It's just the noise it makes.Originally Posted by brenda
The glove is part of the bat, if it's in contact with it.
Basic rules for tests - which are internationals between test playing nations:Originally Posted by brotherdoobie
The game can last up to five days, these five days are split into 3 sessions punctuated with a break for lunch and an interval for a spot of tea - very civillised. These sessions are split up into 30(ish) overs. An over is 6 balls.
The teams each have eleven players.
A coin is tossed and the winner of that can decide whether he wants his team to bet first. If so, two batsmen walk out to the middle and stand at opposite ends of the pitch. The bowlers will then bowl at one of them; trying to hit the wicket behind the batsman or trying to get him to loft a catch to a fielder or hit him on the leg in an effort to make the umpire give the batsman out lbw (leg before wicket).
Batsmen score runs by hitting the ball into space and running between the wickets. Each time this is completed they get one run. Four runs are awarded for hitting the ball to the outer limit of the field (the boundary) - if they hit it over the boundary line without it first bouncing, six runs are awarded. Obviously, the more runs you score, the better it is for your team.
Once the bowling side has bowled ten of the batting team out, their team goes out to bat. Each team gets two turns for their whole side to bat (an innings).
In order to win, though, a team has to bowl the other team out twice. If this doesn't happen by the end of the fifth day, the game is a draw. It doesn't matter if your team has scored more runs than the opposition, you can't win unless you bowl the opposition out twice.
Damn, that got boring quickly![]()
don't the US have a cricket team??? I'm sure they did in the world cup
bacilly in English
you have 11 players on each side some of these players bat some of them bowl some of them can do both we call those players all rounders...
now bowler bowls his job is to get the batman OUT this is done by bowling the ball to the batman if it hits the stumps its out if it hits the bat in the air caught by a fieldmans its out (think baseball) when you hit the ball you can go for a run between the wickets (wickets called stumps) you know that pitch thing in the middle???? the 2 batman cross it and if say they went for a run and one of the 2 batsman didn't cross the line by the time a fileman hit the stumps with the ball the batter is out.
if you hit the ball to the fence it is a 4 (runs) hit it over the fence a 6 (runs)
once a team has bowled the other team out (got 10 wickets aka 10 people out) its the other turns team to bat... of cause this was decide who bats first by a coin toss at the beginning of the game.
test match's IMO are better they go for 5 days no fielder restrictions each team has 2 innings to bat (just like baseball has 9)
example
England get 400 on there first innings all out
Australia get 450 on their first innings
aust lead by 50
england get 300 on 2nd innings
aust need 250 runs to win the match
one days go for 50 overs (6 ball in a over) in that 50 overs you have to get as many runs as possible then the other team after 50 over (unless there all our by the end of 50) have to chase the runs and get them
there are no balls and wides so sometimes you can have more then 6 balls a over
if the bowlers foot steps over the line or the ball is a wide meaning too far from the batmasn to hit it counts as a run and they have to re bowl it..
in One day cricket their is fielding restriction after 15 overs have been bowled thats when most 4s have been hit
theres a guy behind the stumps people ask about who dont uderstand cricket he is called a wicket keeper (simular to catcher in basball) he ovisouly stops the ball from going to the fence for 4 byes, so in the case a bowler bowls batmans misses the keeper misses it (and it hits the boundry aka JONES) its 4 byes which get counted as runs to the bating team
ahhhhh I think it is as easy as baseball to understand
any more questions fire away
can the batters come as far out as they want? If the batter hits the wickets by accident, is he out?
Last edited by maebach; 08-17-2005 at 05:20 AM.
1). Yes but too far would be crazyOriginally Posted by maebach
2). Yes, .... if at least one of the bails comes off the top of the stumps.
Also, if the batsman is out of his crease (that's the line about a yard in front of the wicket), and the ball is bowled and goes through to the keeper, the batsman can be stumped out, if the keeper takes the bails off with the ball.
(the bails are the two pieces of wood that balance on top of the wickets).
Interestingly, if the ball hits the stumps from a bowl, or the batsman hits the stumps, and in either case the bails remain on the stumps, then it's not out. (To be out bowled, stumped, hit-wicket or run-out, at least one of the bails has to be removed from the top of the stumps)
oh yeah, to clarify, there are 6 ways to get out:
Bowled
Caught
LBW (Leg Before Wicket)
Stumped
Hit Wicket
Run Out
Sometimes the wicket keeper will put his helmet down on the grass behind him, if a spin-bowler is on (they're slower, so you don't need a helmet). In this case, if the ball happens to hit the helmet, that's an automatic 5 run penalty.![]()
I see no-one has attempted to explain LBW yet?![]()
Sometimes it's the batsman's fingers breaking..Originally Posted by brenda
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