I've said this before, but it was 2005 I got into cricket. Before that summer, I hated it and when my poor dad had it on the Tele, we'd all nag him to turn it off. The way the cricket was that summer - hard and exciting - but also the way the whole country became gripped by it, I fell in love, the way you do as a kid.
That summer I used my pocket money to buy a GM cricket set - despite my mum's protests because she didn't think we'd ever actually play with it - but that summer, every single day we would be out playing cricket. Rules were simple - played on a brick road (which I've no doubt is the reason I ended up as a spinner), the wall and flats on the leg side were four if the ball bounced or rolled but out if the shot was in the air, and the cars and garages on the off side were boundaries.
A year later I got my first Surrey membership and joined a team for the first time, a year after that I went to my first Test match.
Sky wasn't prominent in my street at the time, and if the cricket hadn't been on FTA there's no chance we'd have got into it the way we did. For years after 2005, the first day of sunshine of the year the footballs went into the garage and the cricket stuff came out.
I couldn't tell you the last time I saw kids or a family playing cricket. Not on streets, not in the park, not on the beach... Nothing.
I understand the financial side of it, but having cricket behind a paywall, coupled with newspapers, news channels etc only focusing on football even all the way through June and July, has killed the popularity of the sport with the younger generations IMO
Funny story I do remember. I was in my back garden getting a bowling lesson from my mate next door who was grounded so leaning out of his bedroom window telling me to keep my arm straight