Cricket - F--k Yeah!!!!!

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It's T20 cricket which isn't the cricket I know, but still an awesome victory.

The squad is almost entirely Caribbean or South Asian, but Yanks cheer laundry so it's all good.
 
T20 is basically 20 overs per side. There are six bowls (pitches) per over, so each side gets 120 bowls unless the team batting last gets to the winning target, the U.S. equivalent of a walk-off.

Point of the T20 game is to make it fit in a 3-hour window to make it more popular.
 
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I don't understand any of it, but I have a grad school friend who was there. He's a Pakistani immigrant - so I think kind of a big deal for him.

Anyway, his Pakistani friends are blaming him on FB for the loss and it's kinda hilarious. I'm glad to see some sports superstitions transcend cultures.
 
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There are many sports I know very little about, but reading a description of an event usually gives me an idea of what happened.

Cricket? Never. AP story today may as well have been written in Mandarin.
 
My annual London trip features at least one day of me sitting in a pub and having a local try to explain cricket to me to no avail.
 
In all seriousness, I learned cricket from playing a video game 20 or years ago. If EA Sports produced it, I bought it and they did a cricket game for the PS2 in 2002 or 03. I found a copy and added it to my EA Sports library. Playing it, I learned about wickets and overs and 6s (not that kind) and all the other sport-specific stuff.
 
We had some Australian friends visit us when I was a kid. We played Cricket/whiffle ball hybrid. Great fun.
 
I'm like the rest of you. I want to understand it, I am genetically incapable of understanding it, but the international events look kind of cool because of how excited fans get. I saw the story on the U.S. victory and I knew Pakistan is a power, so I thought it was awesome.
 
In all seriousness, I learned cricket from playing a video game 20 or years ago. If EA Sports produced it, I bought it and they did a cricket game for the PS2 in 2002 or 03. I found a copy and added it to my EA Sports library. Playing it, I learned about wickets and overs and 6s (not that kind) and all the other sport-specific stuff.
This is how I learned football as a kid - thanks to Tecmo Bowl and Tecmo Super Bowl.
 
Couple of good descriptions from the other thread.

I went to England last year and went to a one-day cricket match at Edgbaston in Birmingham, which isn't the Yankee Stadium of cricket (that's Lord's), but it's one of the more prestigious grounds. Maybe like Busch Stadium, I don't know. I also got heat exhaustion from the experience, which is pretty good for England.

Anyway, I'd describe cricket to the American newby as such.

There are two bases. When the bowler (pitcher) throws it to you (with a stiff arm and on a bounce), you have to swing at it if it's going to hit the posts behind you. If you hit a grounder at a guy you don't have to run. If you don't hit it to a guy, you and your buddy on the other base run down-and-backs to score. You keep hitting until you swing and miss, you hit one that someone catches on the fly, or they hit the posts while you're still running down-and-backs. Homers are worth 6, ground-rule doubles are worth 4. When you're out, your buddy bats and he gets a new buddy. Your team bats until your whole lineup has hit and then it's their turn.

EDIT: And there's no foul balls.

Cricket is actually a fairly simple sport, like baseball as long as you don't get into the weeds with exit velocities, WAR and all that. It is played on a ground where the stumps are in the center of the field, so like somebody said earlier, there are no foul balls. There are 11 men (this is almost exclusively a male sport) on each side.

In test cricket, each match consists typically of two innings, but those can take up to five days to play. In each innings, each team sends all 11 men up and bat until 10 outs are given. Outs can be achieved by either catching a ball on the fly or knocking the bails off the wicket before the batsman crosses the line while running. An out is also called a "wicket" so if you see that, that's what that means. There are other rules that can result in an out such as blocking the wicket with your leg, etc.

The game is basically subdivided by "overs," which are a series of six bowls. A shutout over is called a "maiden over." There are several varieties of cricket, including 20-20 cricket which are 20 overs for each side, or 120 bowls total. This is designed to limit the match to about 3 hours and replicate the window of a baseball game to increase popularity.
 
When I lived and worked in Miami 20 years ago, we had an editor who was a big cricket guy. He tried explaining it to me, but alas, like others, it didn't stick.
 
My South African brother-in-law’s text after I bragged about the big win:

“Pakistan has been **** for at least 10 years. And they’re always willing to bend the knee for a bribe.”
 
Twenty ago I was on the same flight from Bangkok to New Delhi as the Australian National Cricket team. I sat in business class (not first class) next to a team member. I asked him which country held the world championship (I thought it would be India or Pakistan). He answered testily "we are". And that is how I learned the Australians are good at cricket.

When we got to New Delhi we all had to wait an hour and a half for our luggage after a four hour flight. The team members stood with the rest of us waiting for the luggage to come out. I wonder how the United States basketball team would have reacted to waiting for their luggage. Of course it would have never happened.
 
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