Sie sind vermutlich noch nicht im Forum angemeldet - Klicken Sie hier um sich kostenlos anzumelden  

DieBruderschaft.com

Die Junge Mittelalter-Community heißt euch Wilkommen. Hier findet Ihr alles Rund ums Mittelalter wie z.B.: Schwert infos,Infos über frühere Religionen und Musik

Sie können sich hier anmelden
Dieses Thema hat 0 Antworten
und wurde 79 mal aufgerufen
 News
jcy123 Offline



Beiträge: 6.543

24.05.2019 06:25
?Ward: Weve always talked about getting tog Antworten

For 21 years South African cricket fans lived in a twilight world of implausible allegiances. They supported Manchester United or Spurs, Wales when they played rugby. Some went the other way, giving the traditional New Years fixture between Western Province and Transvaal at Newlands a cachet it probably didnt deserve.Some of us - count me in this group - invented traditions and affiliations on the flimsiest evidence. Embarrassing as it now sounds, I supported Mike Gattings England as they romped through Australia in 1986-87, because I was born in Hendon, a suburb in north-west London.A year later, huddling around a small black-and-white Philips television set, I watched Will Carlings England defeat Australia 28-19 at Twickenham. A South African cricketing alternative wasnt yet in sight, and so I cheered when Simon Halliday scored Englands victory-clenching try. I had to support someone. What else was there to do?At the time I lived in a post-graduate digs in Cape Town, nursing my bursary with exaggerated care. Most mornings I went out onto the balcony of our flat to look at the harbour, where nothing much was going on. Once a week a big white Safmarine container vessel from Hamburg or Southampton moored in port, but for the most part the basin was dead, save for the trawler fleet and the odd careworn freighter.Squeezed tight by the trade, cultural and sporting boycott, Cape Town was not the chichi paradise it has become. If anything, the sleep from which it suffered seemed to be getting deeper. This was no place for an adventurous young man.Three years later I was living in London, stringing for a leftie South African weekly. They asked me to cover a match at Lords between a Transvaal Invitation XI and the MCC. The visitors were a good young side, but there was something vaguely clandestine about it all. Lords was empty that chilly midweek day, the concessions closed. The contest was devoid of tradition or large meaning. Cricket on the moon.A left-arm seamer called Graham Yates had Mike Atherton caught and bowled, and a young prodigy called Victor Vermeulen - later to tragically break his neck diving into a swimming pool - caught the eye.With Gattings ill-conceived rebel tour to South Africa a thing of the past, much of the cricket-loving world was waiting to see if South Africa would be readmitted to the ICC. It was surely too much to ask that they might also sneak into the 1992 World Cup.A couple of heady months later I discovered that the problem for a homesick South African adrift in London was that there was nowhere to watch your team when they were miraculously readmitted to the world game. The lightning 1991 tour to India had come, and gone and in search of World Cup cricket from Australasia, I pounded the Kilburn High Road, finding nothing but camping shops and dingy Irish pubs. Surely one of them would show cricket? Cold and tired, eventually I found one, dragging my girlfriend inside. We nursed our beers and watched, aghast, as New Zealands Gavin Larsen and Chris Harris tied us up in knots. It was a hopeless case, an excruciating comedown after the magic of beating Australia in South Africas opening World Cup game at the SCG.The best thing about the 92 World Cup was the overwhelming sense of gratitude. People were so happy that they cried. Steve Tshwete, the minister of sport elect, cried on Kepler Wessels shoulder in the SCG dressing room, while Kepler cried himself. Ali Bacher cried. People you wouldnt have thought of as criers had a good blub.One Sunday afternoon two years later, walking on the turf at Lords after South Africa had won the first Test by 356 runs, I cried. They were vaguely embarrassed, private tears but the game had been so emotional, so memorable - Fanie de Villiers torturing Craig White, Jonty Rhodes swatting Angus Fraser into the Mound Stand for six - that I didnt know what else to do. We were back. It aroused emotions too subtle and rare to name.Later during that series I watched the best innings Ive ever seen from a South African in the post-readmission period: Daryll Cullinans 94 in a losing cause at The Oval. After Lords, the teams went to Headingley, where Peter Kirsten and Graeme Hick scored tons in a drawn Test. Back in London, de Villiers, the hero of Sydney earlier that year, was foolish enough to hit Devon Malcolm square on the helmet. You guys are going to pay for this, Malcolm is reputed to have said. You guys are history.With four ducks and six single-figure scores, Malcolm gutted the South African second innings. Riding the steep bounce with courage and delicacy, only Cullinan stood firm. Some South Africans jabbed their bat down on yorkers after they were bowled; the top order scuttled back to the pavilion like the three blind mice. Cullinan was last out to Darren Gough, England galloping home by eight wickets on the fourth day to square the series.The next time South Africa played England was in Centurion, the ground close to the Jukskei River and a magnet for rain. A debut went in that first Test to Shaun Pollock, a rangy fast bowler, who, when he batted, hit the ball with careless aplomb.A year later a South Africa cap was given to Herschelle Gibbs at Eden Gardens in Kolkata. There have been more important players for South Africa in the last 25 years - Jacques Kallis grim charm, Makhaya Ntinis unflagging energy - but no two players pleased the aesthetes through the nineties and across the cusp of the fresh decade like Pollock and Gibbs.Behind this all, a darker current. On that very tour of India in 1996-97, Bacher foisted the Mohinder Armanath benefit game on a weary party at the end of the tour. The players were furious and eager to get home. Their flirtation with the possibility of throwing that game came to fruition on their next tour to India, where Hansie Cronje seduced Gibbs and others to underperform in the five-match ODI series, besmirching the sport.Until a revisionist history of the world game in the 1990s is published, well never know quite how rife match-fixing was. It is safe to say, however, that other boards handled their scandals entirely differently.On the field itself, a theme was taking shape. South Africa were losing or drawing Tests at home they might have been expected to win, while they were winning away when they might reasonably have been expected to lose. Pollock came to the fore in taking five for 37 against Pakistan in Faisalabad in 1997 (Pat Symcox scoring 55, 81, and taking 3 for 8 in the Pakistan second innings) as the hosts couldnt manage the 145 needed for victory. In 2000, Cronjes men won Tests in Mumbai (with a largely pace attack) and Bangalore. Tests were later won in Karachi (2007) in a victorious series, as well as in Ahmedabad and Nagpur on consecutive drawn series in India.South Africa have always been handy at winning away and the golden period was forged when Graeme Smith and Mickey Arthur managed to cocoon the side from increasingly dogged political interference to win back to back away series in England and Australia across six months in 2008. There have been big series wins (take the 5-0 drubbing of West Indies in 1998-99) but no more cherished prize sits on the mantelpiece of the South African game.For all the moments of magic - who will ever forget de Villiers, legs akimbo, tossing the Glenn McGrath lob into the air in 1994? - South African cricket is a protean, difficult-to-understand beast, with an almost perverse ability to confound. How, for example, can a side as well-rounded as the 1999 team to the World Cup in England contrive to lose it? Perhaps Winston Churchills famous quote about Russia brings us closer to understanding. It is a riddle, wrapped in a mystery, inside an enigma, but perhaps there is a key. In South Africas case that key is surely to be found in an increasingly settled country, less at odds with itself than it once was. We live in hope. Wholesale Air Jordan 6 Ireland . The deal is pending a physical, assistant general manager Bobby Evans said. Traded from Seattle to Baltimore on Aug. 30, Morse also can play first base and right field to give manager Bruce Bochy some flexibility in writing his lineup. Cheap Jordans Ireland . But the quarterback hopes to stay involved in football after officially calling it quits Tuesday. "Id love to look at those opportunities as they arise," Pierce said in an interview from his Winnipeg eatery. http://www.airjordan6ireland.com/ . Here are his mid-season NBA awards. MVP: (KEVIN DURANT-Thunder) - Has been sensational this season and more importantly, the most consistent player in the league. Considering that his team has been without star guard Russell Westbrook and with the free agent departure of sharpshooter Kevin Martin, hes had to carry the majority of the load to not only keep his team afloat but more importantly, at an elite level. Cheap Air Jordan 6 For Sale . Jon Montgomerys gold medal in skeleton at the Whistler Sliding Centre and his subsequent auctioning off of a pitcher of beer in the village square elevated him to folk-hero status. Air Jordan 6 Ireland . Those lessons were more than enough to overwhelm the Utah Jazz. Lou Williams scored 25 points and the Hawks continued their offensive upswing as they rolled to an easy 118-85 victory over the Jazz on Friday night, winning their third straight and for the fourth time in five games. The Cleveland Indians will play Game 1 of the World Series on Tuesday and while the team and Major League Baseball have already identified former franchise greats to throw out the first pitch in the games played at Progressive Field, a fictitious former great waits in the wings, hoping for one more chance to prove he belongs in the big leagues.David S. Ward, who wrote and directed Major League, is still holding out hope that on Tuesday or Wednesday he can see Charlie Sheen, wearing a No. 99 Ricky Vaughn jersey, come out of the bullpen in Cleveland as a sold out crowd sings, Wild Thing.I can just see it happening, Ward said Friday. The crowd would go crazy if it did. That would be very cool. I hope it happens. Ill be there to see it if it does.Ward, who grew up in the Cleveland suburb of South Euclid, Ohio, wrote Major League nearly 30 years ago while the Indians were in a World Series drought that lasted 41 years. The team has still not won a World Series since 1948.I figured I would never see the Indians win anything unless I wrote a movie where they did, Ward said. That was the real genesis behind the movie.ESPN.com caught up with Ward, who also wrote The Sting and Sleepless in Seattle, to talk to him about the Indians returning to the World Series, Cleveland becoming the city of champions and if theres another Major League film in the works.ESPN.com: How would you describe whats happening in Cleveland sports right now? First, the Cleveland Cavaliers win the NBA championship, the citys first major professional sports title since 1964, and now the Cleveland Indians are in the World Series.David Ward: When I was growing up in Cleveland the Cavaliers werent there but Ive become a Cavs fan, but I dont have the same depth of history with them that I do with the Indians and Browns. Ive suffered longer with the Browns and Indians than I have with the Cavaliers. For years, weve been like Cubs fans. Its only a matter of time before everything comes crashing down. When you see it happen time after time you just think its always going to happen. Its just an incredible thing to think that it could be possible for Cleveland to have two professional sports champions in the same year where it was incomprehensible to think that they would have any ever.ESPN.com: Does this Indians team feel different than the teams in 1995 and 1997 that went to the World Series but lost?Ward: It does. I think its largely because this team has had to overcome so much to get here. Losing two top-line pitchers out of the rotation was huge. Carlos Carrasco could be considered their ace, given the way he has pitched. So to get to the playoffs, let alone get to the World Series, without two of your top pitchers would have seemed impossible but this team has real grit and real poise. They play their game and they dont let other teams dictate the game to them. They seem to be able to maintain who they are and what they do and they just have a real resilience to them. This team feels like they have a certain kind of destiny that you dont generally feel with Cleveland teams. You tend to wonder how this is going to go south but I dont feel that with this team. They seem to be a confident and pretty unflappable bunch.ESPN.com: Where did the idea for Major League come from?Ward: I wanted to see the Indians win, to be honest. They not only had not won in so long but they werent even close to winning. They hadnt finished within 10 games of first place in 20 years or something. So it had to be a comedy and that pretty much dictated the direction. I invented a group of misfit players who found a way to come together and get it done. That felt like the only way it would ever happen. We were a small market team. When we did have good players we would lose them to the New York Yankees of the world who could pay them what we couldnt. Thats been the story of the Indians over the years.ESPN.com: In the movie, Indians owner Rachel Phelps, played by Margaret Whitton, wants to move the team to Miami. Of course, this was before there was a major league team in Miami. What did you think a few years later when Miamis expansion team, the Marlins, beat the Indians in the 1997 World Series?Ward: The Indians have been around since the beginning of baseball and we lose to the Florida Marlins? The Florida Marlins?! They were barely in existence. In terms of being a real baseball franchise they were only around for a few years. Who are these guys? Were used to worrying about teams like the Yankees, but the Florida Marlins? It was like when the Browns moved to Baltimore and then won a Super Bowl. This is the kind of thing that happens in Cleveland sports that just makes you shake your head.ESPN.com: Did you have any trouble getting approval from the Cleveland Indians or Major League Baseball in using real team names and uniforms?Ward: Back then the league wasnt quite as image conscious as they are now. The bigger problem I thought was getting the Yankees to agree to be the bad guys. I think what happened was George Steinbrenner is from Cleveland. I think he thought its a comedy so there was no harm but it took him awhile. We didnt get approval right away but when he thought about it he thought having his team in the movie would be good.ESPN.com: We dont actually see the Indians play in or win the World Series in Major League or Major League II. Is there a reason for that?Ward: Yeah, because we were building toward the third movie, Major League III. It has already been written and weve been trying to get Morgan Creek Productions to make it for the last few years without much success. I didnt have a trilogy in mind when I made the first one. When I did the first one I just wanted it to be successful and I wanted people to embrace the movie, and once they did, I said, Well, in the movie we only win the division. We dont even win the American League Championship. In the second one we find out they lost to the Chicago White Sox in the ALCS. I felt in the first one it might be a stretch, even in a coomedy, to have the Indians win the World Series.dddddddddddd Also you have to go through so many playoff games to get to the World Series that it makes the end of the movie a long montage of winning playoff games. I didnt feel the movie was about that. I figured out how to do it for the third movie. The World Series is a natural place for them to go after doing everything but win the World Series.ESPN.com: What could we expect in Major League III?Ward: Well, part of the setup in the third movie is that they did make it to the World Series but lost when Wild Thing gave up a walk-off homer in the seventh game and he just retires from baseball. Even though hes older, hes coming back to mentor this young fire-balling reliever they have. They also need a set-up man and Eddie Harris (played by Chelcie Ross) teaches Wild Thing to throw junk because he doesnt have the heater anymore. He does set-up work while hes mentoring the fire-baller. Theyre not a hopeless team, they are in contention, but they cant seem to get over the top. I dont think we could go back to having them be a hopeless team. You have to do something different. So the big thing in the movie is that he finds out that this young fire-baller that went to Harvard doesnt want to be mentored. He has a degree in biomechanics and he feels he knows everything there is to know about pitching. It turns out that its Ricky Vaughns illegitimate son from one of his many romantic assignations while he was a young man about town in Cleveland and the kid hates him. Charlie Sheen is already on board. We have a lot of people who would love to make the movie but unfortunately the people who own it, Morgan Creek, are not one of them. We have several investors who would make it in a heartbeat, but Morgan Creek owns it and isnt giving up the rights to it. Theyre trying to do a television series called Major League but theyre just using the title. They dont have any characters from the movie. I dont know whats happening with that but Im not part of it and neither is Charlie. If the television show doesnt happen hopefully theyll take a look at doing the movie or allow someone else to do the movie.ESPN.com: Would the Indians winning the World Series change anything in terms of doing the movie?Ward: In a way it could be double-edged sword. I want the Indians to win the World Series, but I wonder if it would steal the thunder from a movie where they won the World Series. I dont know what the answer to that is but I have to say I still want them to win the World Series.ESPN.com: There was actually a Major League III centered on a minor league affiliate of the Minnesota Twins. You werent a part of that film. Is that why youre referring to your script as the real Major League III?Ward: Yeah. It was difficult. In fact, I didnt see that movie for the longest time. I couldnt bring myself to watch it until I was on an airplane. They were showing it on my flight and I said, Oh God, I cant get away from this thing so I watched it. I guess what was strange to me is they called it Major League even though it was about a minor league team affiliated with the Twins. It really had nothing to do with the Indians and Im sort of glad it didnt because to me its not part of the Major League franchise at all.ESPN.com: You filmed the first Major League in Milwaukee and the second one in Baltimore. Was there a reason you couldnt film it in Cleveland?Ward: The first one we were shooting late in the summer and the Browns were already playing preseason games and there were football lines on the field all the time and that didnt look real good. There were also some union issues in Cleveland, and Cleveland is a big union town. So we went to Milwaukee. The second one we shot in Baltimore because Jim Robinson, the founder and CEO of Morgan Creek, is from Baltimore and he got us some good deals there for shooting the movie. But Id want to shoot the third movie in Cleveland. Ohio has great tax breaks for movies now and would be perfect.ESPN.com: When you go to Indians games now its not uncommon to see jerseys of Ricky Vaughn, Jake Taylor, Pedro Cerrano and Willie Mays Hayes in the crowd. What do you think when you see that and how the film has been remembered more than 25 years later?Ward: For any filmmaker thats really a wonderful thing to see that your film has become part of popular culture. Its very gratifying to know that you made a movie that has a special place in peoples hearts. Thats why you do it. I went to an Indians-Giants game in San Francisco a couple of years ago and there were a lot of Indians fans there wearing Vaughn jerseys, Cerrano jerseys and even Roger Dorn jerseys. I was stunned to see that. Theyre not even living in Cleveland. Ive seen that at other ballparks as well over the years. I get a real kick out of that.ESPN.com: How did you come to pick Wild Thing as Ricky Vaughns song?Ward: I always associated that song with the Ricky Vaughn character and then Mitch Williams started to use it after that. He was the first guy to actually use it in Major League Baseball, I think. Im not trying to toot my own horn but back then pitchers didnt come out to music and now all of them do. So we sort of started something there so its fun. The Indians do have sort of a Wild Thing in Andrew Miller. Just the way he plays and the way he pitches its kind of Wild Thing-esque and theres kind of an identification thing there, and if Charlie goes back for the first pitch of the World Series, I think it would be perfect.ESPN.com: Outside of getting together for another Major League are there any plans for a reunion in the future?Ward: Weve always talked about getting together for a reunion and if Charlie does end up throwing out the first pitch, I dont see why we couldnt all get together for that. Maybe if they won the World Series we could all pack into a car and bring up the rear at the parade. ' ' '

 Sprung  

 

M.C. Klein

Listinus Toplisten Hier gehts zu  Mittelalter Top 100
Xobor Erstelle ein eigenes Forum mit Xobor
Datenschutz