Cricket

Let the games begin?



Why Cricket?



What you'll need to play

  1. 2 Cricket bats
  2. 2 Wickets
  3. A ball
  4. People willing to play with you
  5. Hours and hours


My Own Interest in Cricket


My first contact with the game of cricket was in sixth grade in a gym class. Our teacher decided to introduce a little athletic culture into the mix and found cricket to fit the bill. She sat us down, introduced the rules, gave us the equipment, and already some of us were hooked.

The basic rules are fairly simple: Two wickets are set up about 12 yards apart. Behind each wicket stands a bowler, or pitcher in American terms. In front of each wicket stands a batter. a distance away from these players stand the defensive outfielders (band name, man). The bowlers pitach the ball at the opposite wicket trying to knock it over. The batters protect the wicket by hitting the ball away to the outfield. Following a hit the two players try and trade places as many times as possible beofre the outfield can ge the ball back to the bowlers. If a bowler knocks over a wicket by pitch or by returning the ball from the outfield the batters are out.

Here is what I like about cricket. I get a pretentious sense of refinement when ever I play. I fell civilized, yet there is that underlying sense of animal competition very, very far below the surface. Mostly, I am a fan of any sport that embraces meal breaks.