Remember Richie with silence every match [Tobe Frank]

Apr 11, 2015

Tobe Frank said to us yesterday, if Richie went out watching the Cricket World Cup last week in his final days, he will have gone out with a smile on his face and no doubt the hum of “Marvellous” on his lips. But the least we could offer him is two minutes silence in every twenty two minutes of cricket play.   What a great idea.   

We knew this day would come, we just didn’t want it to nor were we prepared for the aftermath…to be frank cricket in Australia and the world over will never be the same without Richie Benaud’s call.  There is really one thing he understands more than most… the power of silence!

For so long now Benaud (or should that be Sir Richie…he should be Knighted shouldn’t he? #SirRichie) has been the soundtrack of summer…his soothing tones, carefully selected words, tongue titillating expressions and even his ability to time absolute silence to perfection so the crowd at home watching on the idiot box could soak up the atmosphere of the MCG – the crowd’s roar, the hammer of leather on willow, and the calls of the runner… silence.  You don’t miss it ’til it isn’t there.

I have always loved watching the cricket being called by Benaud. It’s hand in glove, it’s crackers and cheese, it’s steak on the BBQ. It’s not that I didn’t enjoy the larger than life Max Walker, or the over-excitable lisping of Bill Lawry (who turns 78 in a few weeks!), or even the walking statistician that was Tony Greig, but Benaud was the benchmark. He was the standard and people the world over have loved consuming his call for the past 39 years.

But now, with many of the new breed commentators competing for space and air time, it seems the cricket commentary has been inflicted by the same disease as the Olympics…so much commentary, so many interviews, not enough game and no silence. What’s wrong with just letting us watch every now and again? Do we have to fill every second with call? It’s not supposed to be like advertising on a highway, with every conceivable space filled in…  Some of it is best left to be interpreted by ourselves, in silence as we watch the ball sail into the outfield.

And I’m not saying that today’s commentators are not good chop either…I actually like Heals, Tubby Taylor and Slates but the apparent competition vocal domination sometimes makes the call less appealing than fingernails down a chalkboard! It’s just not cricket. Maybe Benaud should have control of the ‘on air’ button, from the comfort of his lounge couch at home. When he wants silence, or should I say, knows that there should be silence, he depresses the button, cutting Mark Nicholas off mid sentence, allowing the audience to enjoy the simplicity of silence, interrupted only by the crack of a ball being cut over point for four.

So here’s my call… Let’s respect Benaud with 2 minutes of commentator silence in every 22 minutes of cricket play.  We’ll call it Benaud’s “Twooo for Twenty Two.” In the same way that professional footballers should exercise some self control when it comes to texting and many, MANY other things, I call on the commentary team to learn from the master, the Jedi Knight of commentators, and exercise some restraint in the name of the great man. Let the game occasionally call itself the way he did. In the end, it’s a pretty simple game and the simplicity needs to be allowed to cut through the covers.

I guess there’s always the mute button…

And so, in his absence, I send my respects.  Thanks Richie for a great innings.  I call for a Knighthood for #SirBenaud and Two for Twenty Two every match!   urge you to share this article with the hashtag!  Let’s call for the legend to be remembered in cricket forever more – now that would be “Marvellous”.

RIP Richie Benaud 1930 – 2015.

Tobe Frank has reprised his rousing article about Richie Benaud from December 28th 2014 today.  Benaud touched all of our souls in Australia, and we are all going to feel his loss next summer.  

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