Test Match Special - View from the Boundary: Historian Tom Holland
Episode Date: December 14, 2025Sharing his love of cricket is co-host of the Rest is History podcast Tom Holland. He reveals how the podcast started, and a possible cricketing link to Jack the Ripper....
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podcast on BBC Sounds. Hello, this is Simon Mann and welcome to the Test Match special podcast. In
this episode, we have a view from the boundary interview with a historian, broadcaster, and author
who co-hosts the world's most popular history podcast. In 2020, he began the restist history
alongside friend and colleague Dominic Sandbrook, and in the five years since, they produced more
than 800 episodes of the podcast, which you can also hear on BBC Sounds. It now attracts more than
11 million downloads a month and has just been named as Apple Podcast 2025 show of the year.
It's very popular here in Australia as well, where the duo have been touring a sell-out show
and just so happened to find themselves at the Gabba joined the second test of the Ashes.
TMS at the Ashes.
So it just happened to coincide with the Ashes.
No, of course it was planned to coincide.
Oh, it was an incredible coincidence.
What are the odds on that?
Yeah, so we landed in Perth just in time for the first test,
and here we are in Brisbane for the second.
So how many shows have you done?
We've done five, so we did a couple in Sydney,
including the Sydney Opera House, which was a dream come true.
How many people do you have in there?
I think it's about 2,500, something like that.
And then we went to Melbourne, and then we went to Adelaide,
where we stayed in the Adelaide Oval.
which, you know, cricket ground that doubles as a hotel.
And then we came to Brisbane.
Where's Dominic?
Dominic is, I think, heading towards Singapore as we speak.
He is more of a football man than a cricket man.
But he came here on the first day of this test
and came with our two wonderful producers as well,
Theo and Tabby, who love cricket.
So Tabby loves Joe Roots.
It could not have been happier to watch him get his maiden test.
here. Dominic, I think, slightly performatively dislikes cricket, but even he was forced to
admit that it was a sensational first day. Is there something quite performative about Dominic's
general performance on the podcast? I think there is, there's quite a strong degree of performing
when you do a podcast. You know, we try and do serious history, but if there's an opportunity
for a bit of singing or a ludicrous German accent.
We seize that opportunity with all the gusto that we've got.
Yeah, exactly.
I'm actually listening to the current series on Hitler,
the start of, yeah, well, 1933 and onwards, yeah.
So I'm just waiting, I've got the second one.
I'm just waiting for the third one now,
with a few German accents in that.
Well, Christmas is coming,
so we've done the Nazis and we've got Jack the Ripper coming up.
So nothing said. Jack the Ripper, and we have, the final episode of that series will be a long list of the suspects.
And among the suspects, I was astonished to read, was WG Grace, who you think would stand out.
How does that happen?
You had to give it a sneak preview of that?
How on earth does WG Grace get onto the list?
Well, I think basically the murders are so sensational and they create such public interest.
and they have done ever since 1888 when they were done
that I think people don't want to believe
that the murderer might just have been a nobody and an entity
they want to think that it was a major figure
so there's this kind of I'm sure everyone listening
will have vaguely heard of the theory
that it was a member of the royal family or it was the royal physician
but some people have pushed that even further
so WG Grace is one candidate, the Elephant Man, I think that's even madder.
I mean, he really would stand out.
And most precisely of all, Gandhi, who you'd think, I mean, Gandhi's absolutely not the kind of person you'd think to go around murdering people.
But he arrived in shortly before the murders began and left shortly afterwards.
And I presume you do you debunk these, do you debunk them as the episode goes on, do you?
Yeah, so we'll begin with the most ludicrous ones at the end with the most likely.
Okay.
Well, we'll talk about the podcast.
us more in a moment.
Let's talk about cricket to start with.
Yeah, let's talk about cricket.
This is what we normally do.
I mean, there'll be lots of people who wanted to hear you talk about cricket,
but lots of people wanting you to talk about your podcast and history as well.
And business, I mean, an incredible success.
But cricket, why do you love the game and kind of how, you know,
what's your involvement with the game?
Well, I was saying Dominic was performatively dislike cricket,
and I kind of recognised the symptoms because I was like that when I was a child,
because my father
love cricket and football
so he would listen to the
radio to get the football schools
all through the winter
and then come the spring
I didn't need to look for swallows
because he would bring out these black metal plates
and he would paint them
and then he would paint white numbers on them
and these were the numbers that were going to go
on the scoreboard and he'd start going down to the cricket pitch
and preparing the wicket and everything
and I would often be taken
to the matches where he was playing
and I just found it purgatorial
I mean I found it so dull
what sort of age you're talking about here?
I suppose from 6 through to
10 or 11 and
my brother my younger brother
James who also does a
podcast on the Second World War we have ways
which is also incredibly successful as well
isn't it yeah he is an excellent
cricketer and he loved cricket
from the kind of early age so I cast
myself as the guy in the family who didn't
like sport and particularly didn't like cricket. And it was a kind of important part of my
identity growing up as a, you know, in the family. And then in the summer of 1981, my mother
went into hospital and my father had to look after me. And so his idea of childcare was to sit
me in front of a test match and taught me through it. And it wasn't a promising test match. So Ian Botham,
the England captain had been sacked for getting a pair in the previous match.
It began terribly.
It looked like England were going to lose because I heard about both them.
He'd got at, you know, he hadn't scored any runs in the previous test match,
so I kind of identified with him that I thought, you know, he can't play cricket.
I like him.
And then, of course, he had this incredible match.
And by the evening of the fourth day, when he was on 145 not out,
and England were nine wickets down, whatever, 120 on ahead,
I was thinking, God, this is so exciting.
And I said to my father, well, who's going to win?
And he said, oh, I don't have no idea who's going to win.
That's the whole point.
And I couldn't quite wrap my head around the fact that something this exciting,
it was possible that people wouldn't know what was going to happen.
And the following day, which, of course, is written in the annals of cricket,
one of the most famous days of test match cricket ever,
when Willis got his eight wickets and England won, having followed on.
at the end of it
I thought
that is the most exciting thing
I have ever seen
I was insane
why you were how old
how are we I was 13
I was 13
and my father said okay
what you've got to understand is that
not every test matches like that
but of course
basically the next three test matches
were like that
and because I loved both them
and he was the star in it
at Edgebaston and Old Trafford
I was completely smitten
And from that point on, I mean, all that summer, I started playing.
I was kind of teaching myself to bowl.
We rigged up a net in the garden, and the garden had a kind of mad slope.
And so the run-up wasn't really very far, and the wicket was slightly short because we couldn't squeeze it in.
But by the end, I was kind of good enough to kind of play.
And from that point on, I've played religiously every summer.
So from when I was 13 up to now, I'm 57.
I'm still playing.
And what do you do?
Lightning quick.
Lightning quick.
Although I...
Gideon Haig, the great...
The doyen of Australian cricket writers, who I met in Melbourne.
He said he'd been reading my Wikipedia page and that I was described there as medium slow, which I hadn't seen that.
And Gideon very kindly said, I think medium, medium.
So that's a considered opinion of Australia's greatest cricket writer, so I reckon that is a fact.
Okay, so not lightning quick, medium, medium.
Well, I'm 57.
You know.
So you mentioned your brother there.
So was there that sibling rivalry was?
What's the age difference?
No, he's two and a half years younger than me.
But he, I always, I mean, he's an excellent cricketer.
He's a very good bowler, but really good batsman.
So I would never think to compete with him.
So he's better than you, is he?
He's much better than me.
Yeah, he's much better than me.
I mean, I can't really bat.
I'm basically blind.
And I have the coordination of an octopus.
But I do my best.
So who do you play for?
So I play now for a team called The Authors,
which was originally founded by Arthur Conan Doyle and J.M. Barry,
so back in the golden age of cricket,
this kind of Edwardian glow hanging over it.
And then obviously it went into abeyance in the First World War.
And there have been various attempts to kind of resuscitate it.
and the latest one happened in 2012
when I was kind of early 40s
just about and I was thinking I should probably retire
because I'd been running my own team
captioning it and it was quite stressful
there was the whole thing of people dropping out
with groin strains at 11 o'clock in the morning of a match
anyone who's run a cricket team
and know exactly what you're feeling there
so I was thinking maybe it's time to stop
and then the team got set up
and it was set up by my friend Charlie Campbell
who's a writer but also a literary
agent. And so he knew that Bloomsbury were flush with cash from Harry Potter, you know,
which just was going absolutely great guns at the time. And so he pitched the revitalisation
of this author's team as a book. And the concept was that we would have matches at particular
grounds that would be associated with particular themes to do with cricket. And each one of us who
were playing would write a particular chapter. So, you know, a Hamble,
there'd be one on the history of cricket
or we played at the Valley of the Rocks
and that was cricket and beauty
or whatever. And I
played
in a team against
I think 16 year olds
and I was going to write on age
in cricket. So we were kind of
quite elderly and they were all young
Turks. And
I'd had a pretty bad
first match where I'd
taken spikes to an astroturf
wicket and it was very wet
and slippery. And so I was wearing trainers and it was just hopeless. And then this was the second
match. And again, it was grey and drizzly and miserable. And they whacked us all around the
ground. And we needed something like 80 of four rovers. And I was the last man in. And there was
it, they had this bowler who was unbelievably quick. I mean, he swung it, he seamed it. He could
Seam it and de Bole Yorker in the same ball. I mean, he was so good. It amazes me. He's not playing for England now.
And I hit him for six. And it was my first and only six. In your whole life? Ever. And what was
brilliant was it where did it go? Where did it go? I think it went cut or was a damp? Back with a point, which is
tell us the same story. And we amazingly, we had we had a professional sports photographer with us because it was, you know, to get
illustrations for the book and he took a photograph of the six and I got back and I said I can just
go on and on about this I have this photograph of me hitting a six and basically it it reignited
my determination to carry on into old age I thought if I can hit a six at this age my first one
what fresh Everest are there to conquer and so here I am just about holding on with my
my fingertips I would guess do you prefer playing or watching
playing i mean i like watching but i i i love playing it's it's the the constant hope that perhaps
this match won't be misery and despair and maybe every five or six matches something will
happen that will you know give you such a sense of joy and pleasure that it will warm you
through all the disappointment that then inevitably follows and perhaps warm you through the
the winter season and also it's um you know it's such a sociable game and it's playing for the authors
is such an important part of my social life that it would it would be terrible i think to give it up
and as i say a lot of us in the team are we're quite you know we were in the 40s when we began
so we're we're definitely heading northwards now but we're still playing on and we have some kind of
Totemic figures who were well into their 60s.
Like?
Any one would we know?
Well, our first player who retired was Spastin Folks, the great novelist, who was an excellent
cricketer, a very good tennis player as well.
His knee, unfortunately, went, and we had one particularly demoralising match against
Windsor, a game that forever lives in infamy, where I think we only had nine players because
two of the people got lost, and they had sent out their first time.
team and they you know 220 for two or something and Sebastian was stationed a sweeper on the
offside boundary and he literally he was literally on one leg I mean it was absolutely hopeless
well I think he gave up after that but you know there are others we're kind of powering on
and you want to play on to what age do you think I'd like to play on for as long as I you know
I get selected and I can I can perform so I there have been various points where I contemplated
retiring. So we went on a tour of Sri Lanka
where, you know, just saying
I went on a tour of Sri Lanka. I mean, I
cannot tell you how improbable
that would have been when I was 13.
But there's going on a tour of Sri Lanka and there's actually playing in
Sri Lanka because that is the hottest place.
Yeah, and they're so keen. And everybody
in Sri Lanka who plays cricket seems to be about
18, unbelievably
fit. They don't seem to be
any incompetent old cricketers
in Sri Lanka. They've all retired.
And I got no runs,
no wickets, no catches.
And I came back and I thought, oh, this is hopeless.
I'm going to give up.
I had a friend, Matt Thacker, who runs, he runs Wisden, Cricket Monthly
and a host of other sports magazines.
And he said, I've got this great idea.
I'm going to pay you up with a sports psychologist, a professional sports psychologist,
to see what she can do.
And she was a wonderful one called Amanda Owens.
We've worked with cricketers, with tennis players, I think with RAF pilots.
So people under incredible pressure.
and I was very skeptical.
I thought, this is like astrology or something.
It's clearly not going to, not worth doing.
But I thought, well, I'll try anything.
And so we had it at the Oval, so I had an hour of sports psychology at the Oval.
And I thought, that's quite cool.
But it didn't really do anything.
And then the second session, it completely clicked.
I completely got the point of it.
And I had this astonishing run where I got, I had three, five wicket halls in five games.
never had a peak like that before.
But it gave me the hope that maybe out there
there is some method or technique that you can use
that, you know, the kind of, you know, asterix taking the magic potion or something,
if only.
So that gives me hope.
The TMS podcast on BBC Sounds.
My name's Steve Bradnell, a sister manager of Royal Oak FC.
You may have seen me online going viral.
Vinyl sensation.
And now the BBC have given me the chance
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Let's talk about the rest is history
and the success of that.
I mean, can you believe
How successful it's been?
It started, what, five years ago?
No.
How did it start?
Well, it started thanks to my brother, who is a historian in the Second World War,
wrote a wonderful book about the Siege of Malta in the war.
And he got approached by former head of ITV sport, Tony Pasta,
whose parents were Maltese, and so had read the book and thought that it was
that my brother would be maybe good to do a podcast
and Tony was in a position to help with that
because he was partner with Gary Linneka
in a podcast called Goalhanger
and Goalhanger had basically been set up
to serve as handmaiden
to Gary's role on match of the day
so that's why it was called Goalhanger
so they did a lot of
mainly I mean it was almost exclusively sport focused
so as well as football they did a cricket one
with Stuart Broad and Stephen Frye for instance
but my brothers we have ways of making you talk which he did with al murray the comedian
who's incredibly knowledgeable about the second world war was the first one that was not a sporting one
and it was a great success and it was launched just before the lockdown and then in the lockdown
people were desperate for listening material so it was just an amazing success and on the back of that
Tony and his business partner jack davenport approached me and said what about doing a history
podcast. And so I suggested my friend Dominic Sanbrook, who's a historian of the modern world,
and my focus is much more ancient history. And we very arrogantly and hubristically thought,
well, let's try and do the whole sweep of history. And, you know, we can focus on our
respective periods of specialisation and try and muddle through on the rest.
Because a lot of the time you're really at your comfort zone then, aren't you? Because
you're dealing with subjects that you're not.
a specialist on.
So how does that process work?
Well, to begin with, and we did slightly cling to our comfort zones,
but then we realize that actually it's much easier to do a podcast on subjects you don't
necessarily, you're not necessarily an expert about, because the problem with
talking about something you know loads about is that you're very reluctant to express
an opinion because you're always aware that there's some counterpoint or, and it's
actually easier to talk about something that you have researched with.
with a kind of growing sense of excitement.
Because almost invariably, when you start on the topic,
you find it's much, much more interesting
than you'd realized when you began it.
And I think that that sense of excitement and enthusiasm,
hopefully you can then carry into the podcast.
Because I don't think anybody listening to it
would be expecting to listen.
They're not listening to the Reef lectures.
This is not, we're not offering ourselves
as world experts on every single topic.
But what we are saying is that this is fascinating.
We have experienced the fascination for ourselves,
and we want to share that fascination with the people who are listening.
Why do you think it's so successful among a younger audience?
I think, well, under 35.
Half your audience under 35.
I guess it's partly because the younger you are,
the more habituated you are to technology,
and so the red you are to.
listen to podcasts, I guess.
But I think also it's reflective
of the fact that
history is just infinitely
fascinating.
And there's no reason why
if you're 25, you shouldn't find
it fascinating. I think
the assumption that history is for, you know,
people who are very elderly,
I just don't think that the
statistics from our
listenerships supports that.
I mean, clearly
people of all ages are ready to find history fascinating.
It doesn't remotely surprise me.
I've been fascinated by history since I was about seven.
We know a lot, don't we, about sort of the modern era,
so Dominic's era, the 20th century.
You've got so many sources for that.
Your era, your specialism now, is it a bit more limited?
So do we really know what went on?
I think it is much easier to construct.
secure narratives, and we tend to focus on narrative just because we found that that's the easiest
way to structure a podcast. People want to hear stories, whether that's the account of, you know,
biographies or wars or crises or murders or whatever. I think it is harder to do the further
back in time you go because the sources do become more and more insubstantial or contested.
And you have issues like Alexander the Great, who you'd think would be someone whose life is securely sourced.
But the major sources are written hundreds of years after he lived.
And they're full of kind of details about Alexander going off to an oracle and being guided there by two talking snakes.
And you put that in.
But were there actually talking snakes?
I think it's improbable.
But it's a complication that you don't have
when, for instance, you're describing Dunkirk.
There are no talking snakes at Dunkirk.
What's been outside of your own special?
What subject has fascinated you most?
Or what surprised you, looking into a particular subject?
I think the subject that I was most surprised to find myself gripped by
was the story of the Titanic
which
I've seen the film
I had a vague sense of it
I think everyone knows what happens
and we did it because
every so often we want to do a subject
that everyone will have heard of
we want to do an absolute banger
and Titanic is obviously a huge historical
banger I mean literally it bangs into an iceberg
but what was wonderful about that
was that
the narrative is
beyond gripping
I mean when you get up close to it
and you're reading about
how the
the sinking happens
those who survive
those who don't
stories I mean it's so gripping
but beyond that
it provides a brilliant
opportunity to do what we
we sometimes find hard to do
which is social history
because the three classes
that you have on Titanic.
You know, you have millionaires
traveling, but you also
have refugees from Armenian villages
who were fleeing genocide, and you
have them all on this ship.
And so you can tell
their stories.
And you set them against the backdrop
of this incredible drama.
I found it completely, completely gripping.
And we ended up, you know,
I said to saving my wife,
oh, I can't stay here, we've got to go to Belfar.
We've got to go and stay in the Titanic Hotel.
And this is a hotel where the draftsman drew the plans for Titanic.
We've got to go and visit the incredible Titanic Museum, which is opposite it.
We ended up going around every monument, every pub.
There's a pub with a very sinister doll that was found floating where the Titanic had sunk,
and it sat there staring at you as you have your kines.
And I got completely obsessed by it, and Dominic did as well.
and I think it was
we did six episodes on it in the end
and it was...
Did you mean to start with six?
No, we were planning to do kind of two
and then it became four and then it became six
but there was just so much to talk about
and it's not just a social history as well
there's the
Anglo-American rivalry
the sectarian divisions in Ireland
because it's four years
before the Easter Rising
you've got the
First World War brewing in the background
So the sense of drama around it was incredible.
What got you into history?
You talked about Cricky.
You talked about sitting in front of the television
and watching Ian Botham Smat the Australians in 1981.
What captured your imagination about history?
Well, I was one of those little boys who was obsessed by dinosaurs.
I remember going up the lane behind my house
and just wishing that there were, you know, stegosaurs or something roaming it.
I mean, obviously, I wouldn't have survived a minute in the Mesozoic.
But I had this kind of sense that what happened in the past
was basically more interesting and glamorous than the present.
And I think that that just evolved naturally into an interest in history.
So in a sense, I mean, my first love with the Romans.
and I think there's a sense in which the Romans
are kind of the Tyrannosaurs of the ancient world
they're the apex predator
they're glamorous, they're terrifying
but they're also safely extinct
so they're sufficiently removed
that you don't actually have to feel nervous of them necessarily
and are there more sources
I mean there must be certain areas, certain times of it
there must be more source material than for others
yeah so you've got a lot to go on
Yeah, so there was one particular period, which is Rome was a republic,
and then it comes under the shadow of great autocratic figures.
And one of those figures is Julius Caesar.
He wins up, you know, he conquers Gaul, he invades Britain,
and he wins all this incredible glory, all this loot.
He has all these battle-hardened legions behind him.
And his enemies in Rome are very nervous of him.
And so they try and destroy him by taking him.
their plan is to take him to court and ruin him there.
And so rather than give up his command,
he decides that he will leave his provincial command
and cross this tiny river which marks the frontier into Italy.
And this river is called the Rubicon.
And he crosses the Rubicon.
And so hence the phrase, you take a disastrous decision.
You insert Australia at the Gabba and you've crossed the Rubicon.
You're not going to win the ashes.
So Caesar crosses the Rubicon and there's a terrible civil war.
The Republic implodes.
Caesar gets assassinated.
There are more civil wars and Caesar's great nephew, his adoptive son,
emerges from the carnage and establishes what will become an autocracy
amid the rubble of what has been in the Republic.
And this is the man who takes on the name Augustus
and establishes the rule of the Caesars.
And it's such a dramatic kind of primal story.
you watched Travis Head
didn't you play at
I did
yes I did
the other way
what did you equate him to
or equate Australia's victory
to the Trojan walls
or him to the Trojan horse
well I was yeah I
or you're just stretching things about there
yeah I was so I was asked about that
and you know what was it like
and the thing is it was such an effort
and it was amazing two days
completely gripping
so intense so epic
deeds being performed
that will echo down the ages
but obviously if you're a Trojan
you know a bit like the Trojan War
but obviously if you're a Trojan watching the Trojan war
the ending's terrible
I mean you know it's
so that's kind of what I felt like
just one final thing
Tom because the players are out and we're going to
just play the highlights the morning session
can I just say that
you know I said I love both
Then I love KP.
But the cricketer I...
You love Zach Crawley, don't you?
I love Zach Crawley because...
Niche love?
Yeah, I watched his double centre against Pakistan in the lockdown.
And it gave me such joy.
It was kind of great shard of light amid the monochrome gloom of the lockdown.
And I've loved him ever since.
But unlike both of them and KP, he tends to repay that investment slightly less.
But when he comes off, he comes off.
So you can...
I thought...
You know, he's been selected to go to Australia
and whack the Australian bowlers around.
I've got to be in Perth to see him do that.
Out for Norton in the first over of the first innings.
Out for Norton, the first over of the second innings.
So I was so happy to be here to see him
not get out for Norton the first day here.
TMS at the Ashes.
Well, wonderful to hear from Tom Holland,
a passionate cricket fan,
and I can heartily recommend the rest is history
that you can hear on BBC Sounds.
Also on Sounds, if you search Ashes, you'll find all of our cricketing content
with episodes of the TMS podcast, bringing reaction, analysis and interviews right throughout
the series. Thanks for listening. We'll speak to you soon.
Welcome to Terlenders. I'm Greg James. He's Felix White. Hello. And that is England's greatest
ever bowler, Jimmy Anderson. Hello. We've finally got our break on BBC High Play.
It's lovely to be here. England haven't won a test match in Australia since the 2010, 2011,
series which is a long time ago give us a few reasons as to why it's so difficult the wickets are
different the ball's different and the heat as well the media coverage over there is so much
bigger than a test series in england for example and cricket over there is huge plus
australia are amazing in their own country tail enders watch on i player listen on bbcc sounds
this month in football everything is up for grabs the premier league battles intensify
the Champions League reaches its crucial turning point
and the World Cup draw
sets the stage for the biggest tournament on earth.
Football Daily from the BBC brings you sharp analysis,
instant reaction, expert insight
and the stories driving the game on and off the pitch.
Your essential football podcast delivered every day.
Listen to Football Daily on Spotify,
to Football Daily on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts.
Thank you.
