A must-read for any cricket fan. The events that transpired during the summer of '92-'93 would set Australian cricket up for the most glorious decade of its 116-year Test history: Steve Waugh would re-enter the Australian Test XI as a batsman; Dean Jones would be controversially dropped, never to return; Mark Taylor would captain Australia for the first time; Glenn McGrath would make his Shield and domestic one-day debuts for New South Wales; Shane Warne would take his maiden Test five-wicket haul and would, for the first time, win a Test match for his country in front of an Australian crowd; Damien Martyn and Justin Langer would make their Test debuts as 21- and 22-year-olds respectively; Michael Slater and Matthew Hayden - aged 22 and 21 respectively - would score the first-class runs that would book them their plane tickets for the 1993 Ashes tour and an 18-year-old Ricky Ponting would announce himself as the most promising batsman of his generation, scoring 782 first-class runs that summer at an average of 46. Cricket's Summer of Change is the story of how it all happened.