy and I set about writing a new series of historical fiction novels to plug this gap in cricket literature." Recorded 30 May 2023

    Reverse Swept Radio 164: Andy visits the Lord's pavilion, Ian Botham loses his teeth, and a match fixing investigation on film

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2023 32:14


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Visiting the Lord's pavilion and Leicestershire win a remarkable game "You can't really have everyone wandering around with pints." FROM THE ARCHIVES (10'20): Ian Botham v Andy Roberts in 1974: teenage Botham loses his teeth but wins the match "I spat out the last fragments of teeth, took a few sips of water, and let the 12th man assess the damage." THE REVIEW (19'20): Caught Out: Crime, Corruption, Cricket (Netflix documentary) “Sport is meant to be unscripted. It's the unexpectedness that makes it special. If it's scripted, it takes away everything that sport stands for.” Recorded 9 April 2023

    Reverse Swept Radio 163: ICC TV, pissed at the wicket, and unlocking T20s secrets

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2023 31:58


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Discovering ICC TV, and rediscovering The Nightwatchman "Watching Zimbabwe is pure nostalgia for me: in Harare I made a very elegant four." FROM THE ARCHIVES (09'10): The Curious Case of the end of Bobby Peel's Career "Pissed at the wicket? Most probably. Did he piss on the wicket? Probably not." THE REVIEW (19'50): Cricket 2.0: Inside the T20 Revolution, by Tim Wigmore and Freddie Wilde (2019) "There's a theme which could almost be used by businesses as an organisational psychology piece." Recorded 25 March 2023

    Reverse Swept Radio 162: Aussie players learn from twitter, the remarkable career of Chris Schofield, and a delightful slice of cricket nostalgia

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2023 34:02


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Duncan Hamilton fears for the future of cricket writing, and Australia's test players learn from their predecessors via the media "Ian Healey sets himself up in front of the pedal bin in the SEN Office, and did a piece for camera that looks suspiciously like it was filmed on a phone." FROM THE ARCHIVES (11'50): The Rise, Fall and Rise of Chris Schofield "This is the feature that Andy has just admitted he has been looking forward to for several years..." THE REVIEW (22'10): Crickets All (1949) "This remains utterly bonkers to the point I thought that it was a wind-up, but at the end of the day some poor man has to go and set off some rockets: two for a draw, one for win. I have so many questions about this..." Recorded 26 February 2023

    Reverse Swept Radio 161: Remembering when Bangladesh nearly broke their Test duck, review of ”Cricketing Lives”, Ponting's masterplan and the MCC's wrong turn

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2023 35:28


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Ricky Ponting has a plan to save Test cricket, and the MCC take a mis-step when issuing their clarification on the Mankad. "It goes back to that thing called 'the Spirit of Cricket', and the MCC don't contribute towards a debate pro-actively about the Spirit of Cricket when they use language like this" FROM THE ARCHIVES (12'00): Pakistan vs Bangladesh in Multan, 2003 "They decide not to call the batsman back - which is odd, given that it's the captain who has dropped the catch." THE REVIEW (23'15): Cricketing Lives: A Characterful History from Pitch to Page by Richard Thomas (May 2021) "Archie MacLaren was a limousine salesman later in his life. "By all accounts, what he tried to sell to his customers what they wanted or needed." A wonderful way to prick the pomposity of a man who is very much seen that way...." Recorded 29 January 2023

    Reverse Swept Radio 160: ”An innings played with one eye and one leg”, the new Ben Stokes doc and cricket's restorative qualities

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2023 36:55


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Listening to the Aus SA series from an English winter, and re-learning cricket's self-control "When you're watching cricket, you can swear at the umpire as much as you like. But when you're on the pitch, you have to switch to see the umpire in a very different way." FROM THE ARCHIVES (11'00): "An innings played with one eye and one leg" - The Nawab of Pataudi's 75  "As well as having double vision from childhood, he's nursing an injury from the first test - he comes in with a runner and can't play front-foot shots." THE REVIEW (21'50): Ben Stokes: Phoenix from the Ashes (Amazon Prime, 2022)  "I don't want to labour this point (while slightly labouring this point), but you need to enter into the experience of watching a documentary like this with the understanding that a deal has been struck: access has been traded for a certain narrative." Recorded 09 January 2023

    Reverse Swept Radio 159: A West Indian silver lining, the Test debut of DRS, and England's year of four captains

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2022 34:02


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Andy welcomes a legspinner into the world, the test debut of Tagenarine Chanderpaul, and a promising tour match from the South Africans "As yet, she hasn't displayed the level of patience and self-control required of an opening bat." FROM THE ARCHIVES (11'10): DRS' test debut "Every referral that had been sent to the third umpire in the Friends Provident Trophy had ended up back with the on-field umpire's decision." THE REVIEW (21'40): Long Shot Summer - The Year of the Four England Captains, 1988 by Neil Robinson (2015) "Viv Richards wins the toss and says to Cowdrey 'I'll have a chat to my team and let you know what we're going to do'." Recorded 11 December 2022

    Reverse Swept Radio 158: Farewell to Bob Cattell, a mathematician's love of cricket, and a poor effort from the BBC

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2022 28:35


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: farewell to Bob Cattell, author of the Glory Gardens series; and Jonathans Agnew and Liew talk about that incident "This week of all weeks, we don't want to talk too much about politics, but..." FROM THE ARCHIVES (09'00): Godfrey Harold Hardy - the mathematician who loved cricket "That was only the start of his new year resolutions, that also included 'Be the first man atop Everest' and 'Assassinate Mussolini'." THE REVIEW (18'00): One Billion to One: The Great Indian Cricket Dream (BBC - September 2022) "One of the things that is best about it is that... it's very short." Recorded 30 October 2022

    Reverse Swept Radio 157: the curious tale of Sammy Guillen, Jon Hotten's ”Bat, Ball and Field”, and swapping the cricket for a curry house

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2022 31:28


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: cricket in the rain at the Oval, and Shomit Dutta's new play Stumped "It's a very liberating thing to take a day off work to go to the curry house and the pub, and you wouldn't do that under other circumstances." FROM THE ARCHIVES (08'40): Simpson 'Sammy' Guillen - the man who played test cricket for the West Indies and New Zealand "Ironically it was Guillen who was responsible for New Zealand's first-ever test victory - in a game against his old team." THE REVIEW (19'00): Jon Hotten - Bat, Ball and Field: The Elements of Cricket (July 2022) "I was astonished to read the section on Shane Warne's mural - including his friends, imaginary friends, and people he admired, all chilling by a swimming pool." Recorded 30 September 2022

    Reverse Swept Radio 156: Freddie Flintoff's Field of Dreams, Eisenhower goes to the test, and a close encounter with a Yorkshireman

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2022 34:21


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: meeting 'Yorkie' and Australia's new friendship with Pacific cricket "Once you've messed up your own innings, you can take on the umpiring and muck up someone else's." FROM THE ARCHIVES (10'45): When the President went to the Cricket: Eisenhower at Pakistan vs Australia in Karachi "We hope Biden can meet Eisenhower's standards and make it through a whole day... without yawning." THE REVIEW (20'55): Freddie Flintoff's Field of Dreams (2022) "Anyone who has spent time with teenage boys will recognise those challenging moments, and will recognise that you get to your limits whether you've been an England all-rounder or not." Recorded on 5 September 2022

    Reverse Swept Radio 155: a batsman attacks a bowler with a stump, and interviews about the Windies Rebel Tours

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 2, 2022 33:20


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: the joy of cricket writing (writing cricket writing, not reading cricket writing); watching Glamorgan's record-breaking innings "Most undeservedly, I ended up interviewing the curator of the London Transport Museum." FROM THE ARCHIVES (9'40): When a stump became a weapon: Rashid Patel loses it "The batsman has his bat horizontally across his chest in an unusual fencing move." THE REVIEW (20'10): The Unforgiven: Missionaries or Mercenaries by Ashley Gray (2020) "The pursuit of the players become interesting stories in themselves." Recorded on 24th June 2022

    Reverse Swept Radio 154:

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2022 24:19


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: an update from Lord's and England annihilate the Netherlands "As someone who has today had champagne sprayed over my back, my feelings are now rather more nuanced. The behaviour at Lord's may not be better, but the product dumped on you is certainly of a higher calibre." FROM THE ARCHIVES (7'40): When a captain sent his fastest bowler from the field "Something exploded inside me. I couldn't go on. All I wanted to do was get off the pitch." THE REVIEW (15'20): The Ball that Changed Cricket (2018, SevenPlus) "The laconic Kim Hughes comes up with one of the best lines I've heard: 'Built like Tarzan, bats like Jane'." Recorded on 24th June 2022    

    Reverse Swept Radio 153: watching baseball, Andrew Symonds at the 2003 World Cup

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2022 31:54


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: watching baseball, and Bangladesh host Sri Lanka "The first pitch of the game was sent straight into the stands for a home run. That raised my and my wife's sense of what normal drama would be in baseball. It turned out to be very rare." FROM THE ARCHIVES (12'00): Andrew Symonds at the 2003 World Cup "There must be a psychological credit to Symonds: you come in knowing that if you don't score there's the next player waiting, and scoring under those circumstances is difficult." THE REVIEW (22'40): The Test by Nathan Leamon "Cricket is lacking in fiction compared to other sports, and this is a rare attempt to take on top level cricket in fiction - and it's done really well." Recorded on 30 April 2022

    Reverse Swept Radio 152: Root's resignation, the Sir Walter Lawrence Trophy, and the Hollywood Cricket Club

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2022 29:07


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: all change at the top for English cricket "Many of us fans are attracted to the idea of the specialist captain." FROM THE ARCHIVES (9'30): The Sir Walter Lawrence Trophy "For Sir Walter, his money was well spent: his legacy has been preserved by this trophy, while it's hard to find out much else about him other than the description of 'master builder'." THE REVIEW (19'15): Howzat for Hollywood (BBC Sounds) "If you were a British actor in Hollywood at the time, and you got the message from Aubrey-Smith, you were pretty well obliged to play." Recorded on 18 April 2022

    Reverse Swept Radio 151: remembering Warne, the most expensive over in first class cricket, and Frith on Archie Jackson

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2022 29:43


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: how best to remember Shane Warne, and a cricket-inspired name for a new member of the Reverse Swept Radio family "In 40 years time they'll say that he was named after three West Indian greats, and then defined the name Chadd as the finest English opener the 21st century has seen." FROM THE ARCHIVES (8'30): The most expensive over ever bowled in first-class cricket  "After all, the whole thing was a complete waste of time: they could have played out the draw and still won the title." THE REVIEW (18'25): Archie Jackson: Cricket's Tragic Genius by David Frith "There is reference to the late cut as his classy trademark shot, while often with stylish cricketers we go straight for the drive." Recorded on 15 March 2022

    RSR150: The new Warne documentary, the most consecutive Test maidens, and Marnus' homemade spin kit

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2022 26:56


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Marnus Labuschagne prepares for the subcontinent, and Toby takes a rare catch as keeper "I remember a player reverse sweeping in a village game, and the keeper was so offended by the reverse sweep that he gave the batsman an uncharacteristic send off." FROM THE ARCHIVES (8'50): The most consecutive test maidens ever  "Many of the team were suffering from what The Times rather wonderfully described as 'internal misfortunes'." THE REVIEW (17'15): Shane: The King of Spin "If you have never heard of Shane Warne, we would heartily recommend this film." Recorded on 22 February 2022

    Reverse Swept Radio 149 - A Cricket Podcast

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2022 32:07


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: The county fixture list is published, and falling back in love with cricket thanks to the women's Ashes "In the next episode of Reverse Swept Radio, we'll be providing advice on the best way to cook a cricket ball." FROM THE ARCHIVES (8'30): When Alastair Cook and James Anderson played darts  "Maybe this moment at Ally Pally can be credited with rescuing the career of one of England's greatest ever batsman." THE REVIEW (18'45): Who Only Cricket Know by David Woodhouse "We read lots of books that we enjoy, but this is a book that matters: what it says about cricket, about the politics and history of the time, and about writing." Recorded on 1 February 2022

    Reverse Swept Radio 148 - A Cricket Podcast

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2022 30:05


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Andy reviews his highlights of 2021, and enjoying Iceland on Twitter. "The memory of sitting in the sun, at the top of the Radcliffe Road stand, stuffing my face with Scotch Eggs, will be one to keep me going through the winter months." FROM THE ARCHIVES (7'45): Chris Martin, the King of Tailenders "Seeing a tailender desperately backing away to leg is perhaps the only thing that we can all relate to in test cricket. So thank you Chris Martin and Alan Mullally for giving us that." THE REVIEW (18'05): Project Ashes (BBC podcast) "The problem is encapsulated in the title of the podcast itself. We shouldn't have a Project Ashes, after all." Recorded on 11 January 2022

    Reverse Swept Radio 147 - A Cricket Podcast

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2021 26:51


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Listening to TalkSport's coverage of India vs New Zealand from a covid sickbed, and Tom Latham's remarkable innings. "You often think that you have to reinvent yourself to do well in the subcontinent. Latham's great skill was to do less." FROM THE ARCHIVES (8'30): Betty Wilson: the first test cricketer to score a century and take ten wickets in the same game "Her father was a cobbler, so it was only natural that he should make her a pair of cricket shoes." THE REVIEW (17'30): The Cricket Match by Hugh de Sélincourt ""'The seats bore the strain very well, awaiting without impatience the quiet, steady contract of elderly posteriors.' Whatever your views on flowery language, your tolerance has to be considerable to think that's an acceptable way to describe sitting on a bench." Recorded on 3 December 2021

    Reverse Swept Radio 146 - A Cricket Podcast

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2021 29:30


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Tim Murtagh returns for another year, and Australia's plan to return to Pakistan "The England and New Zealand cancellations seemed to reinforce the idea of the haves of the game treating the have-nots with disdain." FROM THE ARCHIVES (7'45): The First Six in Test Cricket "Get Joe Darling into the same team with Graham Onions and you'd have a headline-writer's dream." THE REVIEW (16'30): Sport's Strangest Crimes: Allen Stanford, the Man who Bought Cricket "The parties, the yacht, building a castle in Florida which he then pulled down: there are big themes in this podcast, but there are plenty of salacious anecdotes as well." Recorded on 14 November 2021

    Reverse Swept Radio 145 - A Cricket Podcast

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2021 28:31


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: The retirement of Gareth Batty, and Shikha Pandey's wonderball "There's a lingering attitude that large swing is vulgar, somehow." FROM THE ARCHIVES (8'15): Cricket at the Olympics: Paris, 1900 "The British team was a bunch of amateurs on a jolly to the Continent, and they ended up playing in the Olympics purely by accident." THE REVIEW (17'30): Cricket on the Continent by Tim Brooks "If I was the president of the Vanuatu cricket association, I'd sit down with this book and use it as a blue-print." Recorded on 15 October 2021

    Reverse Swept Radio 144 - A Cricket Podcast

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2021 23:46


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Andy finally makes his Trent Bridge debut, and Toby enjoys a flight of fancy about a rule change. "I was wondering whether it was Sherwood Forest in the distance. Which may be completely geographically inaccurate." FROM THE ARCHIVES (6'45): The cricket career of Lord Byron "His captain wrote 'Byron should never have been in the XI had my counsel been taken'." THE REVIEW (14'00): One Test Wonders podcast, hosted by Brian Murgatroyd "Tony Pigott comes up with the wonderful assertion that if he had been playing in the previous test, England would have won." Recorded on 21 September 2021

    Reverse Swept Radio 143 - A Cricket Podcast

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2021 30:03


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Back at Lord's post-pandemic, and rediscovering the joy of net sessions in lockdown "It's the grabbing by the scruff of the neck that I particularly like. It feels like exactly the right way for an MCC member to express their disgust." FROM THE ARCHIVES (8'00): Cricket and excuses "The match reports talk about the excellence of the bowling, not the fact that none of the batsmen could lift their arms because their shirts were too tight." THE REVIEW (19'05): Cape Summer and the Australians in England by Alan Ross  "Describing the pitch, Ross reaches for an unexpected metaphor: 'perhaps as for tired businessmen who like a night out, a single frolic sufficed for a long time'." Recorded on 30 August 2021

    Reverse Swept Radio 142 - A Cricket Podcast

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2021 29:06


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Watching The Hundred, the changing language of cricket, and marking the death of John Woodcock  "Would I go again? I would go if asked by people I wanted to spend the evening drinking with." FROM THE ARCHIVES (9'10): The history of Vigoro "If you're a fervent cricket or a fervent tennis fan, perhaps it was hard to see how this new hybrid fitted into your life, and quite why you need it." THE REVIEW (17'25): Spinwash '93 (Sky Sports, available on YouTube)  "If you want to know how you can eat a creme caramel in one gulp, it's worth watching this." Recorded 7 August 2021

    Reverse Swept Radio 141 - A Cricket Podcast

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2021 27:15


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Andy rediscovers the joy of bowling, and Toby enjoys a 'shock' England call-up "These days, like so many batsman who don't really bowl, I attempt offspin. Much to my astonishment, my second ball turned and hit middle stump. I had so little faith in my bowling, that I didn't celebrate but assumed that the keeper had knocked the bails off." FROM THE ARCHIVES (8'25): Samuel Beckett, the cricketer "I recently read a theory that Waiting for Godot is all about cricket. At the heart of the play is the question of how you keep an audience glued to their seats while everything happened for several days? A perfect description for cricket. ." THE REVIEW (17'15): Sweet Summers: The Classic Cricket Writing of JM Kilburn, edited by Duncan Hamilton  "Toby, where do you rank him on the curmudgeon spectrum? Andy, that's called leading the witness." Recorded 10 July 2021

    Reverse Swept Radio 140 - A Cricket Podcast

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 19, 2021 23:52


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Controversy at Windsor Great Park, and two intriguing tests   "We had a lovely afternoon that degenerated horribly in the last ten minutes. To the extent that many didn't shake hands at the end." FROM THE ARCHIVES (7'30): Dennis Lillee's Aluminium Bat "Lillee didn't pretend that this was anything other than a promotional stunt. Unlike in baseball, this wasn't about enhancing performance. It was about getting product on TV just before Christmas to boost the sales." THE REVIEW (15'25): John Arlott: Cricket's Radical Voice (BBC radio documentary produced by Mark Whitaker) "Arlott could take people with him who perhaps others couldn't. There were many who would shrink from what would be seen as a left-wing militant cause, but would see Arlott's support and then follow it." Recorded 17 June 2021

    Reverse Swept Radio 139 - A Cricket Podcast

    Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2021 25:28


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Twitter chooses a favourite county, and bamboo bats   "Most persuasively, support Worcestershire because the pavilion has a choice of 20 homemade cakes. Interestingly, many encouraged supporting any county but Surrey." FROM THE ARCHIVES (8'50): Charles Studd's remarkable journey from midwicket to missionary "Perhaps there is some crossover between the energy and drive that makes you become an international sportsperson or go around the world as a missionary." THE REVIEW (16'50): David Townsend's Do They Play Cricket in Ireland "Your appetite for the book depends on your appetite for Irish cricket and for drinking based anecdotes and other stories." Recorded 13 May 2021

    Reverse Swept Radio 138 - A Cricket Podcast

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2021 26:48


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: County commentary, and the joy of being part of a longstanding cricket team "Every game there would be a couple of players who turned up not having been to bed, smelling a bit funny, and with pupils bigger than a cricket ball." FROM THE ARCHIVES (7'55): A Hoax and a War: Peter Smith's Thirteen Year Wait for a Test Debut "Smith asks Wyatt whether he's in the starting XI, and Wyatt confesses that he hadn't expected to see him there. In a moment of beautiful Englishness, he had seen Smith in the changing room and decided to say nothing." THE REVIEW (15'44): Prashant Kidambi's Cricket Country  "The travelling supporters was a group of high-caste vegetarian Hindus. A little different from the way that the Barmy Army team operates" Recorded 10 April 2021

    Reverse Swept Radio 137 - A Cricket Podcast

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2021 38:30


    THE TEN MINUTE FORTNIGHT: Looking forward to watching county cricket, and Cricket the Musical in Sydney "I'm not expecting to go out for a pint with Kumar Roach after the game, but we can still be nattering at the boundary edge." FROM THE ARCHIVES (9'35): The Headingley Ashes Test, 2001 "At the beginning of the summer, Butcher had been in such horrible form that he had been playing for the Surrey Second XI. The chairman of selectors for the England test team, at the end of the season, was happy to state that Butcher owed his place simply to the lack of options elsewhere." THE REVIEW (21'35): Tatenda Taibu's Keeper of Faith: Cricket, Conflict and God in Zimbabwe's Age of Extremes "Miles Jupp points that you read this book thinking that it's a tragedy that Taibu didn't play more international cricket. But it's also remarkable that he played the game for as long as he did, given all that he went through." Recorded 14 March 2021

    Claim Reverse Swept Radio - a cricket podcast

    In order to claim this podcast we'll send an email to with a verification link. Simply click the link and you will be able to edit tags, request a refresh, and other features to take control of your podcast page!

    Claim Cancel