It began on January 5, 1971, and the cricket world has Melbourne’s fickle weather to thank for it.
The 1970-71 battle for the Ashes was a Test series of “firsts”. In fact, it was the Test series that ushered in the modern era, in more ways than one.
The first two Tests had been tame draws, and, impatient to see off the drab cricket of the 1960s, fearful for the game’s future, the press, especially in Australia, was beginning to question the desire of players and administrators to entertain the cricket public.
Later in that series, in an unprecedented seventh Test, Ian Chappell took over as captain from a beleaguered Bill Lawry. By this time, tempers on both sides were frayed by internal, off-field incidents, and the English quicks, especially…
