EXPLAINING CRICKET TO AMERICANS
[The following explanation of cricket has been used since the 1970s, to explain cricket to Americans who had
never seen a cricket match. First developed in Seattle, it has been used throughout the USA. Try it on your American
friends... if they understand baseball, they should be able to follow cricket with this handy guide!]
- There are TWO teams, with eleven players each (instead of nine as in baseball).
- Instead of four bases, there are only two; in the middle of the field, sixty-six feet apart...
all
running is between the two bases... the ball can be hit in front, OR behind... or, in ANY direction.
- Instead of rotating batting for nine innings each, EACH team does all its batting in a SINGLE inning .
- The team scoring more runs wins the game.
[ NOTE: Unlike baseball, where a pitcher
rests every 10 or so pitches when the BATTING rotates, cricket pitchers rest every 6 pitches as their PITCHING rotates.]
- The fielding team works with TWO pitchers at the same time.
- The first pitcher throws from one base to the other.
After six throws, the catcher moves around behind the
first pitcher's base, pitcher #2 takes over. He makes six throws in the opposite direction (i.e. towards
the starting pitcher's base).
- The two pitchers keep alternating like this, until one or both of them are relieved.
* [[ IMPORTANT: Each six-pitch set is called an "over", and pitchers are called "bowlers" in cricket.
So, to say "Doe bowled seven overs", is saying Doe threw 42 pitches, in (alternating) sets of
six. ]]
- The MAJOR DIFFERENCE from baseball is that batters can hit in ANY direction.
- Also, THE BATTER CAN RUN WHEN HE CHOOSES TO,
NOT every time he hits the ball, as in baseball. He
is safe as long as he protects his wickets WITH HIS BAT (NOT his feet or hands) and makes no other errors.
- As long as the batter can protect his base, he is free to keep batting, and scoring, as long as he
can!
- The batter (or "batsman") is OUT only if
: any of the three sticks marking his base (called "wickets")
are hit by the pitcher --he is "bowled" (like being struck out, except that once is enough).
- OR, if: the ball is hit into a fielder's hand without touching the ground, he is "caught" (like baseball's pop
fly).
- OR, if: he is running between the bases, and a fielder can touch the base he is running to,
before the runner
crosses the "safe line" in front of the wickets, he is "run out" (like a tag, except in cricket you tag the base,
not the runner).
So: A cricket batter could be out on the first pitch, BUT would go on batting until someone puts him "out"; Some
batters can stay on base for hours, scoring 50, 100 runs or more!
- A batter (or "batsman") can score in cricket by hitting the ball, deciding to run, then running safely between the two
bases.
- Once across (from one base, to the opposite one) is a "single", scoring 1 run.
- there and back is a "double", scoring 2 runs.
- three times back and forth is a "triple", scoring 3 runs.
- A hit that reaches the fence scores four runs.
- and a hit that flies over the fence is a sixer, scoring 6 runs.
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