Jomboy is the part of the commentary team for the upcoming T20 cricket world cup held in USA from 2nd June 2024. Tournament kicks off with USA v Canada as the first game. Happy to see Jomboy being included for game commentary.
A few things (using baseball terminologies) 1. No batter can bat alone, there is always two of them up there (the partnership). There are 11 players on each team, which is why 10 outs retires the side in cricket. When a side is retired there will be one batter left who is never out, the "last man standing". 2. When a batter is out, whoever is next in the batting order steps up to fill in the gap. Normally the heavy hitters are on the top of the order. So even if you can't get 10 outs before the pitch limit is reached, it's very significant to kick your opponents best sluggers back to the dugout. 3. Both batters on the field bat, but who is actually swinging at the moment depends on a few factors. Let's say right now the northside wicket is being pitched at, then whichever batsman is on the northside of the pitch gets to bat, meaning after an odd amount of runs it will be a different batsman batting, this could be something the batting team wants, in which case they will deliberately not hustle for a double, or alternately, rush for a triple. 4. When an over is done (6 pitches were made), a new pitcher steps in while the old pitcher becomes a normal fielder, and the wicket that is being pitched at is switched. You saw this happen when Kuggeleijn steps up to pitch.
Good explanation! Worth noting that with point 3, the same goes for the bowling team - meaning they may want to keep a heavy-hitter away from then end they're bowling to.
@@dannjp75 so many nuances with cricket. I think he meant 'most experienced batsmen' and just used the term 'heavy hitters'. But we all know the most exciting batsmen come in at 3 or 5 or even later. (Though God Bless Geoffrey Boycott for 'taking the shine off the ball' for the first 127 overs every game!)
There is a direct parallel with baseball in terms of when the 'heavy hitters' enter the game. Both games generally have their best batter at number 3 (top of the order, however this is not some kind of immutable rule). In cricket, the batters at 1 and 2 are generally those batters with the best reflexes and see the ball best. In essence, they sacrifice themselves in order to rough the ball up (slow it down), and to weary the fielders and bowlers (or to frustrate them). This is akin to baseball sending in batters who can get on base, followed by a hitter who can score a home run (scoring 3 runs). In cricket, stats are often compared but mention is often made of a batter's average being lower due to qualification: opener, meaning the batter faced a new ball and fresh bowlers his whole career. The batters with large scores coming in at 3,4,5 etc are typically good at exploiting the field and a roughed up ball and also good at not getting out, or in running between the wickets (fast between the wickets is a big deal, Australia really works on this angle). Think of this as in baseball with batters very fast between bases or good at stealing bases; in cricket a stolen base is quickly running when there is a misfield or overthrow (catcher misses or is unable to retrieve the ball).
The one thing that jars and mystifies me about the game described by Americans is that they always refer to the other "side" of the pitch. It is NOT the other 'side', it is the other 'end'. You run to the 'other end', the batsmen stand at 'opposite ends', and so on.
This was a good explanation of cricket using baseball as a comparison. For batters, I explain it to baseball aficionados like this: in baseball if you hit the ball, you run to first base, then if you make your way to home base you return to the back of the batting order and wait for your next turn at bat. In cricket, the batter is in until the fielding team get him out. Thus, a good batter can be out there the whole game as no-one can get him out. This is how cricket batters accumulate such large scores. Imagine in baseball the batter hits a home run. If the rules of cricket were applied, that batter would return to home base and then pick up his bat and get ready to face another pitch, and he'd keep hitting home runs until he was got out. In cricket, an innings ends when there are no partnerships left (10 outs), and the fielding team then takes its turn at bat. In test cricket, they have five days to complete a max two innings each.
USA Mens T20 team won 2 consecutive matches against Bangladesh and already have won the 3 match series 2-0.(1 game is yet to play in houston). Huge win against a test playing nation. congratz.
Hah! The game shown has my local team, Otago Volts, from here in Dunedin, New Zealand, playing against Northern Districts (BTW, Kuggeleijn is pronounced cougar-line). There's eleven batters in a side, because there have to be two "at bat" at any one time. As you said, sometimes the first batter will stay in all the innings with his batting partners all going out - that's what's known as "carrying their bat" through the innings. It's not common but does happen. As Aril suggested, "Cricket Explained for Baseball Fans" is a good video to watch.
On that score sheet, I felt there were two significant innings. Broom 62, got the major contribution, but if you look at Johnson, he came in when they were behind the required run rate and got 25 from only 13 balls faced. Without his 'acceleration' the guys chasing the remaining runs in the last two overs, would have had a much harder chase, that would probably have favoured the bowling side.
one thing jomboy misses here is that each over is bowled from a different end as well. so you have the batters swapping ends when they run, and bowlers swapping ends each over. Same guy cant bowl 2 overs in a row
“Team USA” is made largely made up of cricketers from other nations that have taken US citizenship. It’s not like you’ve produced a long line of talent yourselves.🤷🏼♂️🤦🏻♂️
you're correct you get either 120 legal deliveries, OR 10 outs whichever comes first. however many runs you can score in that time is your teams score (in this format of cricket, dont worry about that too much just understand the game first)
Each team has eleven players. All eleven players of the fielding team have all players on the field, 9 are in fielding positions with the 10th as the bowler and 11th as wicketkeeper. The opposition always has two players 'at bat' together, as one batsman gets out another comes in; when 10 batsmen are out, the teams innings is over. Now the fielding team takes their turn 'at bat', and the batting team now become the fielding team. To win the game, one team must have atleast one more run than the opposition. When bowlers change, the new bowler bowls from the other end of the pitch; and the fielders and wicketkeeper reposition to the other end.
The batter has two tasks to do at the same time. He has to protect his wicket (not get out) and score runs. The bowler is trying to take the wicket and stop the batter scoring. There are lots of ways to get out. Bowled ~ the bowler bowls the ball into the stumps. Caught ~ a member of the bowling team catches the ball and gains full control of it within the playing area before it bounces. LBW ~ Leg before wicket, the batter is not permitted to use his legs to protect his stumps, he must use his bat. You will see a lot of reviews of this as it is based on the umpires judgement. Stumped ~ In playing a shot the batter strays outside his “safe area” called the crease, The wicket keeper catches the ball and breaks the stumps before the batsman can get back into his crease. Run out ~ The batter fails to get back into his crease before a member of the bowling side breaks the wicket with the ball. Hit Wicket ~ In making a shot the batter hits his stumps Other associated essentials to know. Beer Snake ~ the longest stack of empty beer glasses the crowd can make. Barmy Army ~ A large faction of England Cricket Supporters. Something to note, a cricket ball is harder and heavier than a baseball!
The 62 (53) = 62 runs off 53 balls faced which = strike rate = 62X100÷53=116.98 [62 = runs scored; x100 = 100 balls; ÷53 = balls faced] for Broom @4:42. 11 total players as only 10 can get out. T 20 is the shortest game = 1 innings each of max 20 overs of 6 legal balls, one day matches = 1 innings each of either max 40 or 50 [or other number depending on competition rules] overs of 6 legal balls, 4 day games [unlimted overs with each side getting max 2 innings] and test matches = 5 day games of max 2 innings unlimited overs. In Australia they do the numbers the other way round. Rest of the world = 164 for 7 wickets, Australia = 7 wickets for 164 runs.
There are 11 players in a team. Since there always have to be two batsmen on the field, once number 10 is out, number 11 can't stay on by himself, so that innings is finished. Bowling is s specialist skill, so there will only be a few bowlers on a team. Some will be fast bowlers who basically try to maim the batsmen. Others will bowl spin, which gets the batsmen out with cunning deliveries.
Know such thing as a " Home Run" if the Batsman hit the ball over the the Boundary Six runs are added to the Score , if he hit the ball along the ground or it bounces on its way to the boundary it adds 4 runs to the score
There's always two players batting at anyone time. The bowling team has to take 10 wickets (10 outs) When they achieve this aim there will be one batter who remains not out but this player cant bat by themselves and the innings is now completed (11 players in a cricket team).
Be quite you shrimp on the barbie eater. Y'all talk crazy, SPEAK PROPERLY. HoI Oim fahrking oistraiyan. America is the best country in the world 🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲💪💪💪
As with softball, cricket bowlers can't bend their elbows. They can bowl underarm like softball but it is more effective to bowl overarm and to hit the ground causing the ball to change direction. With the choice not to run on every play, the game favours batters not bowlers. Whereas runs are hard to come by in baseball, outs (wickets) are hard to come by in cricket.
There's 11 players on a team, you have to have two batsmen in at all times so once the 10th man is out the 11th man cannot play on alone. You have usually 5 dedicated batsmen at 1-5, 5 bowlers and the wicketkeeper. Some bowlers and wicketkeepers are actually pretty good with the bat too but usually they'll be the 6th to 11th batters unless they're exceptional all-rounders.
Given the 7 wickets, there is a very good chance that the batsmen at the wicket (Chu and McKenzie) are non specialist batsmen (everybody bats no DH), some bowlers are competent batsmen and some are awful, in this form of the game bowlers who are incompetent batsmen, test cricket bowlers who are incompetent batsmen is still fairly common. One batsman can bat straight thru and if someone does then his team will probably win, it gives stability to the innings and means one of them is always settled and familiar with the conditions of the pitch. The two "at bat" batsmen are totally independent of each other, except in that they are working together for the good of the team, mostly
Don't judge baseball if you know nothing about it. The full official rules of baseball are longer than the Laws of cricket and go into mind-boggling minutiae.
A batsman is replaced once he's put out. Then the next batsman in the order comes in, but the other batsman who wasn't out on the last play continues till HE's put out. Eleven batsmen, ten outs, because the "last man standing" cannot bat alone.
11 total players, but you can't bat on your own you need 2 batters in the middle. And yes as you get down the batting order the players tend to be less skilled batsmen because they are often bowlers.
There are 10 ways to get out in cricket, five of which are common. You have only seen one way in this video; caught. You need to see bowled, run out, lbw (leg before wicket) and stumped.
Please for the love of all that is sensible - if you really want to learn watch a video called "The Rules of Cricket - EXPLAINED!" on the Ninh Ly channel. It's short, comprehensive and simple without any confusing switching of terminology. This video, that starts with the line "I'm still learning the game.." is not the best way to learn.
Generally the first 6 or 7 batsmen are good batters, the last few get worse and worse as they are predominately bowlers ( or pitchers ) worst batsmen last for example.
Hey when are you guys are going to do more cricket video reactions on cricket sports. Guys its been three months and we havent heard anything from you about any new cricket videos.
Someone who doesn’t get cricket trying to explain cricket to others is hilarious. If I compare what the video says compared to what I know about cricket (which isn’t inconsiderable) and it’s basically jibberish
Nihm explains "The rules of Cricket", "Cricket explained for baseball fans" and Stephen Fry's "The laws of Cricket" together will give you a pretty good grounding in the game. However, none of these videos deal with the fielding positions and their ideosyncratic names. For that you'll need to watch a few games from around the world and figure them out for yourselves.
Always two batsmen at opposite ends, and yes it's not unheard of for the number1 opening batsman to be the last man standing, as one batsman can't go it alone. One thing he didn't make clear is, after each 6ball over a different bowler attacks the other wicket at the other end, 6more balls and the first bowler is back attacking the original wicket, so a high scoring batsman will try to make sure he finishes an over at the end that will receive the next over. T20 is limited to 20 overs each, and each bowler is only allowed to bowl 4 overs. Next up is ODI (one day international) limited to 50 overs, with each bowler restricted to 10 overs each Top tier is unlimited overs cricket, where scores can be 500, 600 or 700+ and it's not unusual for an individual batsman to score 200 runs on his own, and several have scored more than 300.In unlimited each team bats twice, the game can last for 5 days, if the last batting side are still hanging on at the end, but are hundreds of runs behind, if the time runs out it's a draw.
Never forget cricket is a tough game bowlers aim 900mph plus balls at head and body so batsman have died and many broken bones and more massive bruises.
i think when people are explaining cricket to americans mixing the term bowler and pitcher is a huge problem. A pitcher throws a ball from a fixed position. a bowler bowls without elbow articulation off a runup. bending your arm is chucking, and is verboten. you can have a runup which is a couple of steps, or someone sprinting from the other side of the field. 6 balls to an over, not counting no balls, which are illegal balls and have to be done again. then you change bowlers for the next over. fielding team has 11 men on the field including bowler and keeper. Batting team has 2 men on at a time. T20 is not real cricket, its just a slog fest with no strategy. 20 overs each side. bowlers limited to 4 overs each. one day cricket, is 50 overs each side. bowlers limited to 10 overs each. first class cricket, 2 innings each side, so to win you have to dismiss 20 players. time limited to 5 days for international matches, often called test matches. before time limits the longest test match was 9 days. having watched some american baseball on youtube the biggest difference to me is the behavior of the players and umpire. other differences are things like, if the ball goes out of the fence in cricket it is returned. the crowd doesn't keep it. the wear on the ball is part of the strategy of the game. the keeper is the only person catching with gloves, everyone else does it barehanded.
Some people still call batters "batsmen", while the other positions, bowler, fielder, keeper have never had a gender tag. Even commentators do this, which is particularly ignorant when it's a women's match they're covering.
Wow, doing a Super Smash game from here in New Zealand. Damaging off Scott Kuggeleijn (pronounced Cougar Line). Just put that in there so if he comes up on your videos again, you know how to pronounce it. Otago Volts vs Northern Brave. So essentially the Dunedin/Queenstown area of New Zealand vs the upper half of the North Island except Auckland (who represent on their own as the Auckland Aces).
This is an interesting and informative video and would have been a very good second video after a basic 'how to play cricket' video. As we know you guys started out with an unhelpful first video, anyway you are back on track and should keep going. I'm sure you know by now that the 2024 T20 Cricket World Cup is being staged jointly by tihe USA and the West Indies. The first game, I believe, is the USA against Canada on June 1st. You are in a tough group that includes India, Pakistan, Ireland and Canada.
Ray Vaughn spits like a 🦙 Llama on (Freestyle #118 LA Leakers Ray Vaughn).. This entire freestyle is off the 📈 charts.. Barzzz after Barzzz after Barzzz is the only thing you'll 👂 hear coming thru your 🎧 headphones. Ray Vaughn ☠️ murders the 🎤 mic and has more Barzzz than a Super Maximum Prison. Your 🧠 brain will think it's 🔐 locked inside a jail cell because of so many Barzzz.. Definitely put this 🎥 video at the top of your reaction 📋 list and keep it on your 📡 radar. Don't 💤😴 sleep on (Freestyle #118 LA Leakers Ray Vaughn) .. I promise you won't regret it. ✌️ Peace.....
America played cricket long before baseball was an event and in fact won the first official international match between America and Canada , then a long gap until today where America beat Canada and a few days ago beat Pakistan [one of the best teams] in the cricket world cup during the cricket world cup now being held in America. 5 day cricket is another story. Anyway America may not win the world cup [then it could] but take England who also invented football [soccer] has only won the football world cup the one time in 1966 , though other football countries have won it a number of times each.
You cant learn a new sport from watching highlight videos. The only way you learn cricket is by absorption. Watch a classic world cup final from start to finish, even better follow a Test match (5 days). Its such a subtle game with so many nuances you need to hear the expert commentary and encounter a whole new vocabulary. I think there are something like 95 different possible fielding positions all known by different, obscure names like 'Silly Mid Off' and 'Fine Leg'. Having said all that, to enjoy cricket one needs the same patience with long interludes of not much happening that you do watching baseball games. But as a comparison cricket especially the shorter form (1 day or even 20 overs each) offers more joined-up action, just my opinion.
There's more than one comment saying that "Cricket Explained For Baseball Fans" is a way better introduction, but in my opinion it's still much, much too detailed and technical. You can watch cricket for months, and you'll never hear the term "popping crease". You'll never understand cricket from a video like that. The best way is to learn in the backyard with a stick, a tennis ball, and an oil drum for a wicket-then build up the technicalities from there. find a friend who already knows cricket to get you started! If you must have cricket explained to you in a video, the very same Jomboy has another one that does a better job. It's here: ruclips.net/video/qmq3mz7nyrk/видео.html
This is not a great video to understand cricket. 1. There are two teams of 11 players each. 2. One team "BATs", the second team "Fields". 3. There are two main versions of Cricket games. "Limited Over Cricket" and "Test Matches". 4. Limited Over Cricket is again of two types: "T20" and "50 Over". The reason they are called limited over cricket is because OVERs are limited. 5. What is an OVER? An Over is a collection of 6 pitches (called Balls in Cricket) that one pitcher (called Bowler in Cricket). 6. At one time, one bowler can throw only one OVER. This means 6 pitches at a time. Then the bowler changes. 7. Remember, there are two teams. One BATs, the other BOWLs. The batting team sends two BATTERs to bat, they are called OPENERs. 8. The goal of the FIELDING team is to get all the batsmen of the BATTING team OUT. 9. Remember, only two BATSMAN are in the FIELD playing at any given time. This means The Bowler has to get atleast ONE of them OUT so that the next one can come in. 10. Once a batsman is out, he is done. He made his RUNs and that is that. He cannot return, he is OUT. 11. A new batsman comes in and CONTINUES the game. Now this batting team has lost 1 WICKET, 9 more to go. 12. So the GOAL of the FIELDING team is to restrict the BATTING team to as less runs as possible, the best way to do that is to BOWL all of them (all 10) OUT. 13. Sometimes the FIELDING team's quota of OVERs is done (say 50 overs) but all the BATSMEN were not bowled out. Does not matter, the quota of overs is finished, their INNINGs comes to an end. Now it is the FIELDING team's turn to BAT. Now, they become the BATTING team, and the other team becomes the FIELDING team. 14. The goal of the 2nd team is to CHASE down the runs compiled by the first team, if they do that, they win, if they don't they lose, regardless of how many wickets they lost. Note: 1 over = 6 bowls (6 pitches). Hence 50 Over CRICKET match is also called an ODI (One Day Cricket). 50 Overs means 300 balls. 50 x 6 = 300 pitches. Why is it called One Day Cricket: Because it takes almost 1/2 day to bowl 50 overs. 1/2 a day per side is one full day of cricket. Almost 7 or 8 hour game. As the games are too long, Cricket has evolved into a shorter version of ODI called T20 in which only 20 OVERs (20 x 6 = 120 balls) per side are thrown. Rest remains the same. Finally, Test Cricket is 5 days, thats another story but is the original version of the game. Considered to be a test of mettle and technique given the length of the game - 5 days. It is also called unlimited over cricket.
React to "Cricket Explained For Baseball Fans"
Jomboy is the part of the commentary team for the upcoming T20 cricket world cup held in USA from 2nd June 2024. Tournament kicks off with USA v Canada as the first game. Happy to see Jomboy being included for game commentary.
Cricket explained for Baseball Fans by Sports Explained is way better
A few things (using baseball terminologies)
1. No batter can bat alone, there is always two of them up there (the partnership). There are 11 players on each team, which is why 10 outs retires the side in cricket. When a side is retired there will be one batter left who is never out, the "last man standing".
2. When a batter is out, whoever is next in the batting order steps up to fill in the gap. Normally the heavy hitters are on the top of the order. So even if you can't get 10 outs before the pitch limit is reached, it's very significant to kick your opponents best sluggers back to the dugout.
3. Both batters on the field bat, but who is actually swinging at the moment depends on a few factors. Let's say right now the northside wicket is being pitched at, then whichever batsman is on the northside of the pitch gets to bat, meaning after an odd amount of runs it will be a different batsman batting, this could be something the batting team wants, in which case they will deliberately not hustle for a double, or alternately, rush for a triple.
4. When an over is done (6 pitches were made), a new pitcher steps in while the old pitcher becomes a normal fielder, and the wicket that is being pitched at is switched. You saw this happen when Kuggeleijn steps up to pitch.
Good explanation! Worth noting that with point 3, the same goes for the bowling team - meaning they may want to keep a heavy-hitter away from then end they're bowling to.
The “heavy hitters” are the middle order, not the openers. They are there to build a platform and wear the bowlers down.
@@dannjp75 so many nuances with cricket. I think he meant 'most experienced batsmen' and just used the term 'heavy hitters'. But we all know the most exciting batsmen come in at 3 or 5 or even later. (Though God Bless Geoffrey Boycott for 'taking the shine off the ball' for the first 127 overs every game!)
There is a direct parallel with baseball in terms of when the 'heavy hitters' enter the game. Both games generally have their best batter at number 3 (top of the order, however this is not some kind of immutable rule). In cricket, the batters at 1 and 2 are generally those batters with the best reflexes and see the ball best. In essence, they sacrifice themselves in order to rough the ball up (slow it down), and to weary the fielders and bowlers (or to frustrate them). This is akin to baseball sending in batters who can get on base, followed by a hitter who can score a home run (scoring 3 runs). In cricket, stats are often compared but mention is often made of a batter's average being lower due to qualification: opener, meaning the batter faced a new ball and fresh bowlers his whole career. The batters with large scores coming in at 3,4,5 etc are typically good at exploiting the field and a roughed up ball and also good at not getting out, or in running between the wickets (fast between the wickets is a big deal, Australia really works on this angle). Think of this as in baseball with batters very fast between bases or good at stealing bases; in cricket a stolen base is quickly running when there is a misfield or overthrow (catcher misses or is unable to retrieve the ball).
The one thing that jars and mystifies me about the game described by Americans is that they always refer to the other "side" of the pitch. It is NOT the other 'side', it is the other 'end'. You run to the 'other end', the batsmen stand at 'opposite ends', and so on.
This was a good explanation of cricket using baseball as a comparison. For batters, I explain it to baseball aficionados like this: in baseball if you hit the ball, you run to first base, then if you make your way to home base you return to the back of the batting order and wait for your next turn at bat. In cricket, the batter is in until the fielding team get him out. Thus, a good batter can be out there the whole game as no-one can get him out. This is how cricket batters accumulate such large scores. Imagine in baseball the batter hits a home run. If the rules of cricket were applied, that batter would return to home base and then pick up his bat and get ready to face another pitch, and he'd keep hitting home runs until he was got out. In cricket, an innings ends when there are no partnerships left (10 outs), and the fielding team then takes its turn at bat. In test cricket, they have five days to complete a max two innings each.
USA Mens T20 team won 2 consecutive matches against Bangladesh and already have won the 3 match series 2-0.(1 game is yet to play in houston). Huge win against a test playing nation. congratz.
USA Team ? its like Indians plays with Indians. USA Team is full of indians only.
Hah! The game shown has my local team, Otago Volts, from here in Dunedin, New Zealand, playing against Northern Districts (BTW, Kuggeleijn is pronounced cougar-line). There's eleven batters in a side, because there have to be two "at bat" at any one time. As you said, sometimes the first batter will stay in all the innings with his batting partners all going out - that's what's known as "carrying their bat" through the innings. It's not common but does happen. As Aril suggested, "Cricket Explained for Baseball Fans" is a good video to watch.
On that score sheet, I felt there were two significant innings. Broom 62, got the major contribution, but if you look at Johnson, he came in when they were behind the required run rate and got 25 from only 13 balls faced. Without his 'acceleration' the guys chasing the remaining runs in the last two overs, would have had a much harder chase, that would probably have favoured the bowling side.
The “Cricket Explained for Baseball Fans” is better for you to watch.
What a great cricket explaining video. Taking an example and explaining ball by ball. Really good
one thing jomboy misses here is that each over is bowled from a different end as well. so you have the batters swapping ends when they run, and bowlers swapping ends each over. Same guy cant bowl 2 overs in a row
I suppose limited over format is the simplest introduction to the game; a 5 day test probably takes some working up to!
#USA defeated a proper Test Rated nation Bangladesh, in 2 Matches in a row, just before the T20 Cricket Worldcup begins
“Team USA” is made largely made up of cricketers from other nations that have taken US citizenship. It’s not like you’ve produced a long line of talent yourselves.🤷🏼♂️🤦🏻♂️
These guys would have seizures learning about duckworth Lewis law
Why? No one understands it, and everybody just ignores it, because it's way over the heads of non-mathematicians. So no seizure.
@@PFNel 😂😂 to be honest even i don't understand it..
@@PFNel 😂😂 to be honest even i don't understand it..
@@aum6032 LOL!
React to Cricket Explained For Baseball Fans, it's a really good explanation even if you don't know how to play baseball.
This is best explaining video of cricket i came across so far. All other videos like cricket for baseball fans etc.. are shitty confusing
you're correct you get either 120 legal deliveries, OR 10 outs whichever comes first. however many runs you can score in that time is your teams score (in this format of cricket, dont worry about that too much just understand the game first)
Each team has eleven players. All eleven players of the fielding team have all players on the field, 9 are in fielding positions with the 10th as the bowler and 11th as wicketkeeper. The opposition always has two players 'at bat' together, as one batsman gets out another comes in; when 10 batsmen are out, the teams innings is over. Now the fielding team takes their turn 'at bat', and the batting team now become the fielding team. To win the game, one team must have atleast one more run than the opposition. When bowlers change, the new bowler bowls from the other end of the pitch; and the fielders and wicketkeeper reposition to the other end.
There's USA team in this year's T20 World Cup starting from 2nd June. 1st match USA vs Canada
The batter has two tasks to do at the same time. He has to protect his wicket (not get out) and score runs. The bowler is trying to take the wicket and stop the batter scoring. There are lots of ways to get out. Bowled ~ the bowler bowls the ball into the stumps. Caught ~ a member of the bowling team catches the ball and gains full control of it within the playing area before it bounces. LBW ~ Leg before wicket, the batter is not permitted to use his legs to protect his stumps, he must use his bat. You will see a lot of reviews of this as it is based on the umpires judgement. Stumped ~ In playing a shot the batter strays outside his “safe area” called the crease, The wicket keeper catches the ball and breaks the stumps before the batsman can get back into his crease. Run out ~ The batter fails to get back into his crease before a member of the bowling side breaks the wicket with the ball. Hit Wicket ~ In making a shot the batter hits his stumps
Other associated essentials to know. Beer Snake ~ the longest stack of empty beer glasses the crowd can make. Barmy Army ~ A large faction of England Cricket Supporters. Something to note, a cricket ball is harder and heavier than a baseball!
There have to be two batsmen out in the middle, so when the 10th wicket falls the innings ends, because the remaining batsman has no partner.
The 62 (53) = 62 runs off 53 balls faced which = strike rate = 62X100÷53=116.98 [62 = runs scored; x100 = 100 balls; ÷53 = balls faced] for Broom @4:42.
11 total players as only 10 can get out. T 20 is the shortest game = 1 innings each of max 20 overs of 6 legal balls, one day matches = 1 innings each of either max 40 or 50 [or other number depending on competition rules] overs of 6 legal balls, 4 day games [unlimted overs with each side getting max 2 innings] and test matches = 5 day games of max 2 innings unlimited overs.
In Australia they do the numbers the other way round. Rest of the world = 164 for 7 wickets, Australia = 7 wickets for 164 runs.
Good on ya guys for trying to open your mind to the game 🏏
cricket is arithmatic
muller and duffy would be the 2 remaining batsmen who would have come into the game when the 8th and 9th wickets were taken
There are 11 players in a team. Since there always have to be two batsmen on the field, once number 10 is out, number 11 can't stay on by himself, so that innings is finished. Bowling is s specialist skill, so there will only be a few bowlers on a team. Some will be fast bowlers who basically try to maim the batsmen. Others will bowl spin, which gets the batsmen out with cunning deliveries.
Know such thing as a " Home Run" if the Batsman hit the ball over the the Boundary Six runs are added to the Score , if he hit the ball along the ground or it bounces on its way to the boundary it adds 4 runs to the score
There's always two players batting at anyone time. The bowling team has to take 10 wickets (10 outs) When they achieve this aim there will be one batter who remains not out but this player cant bat by themselves and the innings is now completed (11 players in a cricket team).
this years Cricket world cup is in US
T20 World cup
US and the West Indies jointly
Just wait till these blokes watch Test cricket over 5 days 🤣🤣🤣
Be quite you shrimp on the barbie eater. Y'all talk crazy, SPEAK PROPERLY. HoI Oim fahrking oistraiyan.
America is the best country in the world
🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲💪💪💪
As with softball, cricket bowlers can't bend their elbows. They can bowl underarm like softball but it is more effective to bowl overarm and to hit the ground causing the ball to change direction.
With the choice not to run on every play, the game favours batters not bowlers. Whereas runs are hard to come by in baseball, outs (wickets) are hard to come by in cricket.
My fave is Test Cricket.It lasts for 5 days.❤❤❤❤❤
There's 11 players on a team, you have to have two batsmen in at all times so once the 10th man is out the 11th man cannot play on alone.
You have usually 5 dedicated batsmen at 1-5, 5 bowlers and the wicketkeeper.
Some bowlers and wicketkeepers are actually pretty good with the bat too but usually they'll be the 6th to 11th batters unless they're exceptional all-rounders.
You should watch a match with Australia and England.Awesome.
Given the 7 wickets, there is a very good chance that the batsmen at the wicket (Chu and McKenzie) are non specialist batsmen (everybody bats no DH), some bowlers are competent batsmen and some are awful, in this form of the game bowlers who are incompetent batsmen, test cricket bowlers who are incompetent batsmen is still fairly common.
One batsman can bat straight thru and if someone does then his team will probably win, it gives stability to the innings and means one of them is always settled and familiar with the conditions of the pitch. The two "at bat" batsmen are totally independent of each other, except in that they are working together for the good of the team, mostly
Cricket is a thinking man's game so it'll never take off in America. I hope I'm wrong as it truly is the best team sport.
Don't judge baseball if you know nothing about it. The full official rules of baseball are longer than the Laws of cricket and go into mind-boggling minutiae.
@@kingspeechless1607 Please point out my judgement of baseball.
Well done USA in cricket world cup
I watch NFL the first time and figured out the rules .
I am a cricket tragic...I LOVE IT SO MUCH❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
A batsman is replaced once he's put out. Then the next batsman in the order comes in, but the other batsman who wasn't out on the last play continues till HE's put out. Eleven batsmen, ten outs, because the "last man standing" cannot bat alone.
11 total players, but you can't bat on your own you need 2 batters in the middle. And yes as you get down the batting order the players tend to be less skilled batsmen because they are often bowlers.
This video didn’t explain you get the batting team out.
There are 10 ways to get out in cricket, five of which are common. You have only seen one way in this video; caught. You need to see bowled, run out, lbw (leg before wicket) and stumped.
The " Bowler" not " pitcher" " Bowls" Six times to make one " over"
A 6 is nowhere close to what a home run means except that it goes over the boundary before bouncing first.
Please for the love of all that is sensible - if you really want to learn watch a video called "The Rules of Cricket - EXPLAINED!" on the Ninh Ly channel. It's short, comprehensive and simple without any confusing switching of terminology.
This video, that starts with the line "I'm still learning the game.." is not the best way to learn.
We call them "The Laws of Cricket"...
Watch Aussie rules football it will blow your mind and is so much fun.
Welcome to the cricket World 🌎
Generally the first 6 or 7 batsmen are good batters, the last few get worse and worse as they are predominately bowlers ( or pitchers ) worst batsmen last for example.
There are two inning games that last for 5 days.....
Yes, you have to WORK to learn the laws of Cricket.
Hey when are you guys are going to do more cricket video reactions on cricket sports. Guys its been three months and we havent heard anything from you about any new cricket videos.
Someone who doesn’t get cricket trying to explain cricket to others is hilarious. If I compare what the video says compared to what I know about cricket (which isn’t inconsiderable) and it’s basically jibberish
Now sit and watch a T20 game from start to finish - ball by ball. Get Pizza and a few beers sit back and waste a few hours.
Cricket ❤❤❤
Nihm explains "The rules of Cricket", "Cricket explained for baseball fans" and Stephen Fry's "The laws of Cricket" together will give you a pretty good grounding in the game. However, none of these videos deal with the fielding positions and their ideosyncratic names. For that you'll need to watch a few games from around the world and figure them out for yourselves.
Just a tip guys, press space bar to pause videos on youtube.
Learn about the LBW (Leg before wicket) law 😊😅
Cricket Explained for Baseball Fans from Sports Explained, is a much better video to understand the concept of the game.
Always two batsmen at opposite ends, and yes it's not unheard of for the number1 opening batsman to be the last man standing, as one batsman can't go it alone. One thing he didn't make clear is, after each 6ball over a different bowler attacks the other wicket at the other end, 6more balls and the first bowler is back attacking the original wicket, so a high scoring batsman will try to make sure he finishes an over at the end that will receive the next over. T20 is limited to 20 overs each, and each bowler is only allowed to bowl 4 overs. Next up is ODI (one day international) limited to 50 overs, with each bowler restricted to 10 overs each Top tier is unlimited overs cricket, where scores can be 500, 600 or 700+ and it's not unusual for an individual batsman to score 200 runs on his own, and several have scored more than 300.In unlimited each team bats twice, the game can last for 5 days, if the last batting side are still hanging on at the end, but are hundreds of runs behind, if the time runs out it's a draw.
Never forget cricket is a tough game bowlers aim 900mph plus balls at head and body so batsman have died and many broken bones and more massive bruises.
900mph? Do you mean 90? I've watched a lot of fast bowlers but none that fast!
11 players per team. 2 batsmen start. If all ten wickets fall the inings is over because a batsnan cannot bat alone. You need a partner.
i think when people are explaining cricket to americans mixing the term bowler and pitcher is a huge problem. A pitcher throws a ball from a fixed position. a bowler bowls without elbow articulation off a runup. bending your arm is chucking, and is verboten. you can have a runup which is a couple of steps, or someone sprinting from the other side of the field.
6 balls to an over, not counting no balls, which are illegal balls and have to be done again. then you change bowlers for the next over.
fielding team has 11 men on the field including bowler and keeper.
Batting team has 2 men on at a time.
T20 is not real cricket, its just a slog fest with no strategy. 20 overs each side. bowlers limited to 4 overs each.
one day cricket, is 50 overs each side. bowlers limited to 10 overs each.
first class cricket, 2 innings each side, so to win you have to dismiss 20 players. time limited to 5 days for international matches, often called test matches. before time limits the longest test match was 9 days.
having watched some american baseball on youtube the biggest difference to me is the behavior of the players and umpire. other differences are things like, if the ball goes out of the fence in cricket it is returned. the crowd doesn't keep it. the wear on the ball is part of the strategy of the game. the keeper is the only person catching with gloves, everyone else does it barehanded.
Some people still call batters "batsmen", while the other positions, bowler, fielder, keeper have never had a gender tag. Even commentators do this, which is particularly ignorant when it's a women's match they're covering.
There so much more
Wow, doing a Super Smash game from here in New Zealand.
Damaging off Scott Kuggeleijn (pronounced Cougar Line). Just put that in there so if he comes up on your videos again, you know how to pronounce it.
Otago Volts vs Northern Brave. So essentially the Dunedin/Queenstown area of New Zealand vs the upper half of the North Island except Auckland (who represent on their own as the Auckland Aces).
You should watch different types of bowling in cricket.🎉
Pitcher( bowling at 100mph and that ball is as hard as brick
This is an interesting and informative video and would have been a very good second video after a basic 'how to play cricket' video. As we know you guys started out with an unhelpful first video, anyway you are back on track and should keep going. I'm sure you know by now that the 2024 T20 Cricket World Cup is being staged jointly by tihe USA and the West Indies. The first game, I believe, is the USA against Canada on June 1st. You are in a tough group that includes India, Pakistan, Ireland and Canada.
Ray Vaughn spits like a 🦙 Llama on (Freestyle #118 LA Leakers Ray Vaughn).. This entire freestyle is off the 📈 charts.. Barzzz after Barzzz after Barzzz is the only thing you'll 👂 hear coming thru your 🎧 headphones. Ray Vaughn ☠️ murders the 🎤 mic and has more Barzzz than a Super Maximum Prison. Your 🧠 brain will think it's 🔐 locked inside a jail cell because of so many Barzzz.. Definitely put this 🎥 video at the top of your reaction 📋 list and keep it on your 📡 radar. Don't 💤😴 sleep on (Freestyle #118 LA Leakers Ray Vaughn) .. I promise you won't regret it. ✌️ Peace.....
America played cricket long before baseball was an event and in fact won the first official international match between America and Canada , then a long gap until today where America beat Canada and a few days ago beat Pakistan [one of the best teams] in the cricket world cup during the cricket world cup now being held in America. 5 day cricket is another story. Anyway America may not win the world cup [then it could] but take England who also invented football [soccer] has only won the football world cup the one time in 1966 , though other football countries have won it a number of times each.
And it was too hard so they invented baseball from rounders
I might be pedantic, but Cricket has no rules, it has Laws.
You are not being pedantic. Cricket has Laws not Rules.
You cant learn a new sport from watching highlight videos. The only way you learn cricket is by absorption. Watch a classic world cup final from start to finish, even better follow a Test match (5 days). Its such a subtle game with so many nuances you need to hear the expert commentary and encounter a whole new vocabulary. I think there are something like 95 different possible fielding positions all known by different, obscure names like 'Silly Mid Off' and 'Fine Leg'. Having said all that, to enjoy cricket one needs the same patience with long interludes of not much happening that you do watching baseball games. But as a comparison cricket especially the shorter form (1 day or even 20 overs each) offers more joined-up action, just my opinion.
There are lot more in cricket 😅
Caps indoors?
Watch couple of matches you will understand
There's more than one comment saying that "Cricket Explained For Baseball Fans" is a way better introduction, but in my opinion it's still much, much too detailed and technical. You can watch cricket for months, and you'll never hear the term "popping crease". You'll never understand cricket from a video like that. The best way is to learn in the backyard with a stick, a tennis ball, and an oil drum for a wicket-then build up the technicalities from there. find a friend who already knows cricket to get you started! If you must have cricket explained to you in a video, the very same Jomboy has another one that does a better job. It's here: ruclips.net/video/qmq3mz7nyrk/видео.html
How do yanks know nothing about the biggest sport on earth after football?????
Literally played by the ENTIRE WORLD.
Not just America.
So they are starting with a 20/20 match?
Cricket is ‘way simpler’ than Baseball.
That may qualify as the most incorrect comment I have ever heard!
When you say ‘dude’ what do you mean?
Are you going to watch the cricket world cup? Its being held in the USA and caribbean right now. USA are doing well
🎉
This is not a great video to understand cricket.
1. There are two teams of 11 players each.
2. One team "BATs", the second team "Fields".
3. There are two main versions of Cricket games. "Limited Over Cricket" and "Test Matches".
4. Limited Over Cricket is again of two types: "T20" and "50 Over". The reason they are called limited over cricket is because OVERs are limited.
5. What is an OVER? An Over is a collection of 6 pitches (called Balls in Cricket) that one pitcher (called Bowler in Cricket).
6. At one time, one bowler can throw only one OVER. This means 6 pitches at a time. Then the bowler changes.
7. Remember, there are two teams. One BATs, the other BOWLs. The batting team sends two BATTERs to bat, they are called OPENERs.
8. The goal of the FIELDING team is to get all the batsmen of the BATTING team OUT.
9. Remember, only two BATSMAN are in the FIELD playing at any given time. This means The Bowler has to get atleast ONE of them OUT so that the next one can come in.
10. Once a batsman is out, he is done. He made his RUNs and that is that. He cannot return, he is OUT.
11. A new batsman comes in and CONTINUES the game. Now this batting team has lost 1 WICKET, 9 more to go.
12. So the GOAL of the FIELDING team is to restrict the BATTING team to as less runs as possible, the best way to do that is to BOWL all of them (all 10) OUT.
13. Sometimes the FIELDING team's quota of OVERs is done (say 50 overs) but all the BATSMEN were not bowled out. Does not matter, the quota of overs is finished, their INNINGs comes to an end. Now it is the FIELDING team's turn to BAT. Now, they become the BATTING team, and the other team becomes the FIELDING team.
14. The goal of the 2nd team is to CHASE down the runs compiled by the first team, if they do that, they win, if they don't they lose, regardless of how many wickets they lost.
Note: 1 over = 6 bowls (6 pitches). Hence 50 Over CRICKET match is also called an ODI (One Day Cricket). 50 Overs means 300 balls. 50 x 6 = 300 pitches.
Why is it called One Day Cricket: Because it takes almost 1/2 day to bowl 50 overs. 1/2 a day per side is one full day of cricket. Almost 7 or 8 hour game.
As the games are too long, Cricket has evolved into a shorter version of ODI called T20 in which only 20 OVERs (20 x 6 = 120 balls) per side are thrown. Rest remains the same.
Finally, Test Cricket is 5 days, thats another story but is the original version of the game. Considered to be a test of mettle and technique given the length of the game - 5 days. It is also called unlimited over cricket.
I would love to hear your opinion on one of Nicki Minaj's old track GETTING PAID. 🙏
A 6 is not a home run??
You guys need to contact me. I understand baseball well and i can explain it in such a way that u will understand it easily.
Does.baseball.break
For.lunch.and.tea.or.coffee
REACT TO XG- WOKE UP it’s new comeback
USA beat Bangladesh recently last 2 T20 please check and reply on that
this explanation is actually wrong in a few aspects