Chappell’s 'Not Out' approaches ball tampering like a detective story—peeling back layers of justification and denial. One chapter dissects the infamous 1981 underarm incident, linking it to a broader culture of bending rules. He writes, 'Every team has its tricks; the difference is who gets caught.' His perspective isn’t defensive but anthropological: tampering emerges from cricket’s inherent contradictions, like allowing saliva but criminalizing foreign substances. I dog-eared a page where he describes how umpires once ignored obvious tampering unless it was egregious, creating a weird honor-among-thieves dynamic. The book’s strength is its refusal to simplify—it’s not about heroes or villains but how competition distorts ethics. After reading, I saw the Sandpapergate scandal differently: less as an aberration and more as a symptom.
Greg Chappell's autobiography 'Not Out' touches on ball tampering with the kind of nuanced perspective only a former player can offer. He doesn't sensationalize it but instead frames it as part of cricket's complex moral landscape. One passage that stuck with me discusses how the line between 'maintenance' and 'tampering' often blurs under pressure—like when players use sweat or saliva to polish one side while discreetly roughing up the other. It’s less about outright cheating and more about how the game’s unwritten rules bend in competitive moments.
What fascinated me was his comparison of different eras. In the 70s, he admits, teams routinely pushed boundaries (like using bottle caps) without much scrutiny. Today, with cameras everywhere, the stakes are higher, but the instinct to gain an edge remains. His tone isn’t judgmental; it’s almost melancholic, like he’s observing how cricket’s soul has shifted. The book made me rethink how we vilify players—maybe it’s the system’s ambiguity that needs fixing, not just individual morals.
In 'Not Out,' Chappell treats ball tampering like a family secret—everyone knows, few discuss. He recalls how players would 'work' the ball within vague limits, and umpires played along. It’s not an exposé but a reflection on how cricket’s unwritten codes evolve. His tone is wistful, especially when contrasting today’s zero-tolerance policies with the pragmatic past. The book’s real insight? Tampering debates reveal less about morality and more about how the sport romanticizes its own mythology while penalizing those who exploit its loopholes.
Reading 'Not Out,' I was surprised by how candid Chappell is about ball tampering. He calls it a 'gray zone' where tradition clashes with modern regulations. There’s a memorable anecdote about a teammate 'accidentally' scuffing the ball with a fingernail during a tight match—Chappell laughs it off as gamesmanship, not malice. It’s this casual honesty that makes the book compelling. He argues that cricket’s obsession with preserving the ball’s condition ironically invites manipulation. Unlike media outrage, his take feels measured: players adapt to what’s tolerated, and hypocrisy lies in punishing some while turning a blind eye to others. The book doesn’t excuse wrongdoing but contextualizes it as an open secret older than reverse swing itself.
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I watched my mate thrust into his female best friend he told me I didn't have to worry about. So I left and now he wants me. How do you get over that?
Alex’s life is a wild whirlwind at this rich hockey school. He’s a poor scholarship kid, but he’s killer on the ice.
Damien, the hot, cruel team captain, hates him — but can’t stop touching him while claiming he's not gay.
He slams Alex hard into the boards and whispers dirty words that make Alex’s body burn with heat and shame.
Then Lila, Damien’s crazy childhood friend, wants Alex for herself. She has dangerous secrets that can destroy him if he says no.
But Jax arrives — a kind, sexy hockey star who truly cares. He wants to protect Alex and make him his.
Now Alex is trapped between hate, obsession, and desire. One wrong move and he loses everything.
This steamy MM hockey romance is full of hot hate-to-love tension, dirty obsession, and a love triangle that will leave you aching.
My fiancé Gavin decides by drawing lots whether I or his childhood friend Chloe gets to accompany him to the World Cup.
In our twelve years together, Chloe won the chance to accompany him to both previous World Cups.
Each time, he’d gently coax me:
"The draw chose Chloe. I can’t go back on it, can I?"
"Next time, no drawing lots. I promise I’ll go with you."
I believed him and waited four years.
This year, I excitedly bought new sunscreen and packed my luggage early because he said that, after the World Cup, we’d go to the Maldives for an early honeymoon.
I was full of anticipation, but when we were about to leave, my fiancé froze.
He looked at me, his eyes filled with guilt once again:
"Chloe’s birthday wish was to accompany me to one more World Cup. This time, I’m still going with her."
"I’m sorry, babe. Next time, I promise I’ll go with you."
My heart suddenly clenched, and I stood there in silence.
Meanwhile, he was meticulously planning the trip, even thoughtfully packing pads for the other woman.
Suddenly, I didn’t want to wait anymore. I called my company’s director:
"I’ll take the overseas assignment to Northern Europe."
'Since when did so much hate become affection, no, NEED'
Callum Reyes has spent his entire life earning his place. A scholarship wide receiver at Crestfield University — one of the most elite football programs in the country — he knows exactly what he is to the people here: a charity case with fast legs and a GPA they didn't expect. He keeps his head down, his grades up, and his heart locked behind something no one has ever bothered to pick.
Then there's Jaxon Whitfield.
Quarterback. Team captain. Golden boy of Crestfield's football dynasty. Jaxon is everything Callum isn't — legacy money, a famous last name, and a jaw that could cut glass. He's also, by every measurable standard, the most infuriating human being Callum has ever been forced to share oxygen with.
From the first day Callum stepped onto that field, Jaxon decided he was a problem. Too fast. Too good. Too'there.' He rides Callum harder than any other player, gets under his skin in ways that shouldn't be possible, and looks at him with those dark green eyes like Callum is something he can't figure out — and hates himself for trying.
But when a career-threatening injury, a locker room secret, a rivalry that's starting to feel like something else entirely, and one night neither of them planned for collide — Callum and Jaxon have to reckon with something they were never supposed to feel.
'Offside' is a slow-burn, enemies-to-lovers MM sports romance about two young men learning that the person who makes your blood boil might just be the person setting you on fire. It's about class and legacy, found family and loneliness, the weight of expectation, and what happens when the one person you want to hate is the only one who actually'sees' you.
The night before the World Cup, Reid Callister made a post on social media. In the photo, he wore a Portugal jersey and was smiling at the woman beside him. He had written something sweet: [Officially done with Argentina. It's all Ronaldo from here.]
Our mutual friends all went quiet. Everyone knew that the night Argentina won the championship four years ago, he had cried in my arms until dawn. That was also the night he slipped a ring onto my finger.
He said, "Messi got his fairy tale. Let's go get ours."
Someone in the comments section asked what happened to his Messi obsession. He replied, "I was young and stupid back then. Now, I know who's worth rooting for."
I stared at the post for a long time. I did not comment. I just set down the divorce papers on the coffee table. Before I left for my flight, I tucked the ring into the pocket of his blue-and-white jersey. This time, I would not be watching the game with him.
As soon as I walk out of the college entrance exam venue, the police bring me to an interrogation room for interrogation purposes.
There, the officers are able to dig out the tools used for cheating in the exams from my clothes. Then, they arrest an accomplice who has helped out with the cheating process in a nearby hotel.
As soon as the accomplice sees me, he claims that I'm the one who has hired his services. After that, he gives a confession on the entire cheating process and how we conducted this transaction.
All the evidence is present. Soon, news of me cheating on the college entrance exam is spread throughout the Internet.
My parents try to defend my innocence, but they ultimately fail. In the end, they die gruesome deaths at home due to cyberbullying.
As for me, I suffer from a cardiac arrest shortly after receiving the bad news of their deaths, and I die soon after.
I still fail to understand what has happened, even when I draw my last breath.
After all, I've never done anything, but why is it that the evidence all points to me being the cheater?
When I open my eyes again, I've returned to the day before the college entrance exams are set to begin.
Greg Chappell's 'Not Out' is a fascinating deep dive into the state of Australian cricket, and it really got me thinking about where the sport is headed. The book doesn’t just rehash old glory days; it’s packed with Chappell’s sharp observations on everything from grassroots development to the pressures of modern professionalism. He argues that Australia’s future success hinges on nurturing young talent without burning them out—a balance that’s harder than it sounds.
One thing that stood out was his critique of the T20 boom. While he acknowledges its financial benefits, he worries it’s overshadowing traditional techniques and long-form skills. His nostalgia for Test cricket’s strategic depth shines through, but he’s pragmatic enough to suggest how the formats can coexist. The book left me convinced that cricket’s soul is in flux, and Australia’s role in shaping it will be crucial.
Greg Chappell: Not Out' is one of those cricket autobiographies that really dives deep into the mind of a legendary player. I've been searching for free online copies myself, but legal options are tricky—most platforms require purchase or library access. Sites like Open Library sometimes have borrowable digital versions, but availability varies.
If you're into cricket literature, you might enjoy exploring other memoirs like 'Playing It My Way' by Sachin Tendulkar while waiting. Honestly, supporting authors by buying their books or checking local libraries feels more rewarding than chasing sketchy free copies.
Greg Chappell's tenure as India's cricket coach remains one of the most divisive chapters in the sport's history here. The controversy stems from his perceived clash with senior players, especially Sourav Ganguly, whose removal as captain sparked outrage. Many fans felt Chappell prioritized his vision over team harmony, leading to disastrous results like India's 2007 World Cup exit. His leaked emails criticizing players added fuel to the fire, painting him as someone who didn't understand India's cricket culture.
What makes 'Greg Chappell: Not Out' particularly contentious is how it revisits these events from his perspective. The book's claims about player politics and selection biases rubbed salt in old wounds. While some appreciate his candor, others see it as rewriting history to justify failures. The Sachin Tendulkar chapter alone caused seismic backlash - when you question a demigod's work ethic, you're begging for chaos in a cricket-mad nation.