Of all games, cricket has long prided itself on its ethical traditions,
but to modern skeptics the idea of cricket encapsulating a higher
morality is actually something of a myth. Playing the Game? looks at
the changing ethics of cricket, from its gentlemanly roots right up
until the present day. After decades of sledging, intimidatory bowling,
blatant gamesmanship and dissent, the MCC adopted "The Spirit of
Cricket" in 2000 in an attempt to reclaim the game's original ethos--but
was it already too late? While the concept is a noble one, its impact
has so far been limited, as award-winning cricket scribe Mark Peel
explains. As well as looking back to the infamous Bodyline series of
1932/33, Peel also investigates the effects of Kerry Packer's World
Series Cricket; takes the ICC to task on their failure to quell rowdy
behavior and gamesmanship; examines the double standards of Western
cricketing nations towards Pakistan; and delves into the recent
ball-tampering affair that has tainted Aussie cricket.