Cricket Explained for Baseball Fans REACTION

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 10 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 2,1 тис.

  • @doughaslehurst5108
    @doughaslehurst5108 4 місяці тому +647

    Unlike baseball, if the ball is struck into the crowd, they are not allowed to keep it. As the ball ages it performs differently.

    • @jamesdignanmusic2765
      @jamesdignanmusic2765 4 місяці тому +55

      Also, different types of bowlers can take advantage of the different condition of the ball - fast bowlers get more out of a new ball, slower bowlers who can spin the ball prefer an older ball.

    • @hobsonjones8693
      @hobsonjones8693 4 місяці тому +28

      In a recent game between England and Sri Lanka, someone in the crowd caught the ball single handed (while holding a pint of beer in the other hand).

    • @VinnBim
      @VinnBim 4 місяці тому +6

      @@hobsonjones8693 Would have been more impressive if he was drinking the beer!

    • @AusExplorer
      @AusExplorer 3 місяці тому +2

      @@VinnBim caught it in the beer they were drinking ...

    • @Bellas1717
      @Bellas1717 3 місяці тому +16

      @@VinnBim they'd have to have been an Aussie to pull that off 🤣

  • @happilyeggs4627
    @happilyeggs4627 4 місяці тому +535

    The ball is extremely hard. Even with padded batting gloves broken fingers are the result of being struck on the hand sometimes.

    • @bashab3098
      @bashab3098 4 місяці тому

      @@happilyeggs4627 and also the pitch, the lighter coloured brown area where the bowler bounces the ball , is rolled and kept dry towards the game it is prepared over ten days to have a consistent bounce .

    • @cheryltotheg2880
      @cheryltotheg2880 4 місяці тому +47

      Yeah also that Australian was killed when the ball hit his neck 😢

    • @AndyKing1963
      @AndyKing1963 4 місяці тому +15

      I once hit a 2 off a head high bouncer with the back of my hand (without a glove, my team were collapsing so quickly I didn''t even have time to put one on) - I lasted two runs, retired injured - ouch! I once had a ball batted past me ear and it was actually buzzing like a hornet.

    • @happilyeggs4627
      @happilyeggs4627 4 місяці тому +1

      @@AndyKing1963 Much nasty.

    • @RalphBrooker-gn9iv
      @RalphBrooker-gn9iv 4 місяці тому +6

      @@happilyeggs4627 Balls that have already bounced can shatter helmets. I once faced an Australian grade bowler in a British forces league. He was the quickest I ever faced. I opened the batting, having bigged myself up. He bowled 5. A fielder said ‘Good leaver’. 6th sent my off stump back to the pavilion.!! Like you both observed, it’s not 3 strikes!

  • @Thoucraggyknob
    @Thoucraggyknob 4 місяці тому +334

    As an English cricket fan, I enjoy most iterations of the sport, but my true love will always be test cricket. You can't beat the ebb and flow of the 5-day game. Captains have to be tactical, the wicket deteriorates, which allows for spin bowlers to take advantage. It's very satisfying.
    As for tickets, you can purchase any one day, or multiple days or the entire test.

    • @cheryltotheg2880
      @cheryltotheg2880 4 місяці тому +17

      I’m the same. My grandad was my fave person and I used to watch the tests with him in the summer holidays when we stayed with them. Always loved it and I like the cricket whites the coloured kits just look messy to me 😂😂😂

    • @davidbrown1594
      @davidbrown1594 4 місяці тому +10

      I will watch the shorter format & T20 is at last growing on me but like you, test cricket is my passion. I’ve watched England tests in Australia, NZ, India, Sri Lanka, South Africa & Barbados. No way will the longer game ever appeal to an American audience though

    • @vinays77777
      @vinays77777 3 місяці тому +3

      lol man... you are funny... they are learning about rules of cricket and you are talking about "the wicket deteriorates, which allows for spin bowlers to take advantage" 🤣🤣🤣... covid cricket fans from common wealth wont understand ur comment 😂😂😂😂😂

    • @shmick6079
      @shmick6079 3 місяці тому +4

      Yeah test cricket is by far the purest and most satisfying to watch.
      I have a hard time taking T20 seriously, given that nobody seems to value their wicket and there’s less opportunity for genuine momentum swings to occur.

    • @sueflynn9886
      @sueflynn9886 3 місяці тому +4

      Mine too, I love test cricket!

  • @JD-bt6vi
    @JD-bt6vi 3 місяці тому +100

    The 5 day test match is like the psychological thriller version of cricket, the deterioration of the pitch which affects the likelihood of a catch off the edge of the bat increases the drama dramatically. This pure form is the best.

    • @carolannhartley359
      @carolannhartley359 Місяць тому +7

      JD. The 5 day game also allowed for tactics, prompted by the condition of the pitch & secondarily, the field in general, but even more by the relative strengths & weaknesses of one's own team vis à vis the opposition. The captain of each team, often in consultation, decides on his team's tactics.
      The limited overs game is more like baseball--batters slog the ball, bowlers have only 6 balls for any tactics.
      Limited overs cricket was introduced to bring in spectators with a short attention span. True aficionados love the 5 day game.

    • @MultanKnight007
      @MultanKnight007 Місяць тому +2

      I liken tests to a war consisting of a series of battles. Each battle having its own sub-goal consisting of strategies required according to the situation. It's definitely my favourite format. A true test of skill, knowledge, discipline and temperament.

    • @langdalepaul
      @langdalepaul 29 днів тому +3

      It’s also what is says on the tin: a true test. There’s nowhere to hide in a test match. It tests skill, stamina, resilience, tactics, athleticism, and many other things. I don’t think there is any sport that is a greater all-round test of the players’ abilities.

    • @roblinnell8382
      @roblinnell8382 8 днів тому

      The most stupid question you can ask in a test match, especially on day one, is who's winning? Often the winner is not decided until day 5. You can have a feeling of the team that may be ahead, but the result is often uncertain. The close matches go up to day 5.
      Biggest rivalry is between Australia and England.
      Try Australian Rules Football if you want REAL entertainment.

  • @kevinfitzsimons5105
    @kevinfitzsimons5105 2 місяці тому +28

    AS an Irishman who came to Australia, I cared not for cricket. I sat beside a fan that told me... Now look... Captain has put fielder 1 in x position, he has put fielder 2 in y position he has told bowler to bowl THERE,,,, it will go one of three places X,Y or stumps..... it went to X.... Hve been hooked ever since

  • @EessaTube
    @EessaTube 4 місяці тому +240

    When I was in NY in the 70s, I went to a baseball match, Yankees against Red Sox. A little old lady sitting next to me heard my accent and said, "if you're used to soccer you may not realise that a baseball match can take several hours to finish". I replied, "hey, a cricket match can last five days".

    • @The-Saxon
      @The-Saxon 3 місяці тому +11

      That's the only type of cricket to watch, five day test cricket, not the baseball in pyjama's limited over nonsense. Unfortunately, that's where the money is, so it's here to stay.

    • @PBMS123
      @PBMS123 3 місяці тому +9

      @@The-Saxon BS they both have their place. LO cricket is getting more poeple into cricket that wouldn't otherwise be into it. Test matches being 5 days some people find boring..... LO allows a cricket match to last as long as a football match

    • @The-Saxon
      @The-Saxon 3 місяці тому

      @@PBMS123 Oh, I agree, they do both have their place, but I don't have to like LO cricket, and as an ex cricketer who played county cricket and played plenty of both formats, I think I know a bit about the game.
      Test cricket is a chess match, LO is a lottery by comparison, but yes, they both have their place.

    • @008juggy
      @008juggy 3 місяці тому +6

      Baseball just glorified rounders 😂

    • @johnnykingtcb
      @johnnykingtcb 3 місяці тому +6

      ​@008juggy baseball is a British sport, invented here. GB were first world champions

  • @tmac160
    @tmac160 4 місяці тому +194

    Cricket is the world's best rabbit hole. Enter at your peril.
    I love it. 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

    • @quiddity1977
      @quiddity1977 4 місяці тому +5

      A rabbit hole who's pinical is the 2019 cricket world cup final. An insane game!

    • @phillipecook3227
      @phillipecook3227 3 місяці тому +1

      And the only sport in the world to be called after an insect.

    • @Ducatirati
      @Ducatirati 2 місяці тому

      Well I do know that the poms are ferrets , Bunny's can't bat so they bat last , Poms are so bad they go in after the bunnies , gotta luv em haha

    • @Ducatirati
      @Ducatirati 2 місяці тому

      But honest , ball shyness is a concept I'd get familiar with if I'm putting my body between the ball and stumps , it's scarey, and inconsistent bounce, behind square the non striker will call wait , yes 1 as they pass , but I front of square the batsman should call the run wait , yes 3 one for the throw run hard , that's what you talk about , the wicket is turning outa of bowler Xa feet marks so bat out your crease negate that length . R

    • @richardcuttler7734
      @richardcuttler7734 Місяць тому

      @@phillipecook3227 Google claims "The name may have been derived from the Middle Dutch krick(-e), meaning a stick; or the Old English cricc or cryce meaning a crutch or staff, or the French word criquet meaning a wooden post."

  • @t288msd
    @t288msd 4 місяці тому +193

    in the scoring section. England scored 287 by the time their innings ended. Their innings ended when 10 of their players were out.
    10 'outs' ends an innings

    • @fellforit
      @fellforit 4 місяці тому +28

      Important to note that it ends at 10 players out because while there are 11 players per team, you have to have a player at each end, hence the team being out once 10 are out.

    • @chixma7011
      @chixma7011 3 місяці тому +8

      The England First Innings score of 287 in that 5-day Test Match means they have no more batting pairs to go to the wicket, ie 10 of their 11 available wickets have fallen. They are ‘All Out’ (apart from the last man, of course, whose score is recorded as ‘x Runs N/O’ - Not Out).
      You’re chasing runs so you’re unlikely to see this after a First Innings, but if your team is really racking up the runs in the Second Innings so that the opposition has little chance of matching or beating your total in the time left, the team Captain may decide to call it a day before the whole of the Second Innings is played. The opposition then has to bat their Second Innings instead, earlier than expected, and if they haven’t been playing that well this is actually quite intimidating.
      The wording for this is ‘England Declared at 287’, and on the score line at the bottom of the screen it would read ‘England 287 (decl)’.
      Cricket has a reputation for being slow because of having to retrieve the ball from wherever it might be on the field, or in the crowd, and getting it back to the bowler for the rest of his six deliveries, or else waiting while the bowler is changed and the players out in the field are repositioned, but when the bowler starts his run-up you know that absolutely anything could happen in the next few seconds. Watch some of the insane catches videos where you see these guys doing the most extraordinary acrobatics to try and prevent just one more run from being scored. It’s a fantastic sport and I love it!!

    • @TheBunzinator
      @TheBunzinator 2 місяці тому +2

      And don't forget declarations. A captain may declare his team's inning to be over at any time before 10 wickets have been lost. It happens fairly often in test cricket, and is done for various tactical reasons.

    • @rogerphelps9939
      @rogerphelps9939 8 днів тому

      @@chixma7011 Actually it is very bad physically. Fielders have to perform catches when they have not warmed up properly or have cooled down. That leads to injuries. That is why short versions of the game are better.

  • @soundscape5650
    @soundscape5650 3 місяці тому +225

    Hey, Australian here. Just wanted to try to answer your questions. (Apologies for paraphrasing.)
    "What is the ball made from?" - The ball construction is actually VERY similar to a baseball, with one main difference, and that is the lacquer. A cricket ball, when compared to a baseball, is SLIGHTLY smaller, SLIGHTLY heavier, and MUCH harder, especially when new (start of innings), before the lacquer scuffs away. The sewn stitching pattern is also quite different, with the leather pieces kinda split into two hemispheres.
    "Does the batter's teammate just run back and forth?" - No. When the batters (batsmen) make a run and switch ends, they basically swap roles. This is referred to being "on strike" (for the batter facing the bowler), or "off strike" for the batter at the other end waiting to run. Whoever is at the end of the pitch facing the bowler will play the next pitch.
    "Does the creator get anything wrong?" - Nope, he does really well. Kinda nails it, actually. The only thing I'd say is that, in reality, cricket terms often pull double-duty to describe entirely different things. For the sake of simplicity the creator avoided that, and did it very, very well.
    "Can the crowd keep the balls that are hit to them?" - No, they have to throw it back. In cricket, the slow degradation of the ball is part of the game. A ball can only be replaced under very specific circumstances at the discretion of the umpires. So the same ball must always be returned to play. For example, in 5-day test matches, the ball is only replaced every 80 overs.
    "Can the batters run outside the pitch?" - Yes. In fact, they're required to. The "safe" areas at either end of the pitch, AKA the crease, extend away from the pitch to infinity, so as long as they're in line, they're safe. The pitch itself is carefully prepared, very very short, dry grass, giving it a consistency similar to concrete. The players shoes, often spiked, degrade the surface, so avoidable damage to the wicket is outlawed, forcing batters and even bowlers off the side of the wicket as soon as possible. The umpires monitor this throughout the game, and regularly give out warnings to players breaching the protected areas.
    "How do they schedule a 5-day game?" - For Test (5-day) cricket, each day is broken up into three "sessions" - a morning session, that runs from about 10am to 12:30pm, a middle session that runs from 1:10pm to 3:30pm, and a late session that runs from 3:50pm to maybe 6pm, depending on available daylight. This applies to all day tests, although recent years has seen the advent of the 'night test', which has a similar structure, just shifted to later in the day, with play beginning in the early afternoon and finishing around 10pm.
    "How do they sell tickets for a 5-day game?" - Tickets are sold as a single day. So you can go to all five days if you like, but you would need to buy five tickets (generally). Sometimes, if its clear at the start of a day's play that the game is about to come to an end, they will permit free entry to the venue. This might happen at the beginning of day 4 or 5 if one team has victory essentially assured, and a result is expected within an hour or two.
    Most people generally attend just one of the five days, and will watch the other four on TV. Of course there are plenty of die-hard fans that will attend all five days, especially if they've traveled from overseas to watch their national team play.
    "Wait, what are the formats?!" - Three main formats - Test cricket (five days, players wear white, played only by national teams), One-Day cricket (games last about 8 hours, 50 overs per innings, players wear team colors, played mainly by national teams), and T20 or Twenty20 cricket (games last about 3 hours, 20 overs per innings, players wear colors, played by professional teams or national teams). Don't try to learn all three at once. Although the rules are basically the same, strategies and play-styles between formats vary wildly. I'll get into how you should get started with cricket at the end.
    "Scorekeeping, oy..." - The graphical scoreboard is super confusing to newcomers. It's not just you. But the creator does explain it very well. I suggest maybe just watching that part of the video a few times, or just watch a game and spend time with it as play goes on.
    "Why doesn't England's first innings score (in the example) show their wickets?" - Although its not obvious, its implied that England lost ALL their wickets in making that score. This would have been what triggered the change of innings. Confusingly, in a One-Day or T20 game, they might also show the score like this if the team ran out of overs, rather than wickets. But the gist is, that's the final score the team could manage, given whatever limitations imposed on them by the format. It's also worth noting that the graphic on screen is really just a snapshot, not the full scorecard (which is a whole other can of worms), but the full scorecard WOULD show exactly how England reached that score.
    *** Some of my other thoughts for newcomers ***
    - Test matches are played with a red (day matches) or pink (night test) cricket ball, while limited overs matches are played using a white cricket ball. The construction of all balls is identical, the only reason for the change in color being visibility in different lighting conditions.
    - Bowlers (pitchers) come in different varieties. Fast bowlers utilize speed, as well as "natural variation" to take their wickets. This might include swing (curve balls), or using the way the ball might change trajectory when it bounces on the surface. There are also Spin bowlers, which use their wrists and fingers, and lower speeds, to cause the ball to DRAMATICALLY change direction on the bounce. Both types will use deception and mind games to bring a batsman undone.
    - Some prestigious games of cricket to look out for:
    The Ashes - A four- or five-match series of 5-day cricket EACH MATCH, played exclusively between Australia and England for one of the oldest sporting trophies in the world.
    The Boxing Day Test - A single 5-day match that begins on December 26 each year, played at the Melbourne Cricket Ground between Australia and a touring nation.
    The T20 World Cup - Like the soccer world cup, but played between cricketing nations in the 20 overs format (quicker, more exciting games). A very coveted tournament to win, as you can imagine.
    - A note on fielding positions: I would say don't bother worrying about learning all the many dozens of fielding position names. Unfortunately, commentators LOVE using the vernacular as they discuss tactics and criticisms. My only advice is to watch a few games, and it'll slowly come to you. I find it also helps to know the etymology, but without a cricket tragic in the room, I don't know how you'd get that experience.
    - FINALLY, which format should you watch? I'd say, WITHOUT A DOUBT, start with T20 (professional) cricket. Although it TECHNICALLY has the most rules, its counterintuitively easier to follow and much more exciting. In particular, for the best bang for your buck, start with the Indian Premier League (IPL). Players are paid NFL-level salaries, and the quality of cricket is incredible. You also get to witness the incredible insanity that is a live Indian cricket crowd (they're absolutely bananas).
    If you're a die-hard general sports fan, and don't mind a slow burn. I wouldn't dismiss Test (5-day) cricket outright. For me, its by far my favorite format. The rules are simpler, and you get more time to absorb the game, the rules, the vernacular, and the general vibe. It's hard to ignore the time commitment though, if you want to see a game through. Any games that involve Australia, India, England or South Africa playing each other are well worth your time, with the caveats above.

    • @katrinabee9846
      @katrinabee9846 2 місяці тому +22

      Yes, this. Perfectly explained. Would add that a game with New Zealand is worth a watch lol (Bloody Aussies!)

    • @HypocrisyLaidBare
      @HypocrisyLaidBare 2 місяці тому +9

      Brit here very good explanation of raised questions

    • @jimff5
      @jimff5 2 місяці тому +8

      A very good explanation, mate! - you forgot to mention in Ashes Matches if one team is cheating - that will probably be The Aussies☝☝🦘🦘🦘

    • @AaronRose69
      @AaronRose69 2 місяці тому +3

      Brilliant!!!

    • @my_uncle_said
      @my_uncle_said 2 місяці тому +1

      Ok

  • @davidarchibald50
    @davidarchibald50 10 днів тому +7

    Can you imagine sitting down on days off, beer in hand, junk food beside you, kids at the grandparents(you should be so lucky) for five 6 hour days to watch your favourite game with the best teams in the world. Heaven should be so good.🤩

  • @danzydan2479
    @danzydan2479 4 місяці тому +159

    Nothing like being at work with the radio on listening to a test match.

    • @walover165
      @walover165 3 місяці тому +4

      WFH has been a blessing. A hot summer's day, the aircon on, ploughing through reports, the cricket on in the background...

    • @GreatCdn59
      @GreatCdn59 3 місяці тому +7

      I'll be honest, I'm a Canadian, a big baseball fan, and I've really gotten interested in cricket these last few months. Last week, I found an ODI between NZ and Australia on youtube, and decided to listen to the entire thing during my work day at the office - and it was fantastic! It had that familiar pacing, it was very tactical, the match was long enough that teams batting would go in mini-hot and cold streaks (something you don't get in baseball in the same way) and it lasted for the majority of my work day, so it was a treat. I could see how people listen to it on the radio regularly.

    • @shellieeyre8758
      @shellieeyre8758 3 місяці тому +5

      I was listening to the Trent Bridge Ashes test during which Stuart Broad took 8-15; my husband was at work and I was texting him the fall of the wickets - he thought I was having him on!

    • @dannyarcher6370
      @dannyarcher6370 3 місяці тому +1

      ...getting now work done.

    • @fossy4321
      @fossy4321 2 місяці тому

      This was a test match so if the first team is out that means all 10 batsmen are out and now the opposition has to try and beat the total made by them. That is why the wickets are not shown-if the second team is in then all the previous batsmen are out.

  • @zwieseler
    @zwieseler 4 місяці тому +113

    A cricket ball is harder than a baseball and bounces because of the pace a bowler generates when they bowl (pitch) the ball.
    Next off, watch Shane Warne’s top wickets (outs). He’s a spinner and you won’t believe what he can do with his bowls (pitches).
    Regarding the 287 runs for England, the outs aren’t shown because that score was achieved by the whole team coming out to bat. So all out for 287. Then Indians first innings would have begun.
    As far as watching matches goes, try the 20-20 for starters.

    • @larey12
      @larey12 4 місяці тому +11

      Just to put things in persepective the guys in bat are facing a rock hard ball (18 grams heavier than a baseball) hurtling towards them at 160km/h with some bowlers. There have been deaths when hit on the head, heart, neck or lost an eye with the ball. There's even been a death when a guy was hit on the head when he was wearing a helmet. I played rugby but would put cricket as a much more dangerous sport.

    • @StephenWestrip
      @StephenWestrip 4 місяці тому +6

      It also bounces because the square (that rectangle in the middle as you referred to it) is very hard. It is protected from rain and moisture when a match is not being played (although not every day of the year).

    • @Leebo13
      @Leebo13 3 місяці тому +2

      His best quote concerning the popularity of the game in Australia: "There's nothing we love more than beating the English at their own game".

  • @MissD_Meaner
    @MissD_Meaner 4 місяці тому +205

    England 287 means that England are ALL OUT which is why India are batting. What he didn't mention was when the bowler has completed his over, the incoming bowler bowls from the opposite end of the strip to him

    • @peterfhere9461
      @peterfhere9461 4 місяці тому +5

      If the players haven't changed ends then the bowler starts the next over bowling at the batter at the other end.

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye 4 місяці тому +2

      I was an "expert" in THe 1960s as my Grammar School overlooks The Oval and I knew all(then) 17 County teams but apart from a Test Match day's highlights that is the only cricket I, occasionally, watch but, surely, an Umpire can independently give a player out with the encouragement of an appeal?
      He didn't mention the bowler's maximum allotted amount of overs in limited cricket.

    • @daz_n
      @daz_n 4 місяці тому +15

      @@Isleofskye MCC Law 31.1: "Neither umpire shall give a batter out, even though he/she may be out under the Laws, unless appealed to by a fielder. This shall not debar a batter who is out under any of the Laws from leaving the wicket without an appeal having been made."

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye 4 місяці тому +7

      @@daz_n Admittedly,I have only been watching Cricket since The Edrich/Boycott.Graveney/Cowdrey/Barrington/Dexter era of the Mid 1960's but I never knew that. LOL
      Was it ever, thus?

    • @daz_n
      @daz_n 4 місяці тому +1

      I believe it was in the original 1744 rules “They are not to order a player out, unless appealed to by the adversaries”

  • @juliarabbitts1595
    @juliarabbitts1595 3 місяці тому +60

    The joy of test matches is you listen on the radio while you do your chores (or work) and only stop when it gets exciting for a few minutes. It’s a wonderful way to be and very soothing.

    • @guypainter
      @guypainter 2 місяці тому +5

      Have you read Bill Bryson's description of cricket on the radio? Bear in mind he doesn't know cricket and he's listening to a radio commentary. Can you imagine anything more incomprehensible to the uninitiated? The way he describes it is one of the funniest things I've ever read. 😂

    • @CAbbott71
      @CAbbott71 2 місяці тому +4

      We used to have the radio playing outside, and the TV running inside while we were working in the garden. If a bit wicket was taken we would run back inside to watch the instant replay.

    • @louisramosa
      @louisramosa 2 місяці тому +1

      My uncles had a dairy farm, and in summer the afternoon milking was often accompanied by the milking shed radio being tuned to whatever cricket game was on at the time. My uncles loved cricket, and I swear the cows did too 😆😆😆, they always seemed totally relaxed when they were listening to it

    • @LearnTechnicalSketching-y1e
      @LearnTechnicalSketching-y1e 2 місяці тому

      @@CAbbott71 I used to watch cricket test matches on broadcast TV with the sound off and the BBC commentary on the radio, best of both worlds, and how can you waste time gardening when a test match is on especially the Ashes series? You can't be that much of a fan.

    • @avibhagan
      @avibhagan Місяць тому +1

      The last day and last session of a test match when one side is close to victory and the other side is clawing on for a draw is the most exciting part.

  • @PeloquinDavid
    @PeloquinDavid 2 місяці тому +13

    As a Canadian, my only real exposure to cricket was when I lived in Australia.
    I sort-of understood it after a year or so, but I found that cricket (in the summer months) was always playing in, say, hospital waiting rooms and proved to be a splendid way of killing a few hours in a hospital.

    • @kimn9802
      @kimn9802 6 днів тому

      Fun fact. The first international game ever was played between the US and Canada.

  • @brynjones5361
    @brynjones5361 4 місяці тому +36

    You may notice that the fielders don’t have a glove. However hard the ball is hit, and however hard it travels towards you, you are expected to catch the ball with your bare hands.

    • @rmstew
      @rmstew 2 місяці тому

      Exception: the wicket keeper has two gloves

  • @DasGuntLord01
    @DasGuntLord01 3 місяці тому +33

    You mentioned that your wife finds baseball comforting! Cricket, especially Test cricket, is the exact same for me! Especially since we always had the Boxing Day Test on the TV every year at my Grandpa's place! Really strikes a chord with me! The hum of the crowd, the chatter of the commentators trying to fill three to five days worth of dead air, and the occasional thing happening. It's perfect!

    • @lazydamsel
      @lazydamsel 2 місяці тому +2

      Yes it's comforting for me too...at least was comforting when I used to watch it regularly. Cricket for me is therapeutic.

  • @MeStevely
    @MeStevely 4 місяці тому +53

    About the 5-day matches. I've noticed that a lot of Americans think it's strange that it could last so long.
    But they're quite used to golf tournaments lasting 4 days, or tennis tournaments going on for a couple of weeks. Nobody thinks that's weird.

    • @guyfaux3978
      @guyfaux3978 3 місяці тому +2

      For THAT matter, the World Series or any other seven-game playoff series.

    • @oopsdidItypethatoutloud
      @oopsdidItypethatoutloud 2 місяці тому +1

      It's best not to mention how long it takes for 5 test series to play out 😂

    • @MrWattsi
      @MrWattsi 2 місяці тому

      Great point

    • @georgedyson9754
      @georgedyson9754 2 місяці тому +4

      @@guyfaux3978why is it called the World series when no other country is involved?

    • @rmstew
      @rmstew 2 місяці тому +5

      @@georgedyson9754 It was originally sponsored by World Whisky; that's the reason it's called the World Series.

  • @MrWattsi
    @MrWattsi 2 місяці тому +29

    Just remember, literally a billion more people prefer cricket to baseball

    • @petero2219
      @petero2219 Місяць тому +5

      In other words, India prefers cricket to baseball.

    • @amanthakur7702
      @amanthakur7702 Місяць тому

      ​@@petero2219it is what it is

  • @MW-cx3sb
    @MW-cx3sb 14 днів тому +2

    The best thing about cricket was the Australian golden age of commentators in the 80's and 90's. They made the sport with their banter and deep insight.

  • @johnt8998
    @johnt8998 4 місяці тому +130

    Cricket balls are definately not rubbery. I remember we were playing cricket at school, and a boy got his nose broken when the ball hit him in the face. The ball is rock hard!

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye 4 місяці тому +8

      Watch videos of 1960's Yorkshire Captain: Brian Close standing as close a you can to the Barsman without any protection and getting hit from very close range and carrying on as if nothing happened.

    • @rishabhpb
      @rishabhpb 4 місяці тому +5

      Been hit in the face as well, needed stitches and could've been a lot worse.

    • @stevesoutar3405
      @stevesoutar3405 4 місяці тому +12

      @@Isleofskye Cricket balls are made of cork, with a leather case stitched on, and a raised seam around the centre, which helps the bowler made the ball cut left or right, with different amounts of spin and speed to defeat the batsman
      When you catch one, it stings like hell, and you can break a finger if you get it wrong ! Every British schoolkid (just like every school kid in India, Pakistan, Australia or Jamaica) learns this the hard way at school

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye 4 місяці тому +1

      @@stevesoutar3405 Thank You, Steve.
      Happened to schoolmate; Jim Draper at my Grammar School Playing Fields in 1967...

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye 4 місяці тому +2

      @@VinnBim Heaven forfend! NO! As you, probably, know, they were in Camberwell along Peckham Road by St.Giles Church and moved to Sutton in 1975. My Grammar School: Archbishop Tensions overlooked The Oval and the really clever kids had their Latin lessons on the roof while their teacher watched the cricket. Occasionally, we would pay 2 old pence to watch Surrey in the tea time session though they were not my team. This was 1965-71 in the days of Edrich, Barrington, and Geoff Arnold. Sadly our school lost its status and by 2023 no one wanted to go to this Comprehensive and it closed forever. Good Luck. Are you an Old Wilonan, my friend?

  • @sohagshah-wm1to
    @sohagshah-wm1to 4 місяці тому +30

    The fact is that Test games are most exciting and that drawing a match is sometimes also harder than winning

  • @AussieDaveok
    @AussieDaveok 4 місяці тому +42

    I’m Australian and grew up with Cricket as a kid I played cricket and baseball baseball was fun to play but watching it is like watching paint dry I remember when the West Indies were the best team and the series a series against Australia was one of the greatest sporting events I had the pleasure of being there Australia won 😊

    • @skullman424
      @skullman424 3 місяці тому +1

      R u excited for BGT this year ???

    • @Zak_Nike
      @Zak_Nike 3 місяці тому

      who won Bruce? haha, well done 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

  • @johnnywiggle
    @johnnywiggle 7 днів тому +2

    Test Cricket is the ultimate chess game of any sport. The fact that you can play for nearly five days and all four results could still be viable for your team: win, loss, draw, tie - this is what makes it brilliant. Avoiding a loss by playing for an unlikely draw can be an amazing feeling of respect for your team. Cricket captaincy is so technical, you can almost carry a captain in your team even if they're not performing well.
    Then you get into the small print. The choice of the make-up of the team (which cannot be changed) will depend on player form, the state of the pitch and its likely wear and deterioration, the five day weather report etc. Then comes all the nitty gritty. How long do you continue bowling with your old work horse fast bowler. Time to bring on a spinner. When do you declare? Are you going for quick runs for a declaration? Or are you batting for your average or trying to wheedle out a century?

  • @gvigary1
    @gvigary1 11 днів тому +1

    I really enjoyed your take on this, as an English cricket fan who's also into US Sports (I've been to an MLB, an NFL and an NHL game).
    The creator's comment on professional v amateur cricket made me think of a couple of historical oddities you might appreciate. Cricket had a "class divide" from very early on, at least in England, with "gentlemen" (wealthy amateurs) and "players" (working class professionals) in the same team but not mixing socially. They had to use different dressing rooms and even different entrances to the field of play. If you look at an old scorecard, some of the players are given initials, others are just a surname - only gentlemen get their initials printed. It was 75 years before a professional player captained England in 1952. Ten years later, the distinction was abolished, and all players are now professional.

  • @klein_karoo_permaculture
    @klein_karoo_permaculture 4 місяці тому +26

    7:51 Not quite. Both batsman are 'at bat', to borrow a baseball term, simultaneously. If one hits only a single run, it's the other batsman's turn as he's on strike (unless the over (6 balls) has finished in which case the first batsman will be on strike again at the other end of the wicket.

  • @francislaverty9262
    @francislaverty9262 4 місяці тому +59

    2 batting stations (A&B) each with a different batsman. The bowler (1) bowls 6 deliveries at batting station A, whichever batsman is at batting station A can score runs (the batsman will change if an odd number of runs are scored off a delivery). After 6 balls, bowler (2) bowls 6 deliveries from the opposite end of the pitch - towards batting station B at whichever batsman is standing there. This is repeated after each 6 deliveries i.e. 6 at batting station A followed by 6 at batting station B. First class cricket can last up to 5 days but play normally starts at 11am (sometimes 10:30am) and finishes when the required number of overs have been bowled for the day (circa 90 overs) meaning play normally finishes between 6 - 7pm. There are intervals for drinks, lunch and tea. In Britain, the weather plays a big part as rain causes cessation of play and this eats into the time available for the game. To win a test match, one team has to bowl out the other team twice with a total run score less than theirs (i.e. team A first innings 300 runs, team B first innings 250 runs, Team A second innings 320 runs (total 620 runs over 2 innings), team B second innings 310 runs (total 560 runs) so Team A wins. Tickets are bought for each day and in cases where a day is rained off or insufficient overs bowled (14 overs I think) tickets are refunded. If the England score was 287, then they have lost all 10 wickets (otherwise it would state 287 - 6 or 7 or 8 etc)

    • @steddie4514
      @steddie4514 4 місяці тому +4

      "Outs" are often referred to as dismissals 👍🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

  • @paulknox999
    @paulknox999 4 місяці тому +26

    the bowler(pitcher) can bowl fast, slow, spin they can make the ball curve in the air they can make the ball bounce at a strange angle off the floor. The ball is harder than a baseball and has a leather stiched seam running all the way around the ball. the bowler can make use of this seam to help them move the ball around. Also you will see the bowler shining one side of the ball but letting the other side get roughened up, this difference between the 2 sides of the ball then helps the bowler to bend the ball as it flies through the air.

  • @kennyx8482
    @kennyx8482 Місяць тому +2

    this is the best reaction video versus reaction face(s) layout ive seen. very good. very easy to watch

  • @KotaMakes
    @KotaMakes Місяць тому +2

    We also have indoor cricket which is a limited overs format. At the local level you can have mixed-gender teams.
    Bowling there are different types of pitches (bowls) -spin, quick et.

  • @mervinmannas7671
    @mervinmannas7671 4 місяці тому +117

    I’m not a cricket fan at all and don’t watch it. But when staying with some friends in the country I was invited to watch a match between his town and a nearby team. It was a warm day, the cider was refreshing and we all broke for tea, scones, cake and sandwiches at the change. Blissfully British

    • @nickbyrne3299
      @nickbyrne3299 4 місяці тому +12

      Sounds like something from a Famous Five book..

    • @lucydog3376
      @lucydog3376 3 місяці тому +4

      It's only British if they lost the game.

    • @dannyarcher6370
      @dannyarcher6370 3 місяці тому +2

      Now THAT'S cricket...

    • @MatthewForman-b9o
      @MatthewForman-b9o 3 місяці тому +3

      We had our wedding in the Cotswolds ( a very beautiful area of England),At a 16th century coaching inn called The Fleece . We wanted a very English/ UK feel to our afternoon so we arranged for a Morris Dancing troup and at 3pm ( after much Perry/ Cider was consumed) we had a cricket tea served in the courtyard. Our friends from overseas loved it. It really got our marriage and the party started.👍🥂🍻🏏🕺

    • @normawithers4447
      @normawithers4447 3 місяці тому

      ​@lucydog3376 It's only cricket if it ended in a draw.

  • @jonathanocallaghan9202
    @jonathanocallaghan9202 4 місяці тому +54

    Brian Lara of the west Indies once scored 501 runs in one 1st class match. He was at bat for nearly 8 hours.!!

    • @whattiler5102
      @whattiler5102 3 місяці тому

      Of course, that was not even close to the 20th 'longest' innings in first class cricket.

    • @larryfroot
      @larryfroot 3 місяці тому +8

      If there was any weakness in Lara's game is that he got nervous in the 490's.

    • @ront2424
      @ront2424 3 місяці тому

      ​@@larryfroot😂😂😂😂😂

    • @Zak_Nike
      @Zak_Nike 3 місяці тому

      ​@@larryfrootlol

    • @rmsteutonic3686
      @rmsteutonic3686 23 дні тому

      Never forget the guy who scored 286 runs on a single bowl

  • @bashab3098
    @bashab3098 4 місяці тому +18

    There is a rhythm to a game of cricket and that is part of the attraction, each time 6 balls have bowled , they bowl at the other end of the ground , which is why their are two sets of wickets ,another point is that as a spectator you get to watch from two different positions without moving .

    • @wozzablog
      @wozzablog 3 місяці тому

      There used to be a similar rhythm in Baseball before the damned pitch clock came in, except it was the batters there facing around 6 or so pitches before moving on. So an over was for the batsman rather than the bowler as it were

  • @markwiddicombe5594
    @markwiddicombe5594 Місяць тому +2

    It's very simple: You have two sides, one out in the field and one in. Each man that's in the side that's in goes out, and when he's out he comes in and the next man goes in until he's out. When they are all out, the side that's out comes in and the side that's been in goes out and tries to get those coming in, out. Sometimes you get men still in and not out.
    When a man goes out to go in, the men who are out try to get him out, and when he is out he goes in and the next man in goes out and goes in. There are two men called umpires who stay out all the time and they decide when the men who are in are out. When both sides have been in and all the men have been out, and both sides have been out twice after all the men have been in, including those who are not out, that is the end of the game.

  • @thisnametaken3735
    @thisnametaken3735 Місяць тому +1

    The way play works in a first class match works is that there's 6 hours of play per day, in three sessions. Two hours each, broken up by a 40 minute Lunch break, and a 20 minute Tea break where players can eat and/or shower. There is a drinks break of a couple of minutes every hour (40 minutes in extreme heat) on the field where everyone gets access to rehydration fluids. Players on the fielding team can leave the field for medical or bio-break reasons, but if that player is a bowler, they're not allowed to bowl again for the same length of time that they were off the field.

  • @Maladjus101
    @Maladjus101 4 місяці тому +11

    What an awesome couple. Love that you’re so genuinely interested in other countries. Keep it up, doing a brilliant job.

  • @gailstevens6831
    @gailstevens6831 4 місяці тому +13

    I am a test tragic and I can't wait for summer, when test cricket is played in Australia. I love the 5 day test, as there is much more strategy involved. If you attend a five day test, you pay for each day. There are 2 breaks in the day - lunch and afternoon tea, as well as a couple of breaks for drinks. If there is rain, all play stops. Any questions, please ask!

  • @adalderson6269
    @adalderson6269 4 місяці тому +101

    The game you were thinking off is hurling which is played in Ireland 🙂. Cricket is awesome!!

    • @Sinbad_Bay
      @Sinbad_Bay 4 місяці тому +5

      And hurling is more awesome-er. The 2024 final was a brilliant game.

    • @RNTV
      @RNTV  4 місяці тому +10

      I've never seen or heard of hurling. I look it up to be sure. It was definitely Lacrosse I was confusing it with.

    • @mattwills2011
      @mattwills2011 4 місяці тому +3

      Hurling and Lacrosse is very similar... Lacrosse more common in America though

    • @RalphBrooker-gn9iv
      @RalphBrooker-gn9iv 4 місяці тому +2

      @@adalderson6269 Didn’t Irishman Eoin Morgan, legendary England white ball skipper with Test caps play hurling? Or was it hockey or both. Incredible wrists Eoin.

    • @adalderson6269
      @adalderson6269 4 місяці тому +2

      @@RalphBrooker-gn9iv as far as I remember Eoin was a hockey player

  • @priyamd4759
    @priyamd4759 2 місяці тому +8

    23:50 England lost all 10 wickets or "declared" their innings thinking they had enough score and time is short to wind up India to win and avoid a "Draw". Not in this case as it is 1st innings. Declare works in 1st innings of team batting second or second innings of the team that played the first. It is basically a gamble by the Captain of the team declaring the innings closed, to save on time. It can backfire if the opposing team makes required runs in the remaining time!!

    • @stanedgie5910
      @stanedgie5910 Місяць тому +1

      that is incorrect. england are all out, all 10 wickets lost for 287 runs.A declaration would be something like 287/8d. You can't declare after all wickets have been taken.

  • @kimn9802
    @kimn9802 2 місяці тому +1

    No, the player at the other end is not there just to run. They are also batting and scoring runs. Every player who bats can score runs. Never, repeat, never call runs points. Also, the ball is bowled, which means the arm has to effectively be straight when the ball is released.
    If a bowler throws the ball it is deemed to be a no ball and has to be delivered again in a legal fashion and a run awarded to the batting side. The batter can't be out bowled or caught out on a no ball. If a bowler continues to throw they can be taken out of the game, with no replacement allowed and possibly banned from subsequent games until their bowling action is deemed to be legal.

  • @keithstevenson6892
    @keithstevenson6892 4 місяці тому +27

    Cricket is a great game... 5 Day matches (tests) that can end in draw which can be part of a series of 5 tests over 2 or 3 months that can also end in a draw... 25 days of 8 hours a day ending in a draw.... Yet still entertaining throughout

    • @PerryCJamesUK
      @PerryCJamesUK 4 місяці тому +2

      What was that game you play in primary school here in the UK. Is it Rounders? That seems similar to Baseball, not that I know for sure though.

    • @dimwitdave9344
      @dimwitdave9344 4 місяці тому +3

      @@PerryCJamesUK Yeah rounders was fab. We played it at my secondary school on a field next to the staff car park. It was a very basic version of baseball. I would just backhand the ball under the cars. Easy run 🙂
      The bat was much shorter than a baseball bat and it was usually (in my experience) played using a tennis ball or rubber ball.

    • @annicecooper8105
      @annicecooper8105 4 місяці тому +4

      ​@@dimwitdave9344rounders certainly more akin to baseball than cricket is really. A proper rounders ball is solid like a cricket ball. Bloody hurts when it hits you at speed which is probably why lots of schools use a tennis ball. 😖🤕

  • @richardjames3022
    @richardjames3022 4 місяці тому +13

    In cricket you can be called out if you take too long to reach the crease, now very rare, so you will see two batsmen crossing on the field or as they come from the pavilion. It was one of the 'ways out' not mentioned in the video. Others include hitting the ball twice and obstructing a fielder.

  • @patriciaburke6639
    @patriciaburke6639 4 місяці тому +14

    In June, the T20 World Cup Cricket Series was held in New York, in a specially built Stadium, to huge crowds.

  • @breeeldred2168
    @breeeldred2168 3 місяці тому +1

    In a test match ( the 5 day ones) the end of play on each day is usually when the umpires think it has got too dark or at a previously agreed time. Usually around 7pm.

  • @JMUDoc
    @JMUDoc 3 місяці тому +1

    Something that wasn't mentioned in the video:
    1. of the two batsmen, the one receiving the current delivery is called the "striker", with the other being the "non-striker", and whoever ends up at the delivery-receiving end after a sequence of runs will be the striker for the next delivery; if there is a boundary or a wide or a no-ball, they stay put for the next delivery.
    2. the two batsmen swap ends after each over.
    3. whichever batsman is dismissed, the next batsman assumes the same position when they come into the game - if the striker is the one dismissed, the next batsman becomes the striker, and vice-versa.

    • @sem1ot1c
      @sem1ot1c 2 місяці тому +1

      At the end of the over the batters stay put it is the bowling that changes end and also bowler

  • @jayweb51
    @jayweb51 3 місяці тому +10

    Each bowler usually specializes a specific type of bowling action; you have Pace bowlers, Swing Bowlers or Spin Bowlers. Each type of bowling can have different styles of bowling. There are five different techniques used by Pace bowlers, two different techniques used by Swing bowlers and eight different techniques used by Spin bowlers.

  • @mikepinhorn1596
    @mikepinhorn1596 4 місяці тому +8

    Thanks for showing this clip. I'm not a real cricket fan, but it reminded me of growing up in the early 50's and 60's, when I used to listen to the radio (we didn't have a TV then) where the now long dead commentators would describe every ball, every pace, as well as painting a vivid picture of what was happening around the ground, hearing the thump of a leather ball striking the willow bat and the crowd applauding. Their accents were, by today's standard, 'plummy' or high class and delivered at slow, measured pace, puntured with anecdotes and humour. An age lost forever.

    • @whattiler5102
      @whattiler5102 3 місяці тому +1

      Test match radio commentaries on the BBC are still there every summer. I couldn't live without them; so much better than the telly commentaries. Lots of people watch it on the telly, with the sound off, and the radio commentary on.

    • @fayesouthall6604
      @fayesouthall6604 3 місяці тому

      @@whattiler5102I watch the TV coverage with Test Match Special playing

  • @Chris53George
    @Chris53George 4 місяці тому +6

    In test matches play is for six hours per day. Play starts at 11.00 until 1.00pm; then 1.40 to 3.40 when they go off for tea, then 4.00 to 6.00pm and clos of play. All this is, of course, weather permitting. You may also notice that, with the exception of the wicketkeeper, none of the fielders is wearing a catching glove. Bare hands only is the rule, and yes, the cricket ball is extremely hard and can cause real damage if the bowler is getting it to you at 85 - 90 miles an hour. Wonderful game, full of courage, skill, teamwork, and tactics.

  • @John-Incatrekker
    @John-Incatrekker 7 днів тому +2

    Observations: The narrator omitted a few things. After each over (6 legitimate balls bowled) the next over is bowled from the opposite end, but the batsmen don't change ends. Only the wicket keeper wears gloves to catch the ball, the fielders can not, but batsmen are allowed to wear thinner protective gloves. The batsmen MUST wear helmets. There are 2 different styles of bowlers; fast and slow. Fast bowlers attempt to deceive the batsmen with speed, whereas slow bowlers spin the ball to deceive the batsmen with direction of movement off the pitch. The nearest British equivalent of baseball is 'rounders', but is only played by school-girls - enough said! Mike's comments on baseball are spot on - it's often pointless. I'm continually impressed by Jess's intuitive grasp of new concepts. 👏

    • @Britonbear
      @Britonbear 3 години тому

      Baseball is the American equivalent of Rounders, a game that goes back to the 17th century and was once known as base-ball.

  • @ReaperZa23
    @ReaperZa23 3 місяці тому +2

    Would love see more of your cricket reactions

  • @KGardner01010
    @KGardner01010 4 місяці тому +8

    M&J - in baseball, the pitcher and catcher decide which way to use the next ball . . . whereas in cricket, you have different bowlers who do various bowls and speeds - such as slower bowls with spin, medium (with straight or spin), and fast bowlers who hurl the ball down at the wicket and batsman! . . . Only the wicketkeepers wear gloves by the way - and I think the hard leather cricket ball is also just a little heavier than a baseball . . . The stitched seam running around the centre is how the spinners are able to get the ball to veer so much on a bounce . . . 11 players on each team, but when the 10th batter is put out - he then doesn't have a running partner so that teams innings is over and they swap over . . . In a Test Match (the long one) - Depending on how many you have scored (typically over 400) - the batting team can then "declare" and put the other team in to bat - then if they get them all out before reaching their total can get them to follow-on = play at bat yet again, trying to get them all out before they can still reach their 1st total . . . There is more involved including those basic points - but that's the main gist of it . . .

  • @leohickey4953
    @leohickey4953 4 місяці тому +8

    Tickets: for multiple day games you buy a separate ticket for each day's play. You get a refund for any days where there is no play (either because of rain or if the game finished before your ticket applied). You also get a partial refund if there is only a short amount of play.

  • @marcshackleton4357
    @marcshackleton4357 4 місяці тому +9

    Please watch a game of 20/20. its quick, batters cant just stand at the crease, they have to attack the ball. It's a great way to understand the game and realise how fast paced and dramatic it can be.

  • @TJSaw
    @TJSaw 2 місяці тому +1

    Guys, the US team put on a good show in their inaugural T20 World Cup this year. In fact, they managed to beat Pakistan in the group stages and advanced to the next round. That’s legendary stuff for a country playing in its first ever World Cup.

    • @gvigary1
      @gvigary1 11 днів тому

      Though of course the very first international match was between the US and Canada in 1844!

  • @DEWDLES
    @DEWDLES 4 місяці тому +10

    I love cricket 🏏 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 used to go watch my Dad play as a kid . He was always seething when he was out lbw because of course he was NEVER out 😂

    • @neilt6480
      @neilt6480 3 місяці тому

      Your dad was Bill Lawry?

  • @JamesMiller-fz9ty
    @JamesMiller-fz9ty 4 місяці тому +18

    When I was a young man I had a French girlfriend. It blew her mind that technically you could play a test match for 25 days, 5 x 5 day tests, and still end the test match in a draw with no winner.

    • @RalphBrooker-gn9iv
      @RalphBrooker-gn9iv 4 місяці тому +3

      @@JamesMiller-fz9ty My partner is French. I live in France since 2008. Very close to her eldest grandson. He LOVES cricket. I’m no coach. He loves batting and bowling. He has obvious eye/hand/ball talent. I can’t coach bowling and can only teach him , 9 years old, so much about batting. He has a ferocious square cut but can’t play in the V. I got him to watch Ponting playing straight bat shots (GOAT imho). But it is an alien concept.
      Incidentally, for Mike and Jess, it’s called ‘bowling’ because the original way of delivering the ball to the batter was underarm and along the ground like the lawn game bowls. Early cricket bats were more like hockey sticks.

    • @oddviews
      @oddviews 4 місяці тому +9

      A test match is only 5 days, 5 test matches (25 days) is a SERIES

    • @geoffdevall9179
      @geoffdevall9179 4 місяці тому +4

      @@RalphBrooker-gn9iv France are the reigning Olympic Silver medallists. Although that was in 1900 and only France and Great Britain competed

  • @AlanJones-kc4us
    @AlanJones-kc4us 4 місяці тому +5

    The first international match of cricket was between US v Canada, even though both sides were mostly filled up with British ex-pats.
    T20 cricket (20 overs per side) makes its Olympic debut in LA in 2028

  • @richardbrown7970
    @richardbrown7970 Місяць тому

    A couple of things to note, in the UK cricket is also know as the English rain dance. I believe in baseball the pitcher is trying to deliver the ball as fast as he/she can. In cricket you have fast bowlers like in baseball, but there are also spin bowlers, who bowl slower but spin the ball. As the ball will bounce it will move or deviate a lot after bouncing.

  • @nemesismcc
    @nemesismcc 2 місяці тому +2

    One point that wasn't made clear, the bat's men, when running between wickets, if a single run is made, the other bats man stays in the crease and takes the next ball, this applies with all odd numbered runs, 1-3-5, and the same applies when an over is finished, the bowler changes ends, the bats men do not, also a runner can be nominated for a player who is able to swing the bat, but has a injury that makes it hard for him to run. Also Jess touched on "how the ball bounces, and must be made that way, the ball is in fact hard, not soft, and is covered in leather, the reason it bounces is due to the fact the area between the wickets is rolled to compress to soil and make it hard. Trust me I know from experience you do not want to be hit in an unprotected area with a fast moving cricket ball, ( and the bats men not only wear leg pads and padded gloves but a a "box" to protect the family jewels lol )

  • @RalphBrooker-gn9iv
    @RalphBrooker-gn9iv 4 місяці тому +11

    I’m English. I love cricket. This is a very good video. Your reactions are smart. I love first-class cricket. You pay for each day. The domestic version of 1st-class cricket is 4-days long potentially. I don’t like what we call ‘white ball’ cricket: that’s what in the video are called ODIs and 20/20s. The white ball games are also sometimes called the pyjama game because of the coloured clothing.

    • @mallockracer
      @mallockracer 4 місяці тому +2

      I do like a good test match, I get the excitement of a T20 but you loose so much in strategy and match craft and guile which the test match provides in abundance..

    • @RalphBrooker-gn9iv
      @RalphBrooker-gn9iv 4 місяці тому +2

      @@mallockracer Nobody remembers T20s. Instant gratification then nothing. Each to their own I guess. There are some Test matches and also series and 1st-class games that are deep in my soul.

    • @mallockracer
      @mallockracer 4 місяці тому +3

      @@RalphBrooker-gn9iv Then again there is nothing quite like stumbling across a game of village cricket on a barmy evening...

    • @RalphBrooker-gn9iv
      @RalphBrooker-gn9iv 4 місяці тому +1

      @@mallockracer Yes!!! That too. You just sit and watch and it’s like you belong there. You get to see pure brilliance and total circus!!! Normally with a good pub within hitting distance.

  • @liramu69
    @liramu69 3 місяці тому +8

    Test Cricket is the longest format of the sport of cricket, .It is the "Real test" of a cricketer's skill, endurance, and temperament. It is a format of international cricket where two teams in white clothing between 2 countries, compete over a match that can last up to five days with six hours of play each day. It consists of four innings (two per team), maximum of 90 overs has to be bowled per day as the longest playing time.
    A team wins the match by outscoring the opposition in the batting or bowl out in bowling, otherwise the match ends in a draw.

  • @drcl7429
    @drcl7429 4 місяці тому +8

    On the scorekeeping, it doesn't show outs for England because we can assume they are "all out" or they "retired" (only really happens in 5 days) meaning they think they scored enough. So if the scoreboard did show it, it would always say 287-10 which is redundant.

    • @daz_n
      @daz_n 4 місяці тому +1

      Or they ran out of overs in a limited over format. So they could have been 287-4 but the target needed to win would remain the same, in this case 288.

  • @David-d8l3w
    @David-d8l3w 9 днів тому

    For an intro into watching cricket - the best form is 20 / 20 cricket, each team receives 20 overs (1 over = 6 balls) and last a day and the team can wear coloured kit = better to watch and a great day out.

  • @collinmetcalfe1313
    @collinmetcalfe1313 3 дні тому

    At the end of each over (6 balls) when the bowler changes they also bowl from the opposite end of the field. So one over the bowler runs in from the north side of the ground the next over the new bowler runs in from the south end of the ground. The batters also are not aloud to run down the middle of the pitch as as it damages the pitch and makes it harder for the team batting.

  • @peterhoz
    @peterhoz 3 місяці тому +5

    When the batsmen run, they're meant to run outside the rectangle ie off the pitch. The pitch is very very short mowed grass, so if you scuff it up it can help the bowler get an odd bounce so you try not to run on it so as not to scuff it up.

  • @klein_karoo_permaculture
    @klein_karoo_permaculture 4 місяці тому +8

    23:47 You're not seeing England's wickets as they've already lost all their batsman in the previous innings of play. Not to complicate things further but, if a side is batting particularly well during their innings, they can choose to declare if they feel they're in a powerful position before all their batsman are out. For eg, you're batting and it's the end of day 4 of a 5 day test match and your opponents need to score a large amount of runs on the last day to win. You could elect to declare your innings so that the opposition has to chase down your total. Once a batting side has declared though with batsman in hand, there is no going back to that innings and restarting it with the remaining batsman. If they lose from this point, they lose.

    • @misterwit1998
      @misterwit1998 3 місяці тому +1

      To add to permaculture's comment, an innings always contains a maximum of 10 wickets (i.e. 10 of 11 players are out), and no partner batter remains for the one who is not out yet. So when the outs (wickets) of the previous innings' score are not shown, it is because regular fans will understand this to mean "for 10 wickets".

  • @rikimarco1826
    @rikimarco1826 4 місяці тому +4

    A cricket ball is primarily made from a cork core, wrapped with string, then covered with a leather exterior stitched together to make 4 quadrants, with a prominent over-stitched seam joining the 2 hemispheres. The heavy seam gives the bowler a chance to 'swing' the ball through the air or to deviate off the ground. At a maximum of 163g, the cricket ball is heavier than a baseball ball, but is also smaller, with a circumference of between 224mm and 229mm.

    • @dimwitdave9344
      @dimwitdave9344 4 місяці тому

      Just to add to this, the swing (curve ball) is magnified by the bowlers rubbing one side of the ball (at the seam) against their clothing to keep that side shiny. The other side of the ball becomes rough as the game moves on due to being hit etc. Eventually the difference between the rough and shiny side of the seam results in one side moving faster through the air than the other causing the ball to curve. Some bowlers were expert at using this effect to take wickets. Spin bowlers would add a spin effect to the bowl as it left their hand so that when it bounced in front of the batsman it would bounce off at an angle. Another comment on here has suggested a Shane Warne video, probably the best example of a spin bowler.

    • @dimwitdave9344
      @dimwitdave9344 4 місяці тому

      As douglashirst noted in another comment, because of the 'work' done on the ball by the bowlers to maximise the swing effect it is vital that if a ball goes in to the crowd it is returned to the field of play

    • @neilt6480
      @neilt6480 3 місяці тому

      An important difference from baseball totally ignored in the og video is that in first class cricket, one ball is used for 85 overs, possibly more, and can only be changed if it is lost (hit out of the ground, for instance) or the umpires judge that it is "out of shape" or too badly damaged. Then a replacement ball is chosen which is in as close to similar state of wear as the original.

  • @j0hnf_uk
    @j0hnf_uk 2 місяці тому +1

    The one other thing you have to remember about test cricket is not only does a test last up to 5 days, but that they have 5 test cricket matches where they play different teams.

  • @babennberry
    @babennberry 2 місяці тому +2

    In 20-20 you have less time at bat, so scoring runs is more important than keeping wickets. This makes for more daring (entertaining?) batting.
    20-20 is like a rock concert, while Test cricket is a music festival.

    • @PossumMagic99
      @PossumMagic99 2 місяці тому

      Test Cricket is Chess dude. 5 days of Chess. The Ashes series is still the best but for a modern audience its a tough sell.

  • @jenscee7679
    @jenscee7679 3 місяці тому +27

    The fact that cricket is the number one sport in India, makes it one of the most popular sports in the world.

  • @zinnia2980
    @zinnia2980 4 місяці тому +5

    The most famous Test Matches are between England and Australia called The Ashes . There is a film and many documentries made of the notorious Bodyline Series where the English bowlers were accused of targeting the body and not the wickets as Australia had one of the greatest players ever in their team. Cricket balls are really hard, and can be very dangerous if you are struck by one especially on the head. I played netball, rounders, football and cricket (my brother had a team with his friends) when young and I got really injured with a cricket ball. My leg was black and blue for weeks, it took ages to recover and it was so painful.

    • @neilt6480
      @neilt6480 3 місяці тому

      "one of the greatest players"? Beyond doubt THE greatest cricketer ever.

  • @jackdaw1328
    @jackdaw1328 4 місяці тому +4

    A friend of mine cheerfully mentions this quote often. Test Cricket would never take off in the states. As Americans would never stand for a game that lasted 5days and still ended in a draw. Oh and as mentioned before , the ball is hard and heavy. Think of a small leather bound cannonball that is slighly deformable.

  • @nic0072
    @nic0072 2 місяці тому

    There is a detailed scorecard available for each innings which will indicate how the players got out, how many runs they scored, the detailed statistics of a bowler (how many wickets taken for example), etc.

  • @garyjordan4735
    @garyjordan4735 4 місяці тому +11

    As many people have already stated, cricket balls are very hard. I googled the fastest speed a cricket ball has been bowled. It came out at 161.3 kph, or 100.22 mph. Cheers.

    • @shankedit65
      @shankedit65 3 місяці тому +1

      Thommo was faster but it was before radar

    • @Foadiafya
      @Foadiafya 2 місяці тому

      @@shankedit65 so he says

    • @shankedit65
      @shankedit65 2 місяці тому

      @Foadiafya I watched him live I promise you he was faster by a lot. Sitting square leg Marshy was more than a pitch back as keeper and you could not see the ball from side on it was so fast

    • @Foadiafya
      @Foadiafya 2 місяці тому

      @@shankedit65 before my time unfortunately, must have been exciting to see (as long as you weren't on the receiving end).

    • @shankedit65
      @shankedit65 2 місяці тому

      @@Foadiafya Tony Greig Thommo broke his foot

  • @elainecampbell8227
    @elainecampbell8227 4 місяці тому +6

    During test matches, the teams stop for tea. Not sure how many times in the course of a day, but these breaks are built into the schedule.

    • @josephtyrrell9499
      @josephtyrrell9499 4 місяці тому

      So in England it starts 11 am lunch is at 1pm till 13:40 (so 40 mins) then 13:40 to 15:40 is the afternoon session then they stop for 20 mins for tea then from 16:00 to 18:00 pm or 18:30 depending on how much cricket has been played during the day

    • @josephtyrrell9499
      @josephtyrrell9499 4 місяці тому

      In short those are the timing hope this helps Elaine

    • @wolfen210959
      @wolfen210959 4 місяці тому +2

      There are 2 scheduled breaks, lunch and tea, and depending on the weather, there could be refreshment breaks, particularly on warm days.

    • @leohickey4953
      @leohickey4953 4 місяці тому +2

      Yes, play typically starts at 11am and continues until about 6pm, with two intervals: "lunch" (a 40-minute break taken at about two hours into the match) and "tea" (a 20-minute break two hours after the post lunch restart). In hot weather there'll also be a couple of very short breaks where water/juice will be bought onto the field.

  • @JamesHyde1986
    @JamesHyde1986 4 місяці тому +5

    This might have been answered in the comments already but in case not:
    The reason that it didn’t show how many wickets England had lost, only their score is that England had already finished their innings and lost all their wickets.
    Unlike in baseball where each team completes an innings at a time, going back and forth, in cricket an innings refers to the entire team batting before the other team has their turn.
    To simplify it, imagine 2 baseball teams are playing each other. Team 1 has their 9 innings in a row. Then the teams swap and the second team has their 9 innings in a row to try beat Team 1’s score.
    The use of the term innings is confusing as they mean different things in each sport.
    But essentially once a team has finished batting and the other team has taken their turn to bat, it doesn’t really matter how many wickets were taken, just the score as that is the target the second team is trying to beat.

  • @shirhanousmand4966
    @shirhanousmand4966 Місяць тому

    Test Cricket is the purest form of cricket and it is a must watch. It truly measures a players character in many ways and it is not easy surviving 5 days. The field setting, bowler changes, defending the wicket all makes up for an exiting game. I really loved watching when I was young, but now I just watch the game highlights. If Im on holiday and there was a test game going on I'd probably spend time watching a test match.

  • @stevencorlett7972
    @stevencorlett7972 Місяць тому

    Some added info for you....the guys at the start in "white" are involved in a 'test match' in which each side is allowed 5 days each to score as many runs as possible often reaching 500+ runs

  • @michaelpearl-r8w
    @michaelpearl-r8w 4 місяці тому +5

    Cricket was first played in England, so in a test match the game will stop each day for lunch and then for tea.

  • @CatholicSatan
    @CatholicSatan 4 місяці тому +33

    The best form, imho, is full on test cricket - a _five_ day marathon. This is when the strategies, the tiny little edges (and the weather) coupled with top sportsmen (watch Shane Warne bowling, for example) can, although others might complain it's slow, have you on the edge of your deck chair (sipping a Pimms) for a week.

    • @mallockracer
      @mallockracer 4 місяці тому +3

      Or listening to it on the wireless.... "Botham could not quick get his leg over".....lol

    • @thedisabledwelshman9266
      @thedisabledwelshman9266 4 місяці тому

      totally agree.

    • @DiceSully
      @DiceSully 4 місяці тому +1

      I always agreed with Stephen Fry, Test Matches can be boring, but those (sometimes) long periods of building makes those moments of excitement or the tension at a close game all the more fulfilling.

  • @Kevinlinnane
    @Kevinlinnane 4 місяці тому +14

    Hi guys, love your channel, firstly, I wish I could find a Jess … what an incredible lady you have Mike !!! Ok a cricket ball is rock hard and coated with leather with a seam stitched around the centre. If you get hit on your body it can seriously hurt you, broken bones are not uncommon, in fact an Australian cricketer recently was hit on the back of his head and died in seconds after being hit. Doom and gloom I know!!! Anyway cricket is a very complex game on the face of it , but like most things time watching helps understanding quite quickly. Love your reactions to comedy , especially when Jess gets grossed out , it cracks me up 😂👍😂

    • @glastonbury4304
      @glastonbury4304 4 місяці тому +5

      Totally agree on finding a Jess...sod the cricket...😂😂

    • @Kevinlinnane
      @Kevinlinnane 4 місяці тому

      @@glastonbury4304 👍🤣😂👍

  • @thomascampbell9207
    @thomascampbell9207 2 місяці тому +1

    In case you’re interested in watching (arguably) the best domestic T20 competition, the Big Bash competition starts 15th December - 27th January here in Australia. You may have highlights available in the US. I’m sure you will end up loving cricket if you follow the season and pick a team to support ❤
    Thanks for the videos

    • @anjneyrai
      @anjneyrai Місяць тому

      Comeon mate IPL is def the best

    • @BitchDontKillMyVibe74
      @BitchDontKillMyVibe74 Місяць тому

      No one watches BBL Thomas, not even native Australians. IPL is the way to go. That's the time of the year even Cummins waits for😂

  • @andrewdavie386
    @andrewdavie386 2 місяці тому +2

    One major difference, for me, between cricket and baseball is that in cricket it's perfectly OK for the bowler to try and hit the batter with the ball. The fastest bowlers are touching 90-100 mph, and that bounce before it gets to the batter means that the ball can/does deviate very late and is angling upwards towards your head. Many batsmen get hit - and here the big difference - when a batter is hit there is no outrage and running-on-the-field to fight from his/her team-mates. It's a part of the game, and skilled bowlers are appreciated for their ability to do this. The payback, of course, is that skilled bowlers are usually poor batters - so when it's their turn to bat they in turn are "marked men" who will no doubt have fast bowlers trying to hit THEM. Even with protective equipment, several batters have died from being struck by the ball; for this reason there are now limitations on the number of times per over a bowler is allowed to bowl dangerous "bouncers" - and also batters are required to wear protective helmets. Being an unskilled batsman, like I was, trust me.... facing an angry fast bowler who is doing his very best to hurt you is very scary indeed! And of course your team mates and HIS team mates all think that's a hoot and fair play.

    • @PossumMagic99
      @PossumMagic99 2 місяці тому

      Good stuff Andrew. All the protective equipment is fine but ive noticed some modern batsman have a bad habit of no longer watching the ball in flight, they just duck and get it on the noggin or body. In the old days vs West Indies the batters were wearing caps and they damn well watched it straight past thier head to the keeper.

  • @K9Weddings
    @K9Weddings 4 місяці тому +4

    The bowlers (pitchers) bowl 6 balls in an over. The next over will be another bowler who bowls from the opposite end. Some cricket pitches may have a slight slope and some bowlers may have a preference for bowling from a particular end. Bowlers are either fast bowlers (90 mph plus) or spin bowlers (much slower but the ball direction unpredictable once it bounces). Even fast bowlers can get limited movement of the ball (called swing) because of the way the ball is held. The ball is very hard and has a stitched raised seam which contributes to the movement. There are a couple of different ball manufacturers that use very different seams. Test cricket which is 5 days is usually played with a red ball. Limited over cricket (game completes in one day) is often played with a white ball. The bowlers will often shine one side of the ball on their trousers (leaving red marks on their trousers). A ball with one dull side and one shiny side can move more unpredictably.
    The game was invented in England but the reason it's popular is because every country within the commonwealth plays it (Commonwealth countries used to be controlled by the UK). Cricket is the national sport in India with a huge population which is why it's so popular globally. Other nations that take cricket seriously include Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, the West Indies and of course England.

    • @klein_karoo_permaculture
      @klein_karoo_permaculture 4 місяці тому +1

      And India... They take it very seriously!

    • @suemoore984
      @suemoore984 3 місяці тому

      There are currently about 90 countries that play cricket, but not all have professional teams

  • @jontuson2078
    @jontuson2078 4 місяці тому +12

    I believe that lacrosse was originally played by native Americans. It is played by a few people in the UK.

    • @oddviews
      @oddviews 4 місяці тому +1

      But mostly in Ireland

    • @carolineb3527
      @carolineb3527 4 місяці тому

      We played lacrosse at school (in England). I was goalie, which means I was certifiably insane. I was shocked when a few months ago I looked at my old school's website and saw that they now play hockey. Bunch of cissies! 😁😁

    • @gailstevens6831
      @gailstevens6831 4 місяці тому

      It is also played in Australia. Apparently it is being revived for the next Olympics.

  • @vaudevillian7
    @vaudevillian7 4 місяці тому +5

    Thanks for checking out my suggestion!
    Cricket is the 2nd biggest sport in the world (largely thanks to the Indian subcontinent)
    I’m a Vols fan too by the way…

    • @RNTV
      @RNTV  4 місяці тому +1

      It was great being introduced to a new sport. Thank you friend! Go big orange 🧡🤍🧡🤍

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye 4 місяці тому +1

      @@RNTV BOTH players score runs when it is their turn to bat.He implied just one did though only one per shot. After 6 deliveries( an over) another bowler is needed but he bowls from THE OTHER END so, tactically,if a genuine Batsman is still there near the end with one of hi teammates who bats at the end ( Number 8,9,10 or11 in the batting order ) the better batsman may try to get ONE single run of thel last ball of the 6 deliveries: Over so he retains the batting. That "287" in a 5-Day match means his team are ALL OUT that is 10 players out leaving one batsman "Not Out" with no remaining Partners. HIGHEST SCORE for ONE player in a Test Match is 400 FOUR HUNDRED in 2003/4:)

  • @MichaelHill-we7vt
    @MichaelHill-we7vt 6 днів тому

    in cricket, when the score is shown like the England score just a straightforward score of 287, it means that that was the England team score when all their batsmen were out and their innings was over...the India score read 118-5, meaning that their innings was still in progress, and that's the current score, 118 runs for 5 batsmen out.

  • @paulizard4292
    @paulizard4292 3 місяці тому

    The cricket ball is made of cork, string, and leather.
    You'll see members of the fielding team shine the ball. This is to aid the bowler (pitcher) to swing the ball (throw a curveball). Fast or medium paced bowlers often like to get a bit of swing, although fast bowlers do use the seam. Slower bowlers are spin bowlers and use their fingers to rapidly rotate the ball so, when it pitches (hits the ground), the spin causes it to turn left or right, hoping to bamboozle the batsman (batter).

  • @elbee1845
    @elbee1845 4 місяці тому +4

    You’ve gotta love England. Where else would a professional game stop for tea?

    • @whattiler5102
      @whattiler5102 3 місяці тому

      Don't forget lunch. The breaks are for the benefit of spectators as much as the players. Who has got the attention span to play, or watch, for six hours without a break?

  • @amalpurandare7283
    @amalpurandare7283 2 місяці тому +4

    When england scores 287 ... it always means all their 10 wickets are out.

  • @dimwitdave9344
    @dimwitdave9344 4 місяці тому +5

    I think you are probably thinking about Hurling. An Irish sport that I won't even pretend to know the rules to but it looks like a cross between field hockey and Aussie rules football

    • @johnnyuk3365
      @johnnyuk3365 4 місяці тому +2

      Being of Irish extraction I love watching Hurling. It is said to be the fastest field sport in the world, not sure if that has been scientifically proven but watching it, it would seem to be so.

    • @RNTV
      @RNTV  4 місяці тому +1

      Never heard of hurling. I had to look it up, but it was definitely Lacrosse I was thinking of.

    • @dimwitdave9344
      @dimwitdave9344 4 місяці тому

      @@RNTV I had vague memories of watching Hurling as a kid so I too looked it up after posting my comment. It looks like an incredibly fun game

  • @Sableagle
    @Sableagle 20 днів тому

    10:00 Ball sails clear over the boundary, you get six runs, thus you have "hit it for six," which became a term for meeting an incoming threat head-on with great success or for great success in general, like "knocking it out of the park."

  • @Paul-g9m5j
    @Paul-g9m5j 2 місяці тому

    In the short version a bowler only has a limited number of overs (balls) each. In the longer version there is no limit to their overs, limits occur if they are tired or ineffectual. However, they can come back later on, or can swap ends but not immediately, an extra bowler has to fill in for one over to swap over, to prevent the bowler swapping ends bowling consecutive overs.

  • @jontuson2078
    @jontuson2078 4 місяці тому +8

    The bowlers come from the same end each time. Therefore, if you only make one run, then the other batter will face the next ball. This leads to tactics where a strong batter will attempt to protect a weaker batter by avoiding running singles.

    • @klein_karoo_permaculture
      @klein_karoo_permaculture 4 місяці тому +5

      Bowlers swap ends each over (6 balls) so a stronger batsman will 'protect' the weaker until the over is almost over. He'll then be very keen to run a single so that he can be on strike again when the next over starts at the other end.

  • @Me-gy7yk
    @Me-gy7yk 4 місяці тому +6

    The five day test match is by far the most interesting format and can be the most exciting as well. A test match is chess, limited overs is checkers. There was a time when test matches were timeless (in theory) and would carry on until there was a result. There was an instance where a timeless test, the last to ever be played in 1939, had to be called as a draw because England had a boat to catch to go home after twelve days, three of which had no play at all because of rain. So nine days of actual play.

  • @steddie4514
    @steddie4514 4 місяці тому +9

    Test cricket is just that...a TEST of endurance and stamina 👍🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

  • @glennwhittaker197
    @glennwhittaker197 3 місяці тому

    Generally in the villages of England cricket would be played on a Sunday after church, so does not begin until 11:30am with a lunch break & dinner/tea (evening meal) break & light permitting stumps are called at 6:30pm.
    Rain can effect play & bad light too.

  • @HarryBarrow-e3u
    @HarryBarrow-e3u 3 місяці тому

    A cricket team will contain members that are specialists: several very good batters and several very good bowlers, both fast bowlers (fast and usually straight), spin bowlers that can make the ball jump up or sideways when it bounces, and stream bowlers that can make the ball swerve in the air.
    There are all-rounders who are good at both batting and bowling.

  • @torresilk4277
    @torresilk4277 4 місяці тому +4

    There is no way USA will accept a game that takes 5 days and can still be a draw. 😁

    • @TheCeleron450
      @TheCeleron450 3 місяці тому

      Or even a tie. It has happened twice.

  • @nic0072
    @nic0072 3 місяці тому

    There was a question about how a day's play plays out in a multi-day test match. So the rule is that (at least) 90 overs (an over =6 balls) has to be bowled in a day. There are 3 sessions of 2 hours in a day's play. After the first 2 hours, the play breaks for "lunch" which is 40 minutes long. Then after that the second session of 2 hours after which they will break for "tea" which is 20 minutes long. Then the last session of 2 hours until the end of play. The last session may be extended if 90 overs had not been bowled.