Derek Pringle was born and raised in Nairobi, Kenya, where he first learnt to play cricket on matting pitches. He attended St Mary's School, Nairobi, then Felsted School in Essex, before reading Geography and Land Economy at Cambridge, where he captained the university at cricket and won three blues. While still an undergraduate he was selected to play Test cricket for England in 1982, a feat achieved previously by Ted Dexter, 24 years earlier. He also appeared, briefly, in the Oscar-winning film Chariots of Fire, as Cambridge's vice-captain of athletics.He played 30 Tests and 44 one-day internationals for England, appearing in two World Cups, one as a losing finalist in 1992. His cricket career at Essex, which spanned 15 years, included five County Championship titles, three John Player League titles, a NatWest Trophy and countless friendships. He retired from the game in 1993.A second career, as a journalist, saw him appointed cricket correspondent for the Independent, then the Daily Telegraph, a role he fulfilled until 2014. He now works as a freelance writer. His hobbies include photography and collecting vinyl records, of which he has several thousand - the latter perhaps explaining why he has never married. He has a son whose musical tastes he is trying to shape. He lives in Cambridge.
Pringle's tale is both a love letter to the greatest player of his
generation, Sir Ian Botham and an engaging romp in which cricket
only plays a walk-on part. That despite the author's playing record
that included 30 Tests, 44 ODIs, six County Championships with
Essex and a World Cup final, a CV that most would be proud to take
to the grave.
*Michael Atherton, The Times*
A fascinating and hilarious read. Like Chris Lewis, Andrew
Flintoff, Ben Stokes and many more [Pringle] was originally hailed
as the new Botham, before winding up as a very junior version. In
his storytelling though, he might just have the edge on the great
man.
*Daily Telegraph*
Anecdotes are funny, original and astounding, often all three...He
[Pringle] has delivered with interest on his promise to avoid a
bog-standard, self-serving work; if he pushed boundaries in his
career he has flattened them completely with this honest addition
to cricket literature.
*The Cricketer*
As Pringle spent the decade as [Ian] Botham's understudy ... it
makes for a fascinating and hilarious read.
*Daily Telegraph*
Former England Test bowler's eye-popping and hilarious account of
cricket in the 80s is as doused as a sherry trifle.
*Guardian*
A feast of anecdotes
*The Observer*
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