I first met Christopher Martin-Jenkins in April 2005, although like
hundreds of thousands of listeners of Test Match Special I already
felt that I knew this voice of summer. I had been at The Times for almost four years by then, but my relationship with cricket
was still that of a fan and our first meeting was not in a press box
but at his former house in West Sussex, which he wanted my help to sell.
Having started on the
paper's gossip column, I had moved to join our new property
supplement, Bricks and Mortar, where I wrote features about people and places. In early 2005, the property editor
got a very polite, slightly sheepish email from our then cricket
correspondent, whose house had been on the market without offers for
some time. Could we help to give it a nudge? Knowing that I liked
cricket, she sent me down to speak to CMJ.
“Quintessential
English gem” said the sales particulars. It was not clear whether
that referred to the house or the man. CMJ was English through and
through, from his elegant manners and precision with language to his
upper front teeth, splayed like stumps after an encounter with Glenn
McGrath.
He was a poet, but an
effortless one. I wrote in my piece on his house that he was the
sort of commentator who would describe a batsman as taking to the
game “like a mallard to a mere” rather than a duck to water,
presumably a phrase I had heard him use. He never burbled or waffled,
unlike some in the box. If he ever mentioned a pigeon, there would be
a damn good reason for it.
The property was enormous. A red-brick Georgian eight-bedroom house with sash windows and wisteria up the wall, set in 44 acres with an
avenue of lime trees, a cricket net and a ten-hole pitch-and-putt
golf course. “I had too much room for just nine holes,” he
mentioned, without pretension. He and his wife wanted to
downsize before his retirement from full-time
cricket-writing.
Naturally, we talked
about cricket and perhaps my recognition when he casually mentioned
in front of a portrait of Alfred Mynn that his wife was descended
from the mid-19th-century Kent all-rounder helped us to strike a
rapport.
It is well known that
the teenaged CMJ wrote to Brian Johnston for advice on how to become
a cricket commentator, but I had not seen what Johnners replied so
asked him. “He told me to go and practise on a tape recorder,”
CMJ said. “So I used to hide myself in quiet spots of the county
ground and make commentaries. I would also commentate on games
between myself and my brothers.”
It paid off: by the age
of 28 he was cricket correspondent of the BBC and spent 40 years
commentating on and writing about his greatest love.
But downsizing came
with a price. I remember the sadness in his voice when he
showed the garage where boxes were filled with a couple of
hundred cricket books that he was having to sell because of lack of
space in the new house. Ian Botham's Don't Tell Kath was top of the
pile. Maybe he had a second copy.
Many young journalists
have written on Twitter today about how CMJ had helped them early in
their careers, but I can't recall having the guts to ask him for
advice that day. However, by that summer I had started a process of
moving across to the sports department.
After helping out with
some of the fiddly bits of coverage of that year's phenomenal Ashes
series – the statistics panels and suchlike – I was semi-poached
from the property section, first for a couple of days a week and then
full-time.
For a while, I was just
on the subs' desk, where I remember CMJ's phone calls to check his
copy – always polite, but always quite rightly firm when
someone wanted to “improve” his words. I recall one incident when
he had a strop because someone had amended a reference to Paul
Collingwood being “cabined, cribbed, confined”, arguing that if
it was good enough for Shakespeare it was more than good enough for
The Times.
When I got out of the
office and started to cover home Test matches I found him always a
delightful, charming, intelligent man. We were in Dubai for England's series against Pakistan and I think the last time I saw him was when he was shopping with his wife in a souk.
He talked about how as
he got older he insisted that she went on tours with him so that they
could spend more time together. They were friends since university
and had been married for more than 40 years. Alas, it was on their
next overseas trip, a holiday in St Lucia, where the cancer that
killed him was diagnosed.
We last communicated by
email in November, when it was clear that the illness was terminal,
but the tone of his message was still upbeat. A strong Christian, he
found his faith comforting during what must have been an
awful time for him and his family.
Everyone has a story
about CMJ's scattiness, poor timekeeping and technophobia and Mike Selvey has shared some brilliant stories, but I remember one occasion
when he was not only punctual but actually early. It was the annual
Times over-40s v under-40s cricket match in Coldharbour, near
Dorking, and CMJ arrived at the ground before almost every other
player.
Proud of his punctuality, he went to his car as the pavilion was
being opened... only to discover that he had left his kit bag at
home. Chastened, he headed back down the hill towards Horsham and
eventually arrived, as always, after the toss. It did not
seem to put him off his stride: despite his age, CMJ bowled an
impeccable length and took something like five wickets for eight
runs.
The only other occasion
when I recall him participating in a Times sports event was the
annual correspondent's golf day. For a bargain price, our golf
correspondent had arranged breakfast, a round of golf at Sunningdale and lunch afterwards. CMJ managed to get there by lunch – and only just. But he stayed and ate with us,
hearing all our dull stories about duffed chips and missed putts
while he apologised for being five hours late.
Cricket has lost a
lovely man today. It was a pleasure and privilege to know him a
little.
1 comment:
That so many folk have so many happy memories is the mark of the man. RIP CMJ.
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