Anderson can be England’s archaic weapon in modern one-day world | Barney Ronay

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Who would World Cup opposition openers least want to face on a nibbly early-summer morning? Anderson, Wood or Stone?

If I had to draw up a top-five list of eccentric 20th-century British army officers Jack Churchill would definitely be up there, at the very least in the mix. A male model, film actor and expert archer and fencer, “Fighting Jack” was also the last British soldier to insist on marching into battle with a sword, longbow and a set of bagpipes, as he did to great effect against the mechanised might of the Third Reich.

Churchill used his bow and arrow to lead a successful ambush of a German patrol in northern France in May 1940, an act that helped him win the Military Cross. A year later, he leaped off the first landing craft in the commando raid on Norway and fought his way through the streets at sword-point. He was eventually captured in 1944, knocked unconscious by a grenade as he played “Will Ye No Come Back Again?” on his bagpipes in the face of the advancing enemy.

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Written by Barney Ronay
This news first appeared on https://www.theguardian.com/sport/blog/2018/nov/02/jimmy-anderson-england-weapon-one-day-cricket-world-cup under the title “Anderson can be England’s archaic weapon in modern one-day world | Barney Ronay”. Bolchha Nepal is not responsible or affiliated towards the opinion expressed in this news article.