I’m a 49 year old Aussie. I’ve been a cricket tragic my whole life. I’ve seen some amazing performances. This one was up there with the best individual performances combined with an almost impossible comeback that I’ve seen in my lifetime. Absolutely incredible.
Remember watching it live on tele thinking, i'll go to bed when Maxwell gets out, as i thought it was 0.0001% possible. Ended up best night/early morning ever.
Duuude I was so shattered that day from whatever I'd been doing that I went to bed around 3am thinking "I love Maxwell, and like Murphy's law he'll probably do something crazy, but I can't risk staying up if it all falls apart". Needless to say I regretted going to bed. Same thing happened 80 something minute at the 2006 Fifa world cup with the socceroos v Japan. I think the trick is I go to bed while everyone else watches 😫
As an Englishman i am honestly so envious of what aussie cricket has had over the last 10 years...i mean i would not want to face ANY of your front line seamers, or spinners. They just know how to tighten a screw...
Hitting 200 is a rare event itself.. only a handful people have done it in history…that too while chasing a score 7 down was probably the best ODI innings played by any batsman in 200 years of cricket history.. totally clutch … i was watching it live and could not believe what I was watching .. madness.. as an indian cricket fan i must say only aussies have this kind of winning DNA
Oh I’d second that. The “Sunmer of Mitch” was the scariest sustained series of intimidating and frighteningly fast bowling I’ve ever witnessed. That series saw Jonathan Trott retire and seek counselling and Graeme Swann also retired from memory. The rest of the team admitted that they were absolutely shit scared. Devastating stuff.
@@GeoffTheChefOfficial Off the top of my head, I believe 5 English players never played international cricket after that series. Trott, Smith,Carberry, Panesar and Tremlett.
I remember watching this, laughing thinking Australia were going to get spanked (i'm English) when Maxwell had the Dr's on treating his cramp...and he did this. Unbelievable cricket, could only applaud.
i'm Australian and let me tell you, the past 18-24 months have been wildddd from our cricket team. Some of our best batsmen have been going through some form slumps...and just when it seems like we are going to get rolled...someone clutches up. Glenn Maxwell here, Pat Cummins who is mostly a bowler has batted superbly on a few occasions, Travis Head in the World Test Championship match. Mitchell Marsh and Cameron Green recently, like it doesn't mask the fact that are batters at the moment are going through a rough patch, but somehow we just always find a way to win.
Literally the Aussie batters need to stand like....their lower order these days have contributed more than upper order ....but hey as the saying goes Australia..is Australia any day of the week
@@cicjose6016 West Indies deserved it that day. Did you see Shamar Joseph bowl 140+ with a broken toe? Unbelievable stuff. That being said Australia are knockout heroes. Even if they play piss poor in group games/bilaterals, they still find ways to win in clutch situations which is what eventually counts.
There are three moments I love most in Aussie cricket. Gilly fastest test match century in the 2006 Ashes in Perth Peter Siddles' birthday Hattrick at the SCG And this absolute monster of an innings haha
Siddle's hat-trick was at the Gabba but yeah, that's a good list. So many good moments for Australia in the last 25 or so years since I've been watching cricket.
As a proud Englishman I can safely say that this is the greatest innings that I've ever seen, and there have been some good ones over the years. Outrageous stuff.
Glenn was actually on the pickle juice during this innings. What with the stifling heat and being in a subpar condition to begin with, he was just that cramped up 😅Kids who take up cricket get it drilled into them from the start how integral proper footwork is to batting, but then Glenn goes and does something like this... absolutely one of a kind.
We were on a family trip while the tournament was on. On this day we were somewhere in the middle of the Atlantic, on a cruise from Rome to Florida. I forgot it was on and when I got to the sports bar we were down 7 with not many runs on the board. Ah well, you can't win them all I thought. I'll grab a drink and see how it goes. It would have been hilarious to see one single aussie sitting and watching the cricket in the middle of the day on a cruise ship full of mostly Americans. Hell of a knock. One of the greatest individual performances I've seen.
I always remember when Matthew Hayden broke Brian Lara's world record of 375 (Hayden scored 380 vs Zimbabwe), an interviewer asked Lara what he thought, he said "its OK, its just on loan" 6 months later Lara scores 400 against England and gets his record back
bro, he couldnt walk or use his feet whatsoever for the last 70 runs he scored. Yet he showed why he was one of the most talented players of this generation despite never really living up to the hype. The power he could generate just from his wrists without using his legs is incredible. one of the most frustrating players ive ever seen in terms of consistency but when he gets going, hes one of the very few who could single handedly change the course of a match. no wonder hes called "THE BIG SHOW".
Yeah ur right has a century against us in the wtc final and he has a century at the odi final and bro hit 73 runs in a match in T20 and almost crushed our dreams in T20 aswell😅
I was watching this live, and we Aussies thought we were done, but that we might see Maxi do something neat and make the loss a little more respectable, and then this happened. Asa side note, Cummins has shown a talent for hanging on to get us unlikely victories, aside from this match he has stuck it out and been largely responsible for getting us home in Test matches on three different occasions. The last time was just yesterday against New Zealand.
77 from 76 was pretty tough 20 or more years ago. With the growing popularity of T20 Cricket, it's a exactly where you would want to be. There or there about. The biggest threat that could've stopped the Aussies from winning the game was the 3 remaining wickets. Nice reaction. Your Cricket is knowledge is getting better. 😎
The Leg before wicket is a type of dismissal in all forms of cricket and probably one of the most complicated ones. As the name suggests, when a batsman misses or leaves a ball and if the ball goes onto hit him on any body part in front of the stumps (most commonly the knee high pad or shoes on the leg) within a hitting trajectory, the bowling team appeals and the umpire decides whether the appeal is approved( out-usually signalled by raising the closed fist with a raised index finger) or dismissed (not out- commonly by saying not out or a dismissive nod of the head). The decision is made in a matter of seconds and is based on 4 main factors. 1. The ball pitched outside the batsman's off stump or in line with the stumps, 2. The impact was in line with the stumps , 3. The bowl did not come in contact with the glove (holding the bat) or the bat before hitting the body, 4. The actual ball, based on the turn or movement straight on, would've hit the stumps. The bowler and batsman are allowed to contest a review towards the third umpire for video and technical analysis if he/ she thinks the decision was wrong on the field (within 15 seconds of the actual umpire's decision) with a specific hand gesture. The third umpire upstairs analyses the same on a screen using video and tech to analyse the above mentioned parameters and dismiss or approve the appeal which is inturn re signalled by the umpire in the middle. Yeah, its not easy for a beginner. Hope it helps at some point. 🙌🏼
Not to mention, the first ball he faced was millimetres away from getting him out, and giving the bowler a historic hat-trick. How close the game was from ending up totally different.
I’m Aussie and I truly believe if this innings had have come from any other country and I would have applauded just as hard. The difference would have been the missing tear in the eye. Secondly I’m am choc full of envy for all those folks that were at that ground to whiteness the feat. Bravo Maxi 👏👏👏
I was watching this game live at my friend's house. He was rooting for Australia, and I was there to see his reaction cuz at that point I knew Australia gonna lose. He knew it too, the only hope was Maxwell. But the run was too much for him to score alone. Lucky me, Maxwell did a miracle, scored almost all runs by himself and I got to witness this historic inning with my friends.
I Thoroughly enjoyed this reaction Luke. I am a hug fan of Glen Maxwell. His also has taken many wickets in record times too....His 20/20 and One Day International games are worth a look see to. Hi from Australia
Now u witness the grit and determination of Aussies to win..No wonder they have 6 world cups..Our arch rivals but we have a lot of respect for them..Btw,cummins is their captain and is probably the greatest cricketer at this moment coz he has won every trophy possible..He is also quite valuable as a batsman..
There are 9 different modes of dismissal in cricket: *Bowled* *Caught* *LBW* *Run out* *Stumped* *Hit wicket* (breaking your wicket while playing a shot) *Hit the ball twice* (only out if you attempt to score a run after the second hit) *Timed out* (taking too long to come out to bat after the previous wicket falls) *Obstructed the field* (getting in the way of the fielding team when they're trying to field the ball or in the way of the ball when they throw it) “Handled the ball" used to be separate mode of dismissal, but it's now covered under the "Obstructed the field" rule.
well said mate..as a cricket guy im still in awe of Maxwell... im not sure we as oz realise how incredible he was..it's almost inspired me to start my own channel. Love the USA and how you try to understand one of the greatest games in the world
You should also check out Jason Gillespie's 201. He's a bowler, so he's not even in the team for his batting ability, and usually bats pretty low in the order, but in a test match, if a team loses a wicket towards the end of the day, they'll sometimes send in a lower order batsman as a "night watchman", so the next batsman doesn't have to go in for a few overs, and then start again in the morning. Well a night watchman isn't usually expected to last that long, and certainly not expected to score a century, never mind a double century. It's a long innings, but thoroughly worth the watch. Also his batting partnership with Glenn McGrath (also a bowler, and even less recognised for his batting than Gillespie is), where both of them scored their first ever half century, is definitely worth watching.
I was supporting underdog Afghanistan that match and was very happy to see World champions losing with them as it is booring for me to see same team winning world cup again and again. But Maxwell ruined everything😭
So when it comes to need x amount of runs in y amount of balls we count it in overs most the time & this is generally how it's viewed Test Matches: 2 Runs per over - Easy 3 Runs per over - Average 4 Runs per over - good pace 5 Runs per over - fast now for ODIS (50 Overs) & T20s i'll use Required Run Rates so how many runs you need per over to win ODIs 4.50 to 5.50 Required Run Rate is pretty slow 5.50 to 6.50 Required Run Rate is pretty standard 6.50 to 7.50 RRR is mangable 7.50 to 8.50 RRR is alarm bells 9+ is panic T20s 6 to 7 RRR is pretty standard 7 to 8 Still not bad odds 8 to 9 manageable 9 to 10 is alarm bells 12 + is panic When you're the chasing team though once you get to lets say the last 10 overs of an ODI or the last few overs in a T20 game it all gets thrown out the window & Required Run Rates that have climbed over the game to 18 have been chased. Some examples of Run Rates at points in a game ODIS: Starting out chasing 8 Per Over is a bit of pressure At the half way (25 over mark) chasing 9 per over is sort of alarm bells T20s Starting off anything below 9 is manageable Half way anything below 10 is manageable above 12 you panic abit Final few overs it doesn't matter because you're just going to swing but anything below 15 is usually on the cards (Best i've seen was 26 runs off the last over)
He said it was the last over, which it ended up being, but there was actually 4 overs left of possible balls to get the runs required. At the start of the over they needed 23 off 24 balls, maxy did in 6
This video didn’t really capture how epic Cummins was. He was essentially blocking for 6 balls and then Maxi would get 12 off the next 6 as he couldn’t run. It was a circus.
in this instance, needing 77 off 76 isn't where the difficulty lies, it's being 7 wickets down while trying to chase it down that's the pressure point.
Just watch the World Cup starting June 2nd 2024 USA vs CANADA.... USA hosting with West Indies. Watch the games and listen to the commentary and you will quickly learn the game. A game of patience and excitement unrivaled....Playing is more fun than watching. Try it...You don't have to be fit.... most guys I know play with a beer in one hand.... Have fun.
The Cummins guy himself could bat very well, just that everyone after him was trash and he didn't want Maxwell to come under pressure in case he got out. Cummins is the Australian captain so he has the responsibility to make sure his team wins.
at 02:35 - There are a BUNCH of different ways to be out in Cricket, most explained vids only touch the baiscs - Caught, Bowled, LBW, Stumped and run out. Batters can also be timed out by taking too long to get to the crease on the loss of the previous wicket, out by handling the ball, obstruction, hittting the ball twice and others. But they are incredibly rare.
You can watch cricket for another 50 years and you will never see anything like that again. The most boss cricket innings of all time. No matter what your criteria. Just the perfect instance of the right guy and the right moment happening at the right time. And the Afghans are no slouch. Amazing stuff.
The 200 was awesome, but i think we should cummings performance an applause too. All he was trying to do was giving maxwell the strike at all times, it was the only way to win as he is mainly a bowler and not a batter so much!
@11:15 it wasn't the final over, Maxwell ended the game early with a few overs to spare. so technically it was the final over, but the game could have continued if there were still more runs needed to get to the target score.
Maxi was given out LBW (leg before wicket) which means the ball hit him on the legs/pads without touching the bat - ie: Leg Before Wicket... meaning if it did not hit his leg it would hit the wickets.. The umpire made a mistake in this instance as the ball would not have hit the wickets - but gone over the top of them.
5:07 a run a ball is not a lot nowadays in the modern game. It used to be a big deal but now scoring at 10 runs per over is pretty standard hitting. If you get to the final over and need like 14 runs or less, many teams would think they are a chance. There was an IPL game recently where they needed 28 runs from the last 5 balls of the game and the batsman hit 5x 6's to win the game - batters really have so many big scoring tools in the kit nowadays from the advent of T20 it's incredible.
Hey man, love the video. Glad you're getting into this wonderful sport. I wanted to answer some of your questions and clear the confusion 2:13 - What happened was an appeal for "LBW" (Leg before wicket) and yes this is one of the ways that a batter can be given out. If you block the ball with your legs (and not the bat) and the umpire (referee) believes that the ball was going to go on and hit the stumps (the three poles behind the batter), then he is out. However, in the modern game each team gets 2 TV reviews, in case they think that the decision from the umpire is wrong. What happens then is, they use some methods like ball tracking technology and different camera angles to review a decision. In this case, the umpire's original decision was reversed, so Maxwell got to stay on. 5:00 - So every time the bowler throws the ball in, that's one ball. So yes, they needed 77 runs from 76 balls at that stage. Those odds are actually pretty good (especially in this format of the game, will cover later). This is because as you know one ball can go for a 6 or a 4, or 1,2,3 - if the batters can run across 1,2 or 3 times before the ball is retrieved and thrown back. Now here's why in this game, the 77 from 76 was harder to get. This is because Australia only have 3 "wickets" left - basically 3 more times that a batter can get out. Maxwell is the only one who can bat, the rest are bowlers in the team, so their ability to sensibly hit the ball around is questionable. Also at this point Maxwell has no legs. So normally 77 of 76 are good odds, but it was a lot harder in this scenario and required Maxwell to just whack it around and hope he doesn't get out. 10:55 - So one "over" is made up of 6 balls. A bowler comes on and he can deliver the ball six times. In this format of the game that we're watching (It's called an ODI - one day international), there are 50 overs a side. So 50 times, a bowler comes in and bowls a delivery 6 times. This means that in total each side get 300 balls to score from. (50*6 = 300). So Afghanistan scored 291 in their 50 overs and so the target for Australia was 292 in their 50 overs. It is important to note that the other limiting factor for a batting team is the number of wickets. A team has 11 people, 2 people need to be out there at a time, so the max times a batter can get out in a team is 10 times. So, Australia at point are 7 down already (all their top batters are gone, and Maxi is still surviving). Saying that this was the "Final Over" can be a little misleading. It ended up being the final over cause Maxwell finished the match by scoring the required runs, however Australia did have 3 more overs after this, had they needed it. Notice it says 46.1 (that means 46 overs and 1 ball have been bowled). This is one of the greatest individual performances in the history of the game, it was unbelievable watching as a fan. Australia ended up winning the World Cup, and they are statistically the best team in the sport, they've won 6 out of the 13 world cups played. INSANE Record! Any more questions about the game give me a buzz. I am a passionate fan. If you haven't already - check out the 2019 world cup final between England and New Zealand. It was an absolute nail-biter. You could compare it the 2022 Fifa world cup final. Final thoughts - compared to a lot of other sports, cricket is very strategic. The batters, bowlers and fielders have to constantly think and take calculated risks. It's the sport where the captain and his strategy has a lot of impact on whether a game will be won or lost because you are constantly trying to out-think and out-play the other team. It's like chess on a field.
There are nine ways to be given out, and one way that a batter can decide to be out. The most common ways: caught, bowled, LBW, run out, stumped. The uncommon ways: hit wicket, hit ball twice, obstructing the field, timed out. The batter can also retire himself out at any time. Very rare at the top levels. There was until 2017 also a law for out "handled the ball". This has now been included under the "obstructing the field" law.
Correct! Although when you retire (most commonly hurt) you're not actually hurt. You can bat again (once another batsman gets out) if you feel able to.
@@patrickguretti2300 That's right. I didn't include it in the "outs" because "retired hurt" is not out and is recorded on the records as "retired not out". However, you can retire yourself out, effectively declaring your own batting innings over, and you cannot return.
so that form of getting out were trying to describe, is called Leg Before Wicket (AKA: LBW). Its when the ball hits the batter's leg (before the bat) and the ball is projected to have hit the stump had the ball not hit the batter's leg and continued on its unimpeded trajectory.
there's 11 ways to get out in cricket. Bowled: The bowler hits the stumps and dislodges the bails. Caught: A fielder catches the ball hit by the batter before it bounces. LBW (leg before wicket): The umpire decides that the batter was in the way of the ball and would have hit it if they had not been there. Stumped: The wicketkeeper catches the ball before it bounces after the batter misses it or steps out of their crease. Hit wicket: The batter hits their stumps with their body or bat. Run out: A fielder throws the ball at the stumps and dislodges the bails before the batter enters their crease. Timed out: The batter does not reach the crease within three minutes of being called upon to bat. Handled the ball: The batter touches the ball with their hand, except when it is necessary to prevent an injury. Obstructing the field: The batter intentionally prevents a fielder from catching the ball. Hit the ball twice: The batter hits the ball twice in a row. Retired out: The batter chooses to leave the field without being dismissed.
There's actually 11 ways to get out: - bowled - caught - stumped - run out - leg before wicket - hit wicket - Mankaded out (this is a form of run out where the bowler gets the non striking batsman out for taking too much of a lead before the delivery is bowled. Usually the bowler warns the batsman not to do it. First done by a in Indian bowler Vinoo Mankad.) - handling the ball (batsman touches the ball) - hitting the ball twice (hits a still moving ball with his bat a second time.) - interfering with the field (moves in a way to block a throw from hitting the stumps) - timed out (new batsman does not take his guard at the crease within five minutes of the last batsman going out.) The last four are kind of considered not in the spirit of the play and are rarely, if ever appealed. One notable exception was a Sri Lankan batsman earning the dubious distinction of being the first ever batsman to be timed out. There was an uproar in cricketing circles about how that was not in the spirit of the game, especially when the batsman had faulty equipment (his helmet.)
Not to be pedantic, but a Mankad is just a run out. Names so after the guy who famously did it years ago. Isn’t considered gentlemanly but it’s in the rules.
Maxwell's game that day was out of this world. He sounded like an alien to the cricket fans that day. It's not a one man show usually in cricket. But it happened so that day that 7 top order batsmen got out and maxwell was all alone with tail enders who can hardly score runs as their primary skill is to bowl and batting is just a supportive role they play in the game. Cummins stood the ground that day rotating the strike to maxi. His effort is commedable too. Because had he got out that day, the last two players cannot even hold the bat properly. Cummins just cannot hit big shots and he is not that good technically with the bat as he is basically a bowler but he stood the ground. But the last two players who were to come if anyone had got out cannot even hold the bat properly. You watch a few more games. You will start understanding how the players are structured in the batting line up.
If you wish to hear, here is how it is. There will normally be 5-7 specialist batsmen and 5-6 specialist bowlers. Some of the batsmen can bowl and some of the bowlers can bat relatively well. 1. When the innings starts, ball will be new. This new ball when pitches on the pitch during the bowling, it swings. So usually the opening batsmen are good with such new balls. 2. Those who come to bat after 1/2 wickets down, to 4 wickets down are specialist team players who stand the ground and build the innings to play for next 20-30-40 overs in a 50 over game. They are usually not big hitters of the ball but are technically very sound batsmen. 3. Usually those who come after 5-7 wickets are big hitters again as there is high probability that they come to the ground after 35/40 overs and the team needs quickest runs at that point in time. 4. Next set of players usually who come after 7 wickets are specialist bowlers in the team but are there to support scoring the runs. Now bowling, 1. Team captain decides the bowling structure based on the kind of pitch. If the pitch looks bouncy then he usually picks 3 fast bowlers and of the pitch is slow then he usually picks 2-3 spinners. 2. When the ball is new spinners usually dont bowl as the ball does not spin consistently. Usually fast bowlers bowl for the first 10 overs in the match. 3. Usually by the end of 10 overs, ball starts getting old and spinners can grip the ball well, there comes spin bowling. And when the ball gets too old like over 25-30 overs, the ball can reverse swing with the fast bowlers. When the intensity of swing or spin is more, the more difficult it is for the batsman to bat as he needs to make near instinctive judgement and also read the bowler very carefully.
And yesterday captain Cummins helped bat Australia to another victory, partnering with Carey to score the last 61 runs required to beat New Zealand in the second test of their tour.
Fair comparison with Kobe and basketball, but there's one HUGE difference - in cricket, the batsman is one ball away from ending his involvement in the game. It's a bit like life - you usually only get one chance. Also, you can play well and still get out. Whereas in basketball the only way to finish the game early is either injury, replaced, or be ejected.
Ways to get 'out' in cricket 1) Clean bowled out 2) Caught out (ball in the air, doesn't hit the deck) 3) Run out 4) LBW (Leg Before Wicket) Blocking stumps with no bat involvement 5) Stumped out (Wicket keeper catches the ball and breaks the stumps if you're out of your crease)
One thing to remember though in looking at 'great batsmen' is that in these limited over games (ODI and T20) the rules are amended so as to make it easier to bat .... eg restrictions on where the fielding team can put their men, restrictions on where the bowlers can bowl the ball as in much stricter definition of wides, restrictions on how many overs a bowler can bowl ( in T20 bowlers are limited to 4 overs or 26 balls. You can have the greatest bowler in the world but he can only bowl 26 balls). Basically these formats are designed to make it easy for batsmen to score runs because the powers that be think that's what the TV audience wants to see. Test and First Class cricket is where you get a fair game between bat and ball and it's where the 'great' batsmen make their name and go down in history.
you having said all that is is still one of the best inning ever and is probably equivalent to a triple century in test cricket or even better, plus there are down sides that you neglected to mention , such as a limited about of balls to score off and the ball is never as old as a test cricket ball which makes the ball harder to hit as well, in sixty plus years of cricket having watched some of the best batsmen ever from Chappel ,to Barry Richards Vivian Richards, Sachin Tendulka, Virat Kohle to mention a few I have never seen better i think you are severely under rating the performance. your main point is mute because all the greatest batsmen get the same conditions and no one else has even come close and on one leg as well so what the fuck are you saying.
I couldn't be bothered reading if someone has explained this, so if they have, I apologise. If the ball hits you on the leg in front of the wicket, you can be given out LBW, Leg Before Wicket. Maxwell's LBW was overturned because it showed the ball was missing the stumps. Before all this technology, that was out "plumb LBW".
There are actually 10 ways you can be given 'out' although a few of them are not realistically a threat. 1. Bowled 2. Caught 3. LBW 4. Stumped 5. Run Out 6. Hit Wicket 7. Handling the Ball 8. Obstruction 9. Timed Out 10. Hitting the Ball Twice 6 through 10 happen rarely, with 6 & 7 happening on rare occasion, 8, slightly more rarely and the others almost unheard of. .
There are more than 5 ways to get out. Bowled, caught, and LBW are the three most common ways, but you can also be dismissed (out) by... - Run out (where the stumps are broken by the ball when attempting a run) - Stumped (where the stumps are broken by the wicket keeper after you've missed the ball and are out of your crease) - Obstructing the field (generally any deliberate attempt to stop the fielder from getting you out - getting in the way, pushing them out of the way, changing your running line to stop them having a direct throw at the stumps etc.) - Hit wicket (where part of your body or equipment breaks the stumps while making a shot or avoiding the ball) - Timed out (taking too long to get to the middle after the previous batter is dismissed) - Handling the ball (using your hand to stop the ball from hitting the stumps) - Hitting the ball twice (there is an exemption to this one, though: if you’re doing it to prevent the ball from hitting the stumps or to prevent injury)
Oh, and technically there's an 11th way - retired out. Retired out is when you sacrifice your time at bat despite not having been dismissed. This is not to be confused with retired hurt. If you're retired hurt, it means you've suffered an injury while batting and need to leave the field of play for treatment. You can return later on in the innings and continue where you left. You can't do that if you retire out.
There are officially 10 modes of dismissal in cricket: - Caught - Bowled - Leg Before Wicket (LBW) - Stumped - Run Out - Hit Wicket - Handling the Ball - Timed Out - Obstructing the Field - Hitting the Ball Twice And there's a bonus method that most people forget: - Retiring (but nor Retiring Hurt, that's different). When a batsman retires he is technically out.
Handled the Ball hasn't been a mode of dismissal since 2017. The laws folded that in with Obstructing the Field. The 10th mode of dismissal is "Retired Out"
Maxwell was given out LBW (leg before wicket) and it looked a reasonable decision by the umpire. On being referred to the third umpire the technology showed it would have gone over the wicket. The LBW law, in effect, prevents batsmen from being able to hide the wicket with their body without any risk.
Theres 10 Ways to Get out. 1. Caught 2. Bowled (Ball hits stumps) 3. LBW (Blocking ball from hitting stumps with part of the body. 4. Runout (Leaving crease and not making it back without bat grounded inside the crease) 5. Stumped (Wicket keeper taking out the stumps while your outside the crease), 6. Hit Wicket (Batter breaks stumps with his bat or body while attempting to play a shot) 7. Double Hit (Hitting the ball twice Rarest out). 8. Handling the ball (Using your hand to prevent the ball from hitting the stumps 9. Obstructing the filed 10. Timed out (taking 3 mins to be ready to bat in a test match or 2 mins in other types of matches). and of course you can retire hurt but that's not exactly an out.
Cricket is a awesome game. The Aussies are the most successful Cricket team for wins , world cup especially. They have won 6 i think. Where as every other teams have won at best 2 from other countries, some have won only 1 and teams like south Africa, new Zealand and other countries have won 0 The Aussies have basically every cricket tournament trophy that exists. You should watch Maxwell vs Netherlands , Maxwell broke the record for the fastest 100 from 40 balls i think. It was a few games before this game that you watched the highlights from
The 5 ways of being out. LBW(leg before wicket) if the ball would have hit the stumps. Caught...self explanatory Run out- as the baters are running between the wicket the ball dislodges the bails. Stumped- the batsmen is outside of the "crease" and the ball passes the bat from the bowler and the keeper takes off the bails Timed out- if the batsmen messes around (i believe its 2 and a half minutes) he given out for being slow to face the next delivery
Ways to get out (lose your wicket): The 5 common ones 1. Bowled (bowler bowls the ball, it hits the wicket) 2. Caught (batsman hits the ball in the air, fielder catches it before it bounces) 3. LBW (leg before wicket, ball was going to hit the wicket but the batsman's body was in the way) 4. Run Out (wickets are broken with the ball by the fielding team while the batsmen attempt to run and score) 5. Stumped (Batsman goes out of the safe zone as they try to hit it, they miss and wicket keeper breaks the wicket with the ball) The 5 uncommon ones 6. Hit wicket (Batsman accidentally breaks the wicket themselves as they try to hit the ball) 7. Hitting the ball twice (You can hit the ball more than once if you're doing so to protect your wicket, but if you do it trying to score, you're out) 8. Obstructing the Field (You intentionally get in the way of the ball or a fielder while the ball is in play) 9. Retired Out (Batsman willingly leaves the field, if you retire due to injury you are retired hurt, not considered out, instead and can return to play later) 10. Timed Out (You take too long to get on to the field after the previous batter is out)
Altogether there are 10 ways of being dismissed in cricket. They are caught, bowled, lbw, run out, stumped as the common ones. Additionally there is 'hit wicket (batsman hits his own wicket), 'hit the ball twice' (in one stroke other than defending his wicket), 'obstructing the field (obstructing a member of the fielding team)', timed out (new batsman taking too long to get to the wicket), and retired out.
It's not the first time that he's done it. He has destroyed better teams than Afghanistan, BUT as you saw, he could have been out before he even got to double figures. He's like that. If you want him out you have to get him early because once he hits his straps it's game over.
77 in 76 is reachable but that catch here is Maxi couldn't run between the wicket to pick up the singles and Australia did not have enough wicket in hands too. If Maxi had gotten himself out trying to hit it outta park there was no other batter left after who could make Australia win that day.
Common ways to get out in cricket are bowled, LBW (trapped in front of the stumps), caught, stumped, run out. Other less common ways to get out are hit wicket, handled the ball, double hit, obstructing the field and timed out.
I’m a 49 year old Aussie. I’ve been a cricket tragic my whole life. I’ve seen some amazing performances. This one was up there with the best individual performances combined with an almost impossible comeback that I’ve seen in my lifetime. Absolutely incredible.
i watched it from the stands at the wankhede , there were a few aussie blokes next to me , they went batshit crazy , it was surreal
@@adrishbasu1644 That would have been crazy.
Remember watching it live on tele thinking, i'll go to bed when Maxwell gets out, as i thought it was 0.0001% possible. Ended up best night/early morning ever.
Duuude I was so shattered that day from whatever I'd been doing that I went to bed around 3am thinking "I love Maxwell, and like Murphy's law he'll probably do something crazy, but I can't risk staying up if it all falls apart". Needless to say I regretted going to bed. Same thing happened 80 something minute at the 2006 Fifa world cup with the socceroos v Japan. I think the trick is I go to bed while everyone else watches 😫
As an Englishman i am honestly so envious of what aussie cricket has had over the last 10 years...i mean i would not want to face ANY of your front line seamers, or spinners. They just know how to tighten a screw...
Maxwell is built differently, like a lot of Australian cricketers.
But same attitude
😂😂😂😂
If lot of aussie like hie then how is he different
Built with what ?? Sandpaper 🤭🤭
@@saikatghosh9073nah, built with trophies
Hitting 200 is a rare event itself.. only a handful people have done it in history…that too while chasing a score 7 down was probably the best ODI innings played by any batsman in 200 years of cricket history.. totally clutch … i was watching it live and could not believe what I was watching .. madness.. as an indian cricket fan i must say only aussies have this kind of winning DNA
I went to bed @ 4/40 😂
Well, a double century isn't rare. But a double century in a World Cup is rare enough that Maxwell holds a record in that regard
@@georgelloydgonzalez a double century is rare. How many do you see per year?
@@georgelloydgonzalezbro there have only ever been 12 double tons in the history of ODIs, wdym theyre not rare 😭
A Double Century in an ODI by anyone who isn't an opener is rare. Glenn Maxwell. That is it.
Next one Mitchell Johnson 37 wickets in the 2013/2014 ashes. He literally scared the life out of an entire team over 5 matches
Oh I’d second that. The “Sunmer of Mitch” was the scariest sustained series of intimidating and frighteningly fast bowling I’ve ever witnessed. That series saw Jonathan Trott retire and seek counselling and Graeme Swann also retired from memory. The rest of the team admitted that they were absolutely shit scared. Devastating stuff.
@@GeoffTheChefOfficial I still regularly watch a video on RUclips called Mitch's Thunderbolts. Never fails to cheer me up.
@@GeoffTheChefOfficial Off the top of my head, I believe 5 English players never played international cricket after that series. Trott, Smith,Carberry, Panesar and Tremlett.
@@Skwiddd Didn’t Swann go home too?? Dunno. It was carnage though I remember that!
@@GeoffTheChefOfficial Swann did go home, but he played for England again after a break. I think he played an ODI series the next year.
Cricket has 200 plus years of history, it's rare to see records fall but Maxwell smashed records that day.
I remember watching this, laughing thinking Australia were going to get spanked (i'm English) when Maxwell had the Dr's on treating his cramp...and he did this. Unbelievable cricket, could only applaud.
i'm Australian and let me tell you, the past 18-24 months have been wildddd from our cricket team. Some of our best batsmen have been going through some form slumps...and just when it seems like we are going to get rolled...someone clutches up. Glenn Maxwell here, Pat Cummins who is mostly a bowler has batted superbly on a few occasions, Travis Head in the World Test Championship match. Mitchell Marsh and Cameron Green recently, like it doesn't mask the fact that are batters at the moment are going through a rough patch, but somehow we just always find a way to win.
Man I hate you guys so much. We’re going 3/3 in BGT later this year tho 😉
Literally the Aussie batters need to stand like....their lower order these days have contributed more than upper order ....but hey as the saying goes Australia..is Australia any day of the week
i went to bed, we're done, i woke up and wtf!!
they literally lost to the worst West Indies side of all time
@@cicjose6016 West Indies deserved it that day. Did you see Shamar Joseph bowl 140+ with a broken toe? Unbelievable stuff. That being said Australia are knockout heroes. Even if they play piss poor in group games/bilaterals, they still find ways to win in clutch situations which is what eventually counts.
As an older Australian having watched cricket my whole life, this moment (which I watched live) was easily the greatest moment ever for me.
There are three moments I love most in Aussie cricket.
Gilly fastest test match century in the 2006 Ashes in Perth
Peter Siddles' birthday Hattrick at the SCG
And this absolute monster of an innings haha
Siddle's hat-trick was at the Gabba but yeah, that's a good list. So many good moments for Australia in the last 25 or so years since I've been watching cricket.
And Gilly’s hundred at the WACA was only the fastest by an Australian. He failed by one or two balls in breaking Viv’s record at the time.
As a proud Englishman I can safely say that this is the greatest innings that I've ever seen, and there have been some good ones over the years. Outrageous stuff.
NEVER underestimate Australian skill and mongrel. They are beasts.
They truly are🥵
yes fs ✌
The greatest innings in One day international history! Just the 200 is epic enough
All hail the "Big Show"!!! A privilege to watch the best innings ever in 50 years of limited over cricket and after he'd bowled 10 overs!
Glenn was actually on the pickle juice during this innings. What with the stifling heat and being in a subpar condition to begin with, he was just that cramped up 😅Kids who take up cricket get it drilled into them from the start how integral proper footwork is to batting, but then Glenn goes and does something like this... absolutely one of a kind.
We were on a family trip while the tournament was on. On this day we were somewhere in the middle of the Atlantic, on a cruise from Rome to Florida. I forgot it was on and when I got to the sports bar we were down 7 with not many runs on the board. Ah well, you can't win them all I thought. I'll grab a drink and see how it goes. It would have been hilarious to see one single aussie sitting and watching the cricket in the middle of the day on a cruise ship full of mostly Americans.
Hell of a knock. One of the greatest individual performances I've seen.
I always remember when Matthew Hayden broke Brian Lara's world record of 375 (Hayden scored 380 vs Zimbabwe), an interviewer asked Lara what he thought, he said "its OK, its just on loan" 6 months later Lara scores 400 against England and gets his record back
yeah, and batted his team out of any chance of winning the match. what a champ !
an australian captain would never do that - ever
bro, he couldnt walk or use his feet whatsoever for the last 70 runs he scored. Yet he showed why he was one of the most talented players of this generation despite never really living up to the hype. The power he could generate just from his wrists without using his legs is incredible. one of the most frustrating players ive ever seen in terms of consistency but when he gets going, hes one of the very few who could single handedly change the course of a match. no wonder hes called "THE BIG SHOW".
We Indians are traumatized by Travis Head (Oz Batter) , who single handedly decimated our chances to win two ICC trophies
Yeah ur right has a century against us in the wtc final and he has a century at the odi final and bro hit 73 runs in a match in T20 and almost crushed our dreams in T20 aswell😅
I was watching this live, and we Aussies thought we were done, but that we might see Maxi do something neat and make the loss a little more respectable, and then this happened.
Asa side note, Cummins has shown a talent for hanging on to get us unlikely victories, aside from this match he has stuck it out and been largely responsible for getting us home in Test matches on three different occasions. The last time was just yesterday against New Zealand.
77 from 76 was pretty tough 20 or more years ago. With the growing popularity of T20 Cricket, it's a exactly where you would want to be. There or there about.
The biggest threat that could've stopped the Aussies from winning the game was the 3 remaining wickets. Nice reaction. Your Cricket is knowledge is getting better. 😎
That dude makes good cricket videos. He’s great at explaining stuff.
The Leg before wicket is a type of dismissal in all forms of cricket and probably one of the most complicated ones. As the name suggests, when a batsman misses or leaves a ball and if the ball goes onto hit him on any body part in front of the stumps (most commonly the knee high pad or shoes on the leg) within a hitting trajectory, the bowling team appeals and the umpire decides whether the appeal is approved( out-usually signalled by raising the closed fist with a raised index finger) or dismissed (not out- commonly by saying not out or a dismissive nod of the head). The decision is made in a matter of seconds and is based on 4 main factors.
1. The ball pitched outside the batsman's off stump or in line with the stumps,
2. The impact was in line with the stumps ,
3. The bowl did not come in contact with the glove (holding the bat) or the bat before hitting the body,
4. The actual ball, based on the turn or movement straight on, would've hit the stumps.
The bowler and batsman are allowed to contest a review towards the third umpire for video and technical analysis if he/ she thinks the decision was wrong on the field (within 15 seconds of the actual umpire's decision) with a specific hand gesture.
The third umpire upstairs analyses the same on a screen using video and tech to analyse the above mentioned parameters and dismiss or approve the appeal which is inturn re signalled by the umpire in the middle.
Yeah, its not easy for a beginner. Hope it helps at some point. 🙌🏼
I remember watching this live and my thoughts go from its not gonna happen to atleast he's trying to ofcourse its maxwell who does it
Not to mention, the first ball he faced was millimetres away from getting him out, and giving the bowler a historic hat-trick. How close the game was from ending up totally different.
I’m Aussie and I truly believe if this innings had have come from any other country and I would have applauded just as hard. The difference would have been the missing tear in the eye. Secondly I’m am choc full of envy for all those folks that were at that ground to whiteness the feat. Bravo Maxi 👏👏👏
To be slogging 6's without the contribution of the legs blows my mind. It's all upper body strength. When Maxi is on, he is pure entertainment.
I was watching this game live at my friend's house. He was rooting for Australia, and I was there to see his reaction cuz at that point I knew Australia gonna lose. He knew it too, the only hope was Maxwell. But the run was too much for him to score alone.
Lucky me, Maxwell did a miracle, scored almost all runs by himself and I got to witness this historic inning with my friends.
I Thoroughly enjoyed this reaction Luke. I am a hug fan of Glen Maxwell. His also has taken many wickets in record times too....His 20/20 and One Day International games are worth a look see to. Hi from Australia
Now u witness the grit and determination of Aussies to win..No wonder they have 6 world cups..Our arch rivals but we have a lot of respect for them..Btw,cummins is their captain and is probably the greatest cricketer at this moment coz he has won every trophy possible..He is also quite valuable as a batsman..
There are 9 different modes of dismissal in cricket:
*Bowled*
*Caught*
*LBW*
*Run out*
*Stumped*
*Hit wicket* (breaking your wicket while playing a shot)
*Hit the ball twice* (only out if you attempt to score a run after the second hit)
*Timed out* (taking too long to come out to bat after the previous wicket falls)
*Obstructed the field* (getting in the way of the fielding team when they're trying to field the ball or in the way of the ball when they throw it)
“Handled the ball" used to be separate mode of dismissal, but it's now covered under the "Obstructed the field" rule.
Great reaction matey. Got to love the Big Show! Thanks for checking it out
well said mate..as a cricket guy im still in awe of Maxwell... im not sure we as oz realise how incredible he was..it's almost inspired me to start my own channel. Love the USA and how you try to understand one of the greatest games in the world
You should also check out Jason Gillespie's 201. He's a bowler, so he's not even in the team for his batting ability, and usually bats pretty low in the order, but in a test match, if a team loses a wicket towards the end of the day, they'll sometimes send in a lower order batsman as a "night watchman", so the next batsman doesn't have to go in for a few overs, and then start again in the morning. Well a night watchman isn't usually expected to last that long, and certainly not expected to score a century, never mind a double century. It's a long innings, but thoroughly worth the watch.
Also his batting partnership with Glenn McGrath (also a bowler, and even less recognised for his batting than Gillespie is), where both of them scored their first ever half century, is definitely worth watching.
One of greatest odi innings ❤
I was supporting underdog Afghanistan that match and was very happy to see World champions losing with them as it is booring for me to see same team winning world cup again and again. But Maxwell ruined everything😭
So when it comes to need x amount of runs in y amount of balls we count it in overs most the time & this is generally how it's viewed
Test Matches:
2 Runs per over - Easy
3 Runs per over - Average
4 Runs per over - good pace
5 Runs per over - fast
now for ODIS (50 Overs) & T20s i'll use Required Run Rates so how many runs you need per over to win
ODIs
4.50 to 5.50 Required Run Rate is pretty slow
5.50 to 6.50 Required Run Rate is pretty standard
6.50 to 7.50 RRR is mangable
7.50 to 8.50 RRR is alarm bells
9+ is panic
T20s
6 to 7 RRR is pretty standard
7 to 8 Still not bad odds
8 to 9 manageable
9 to 10 is alarm bells
12 + is panic
When you're the chasing team though once you get to lets say the last 10 overs of an ODI or the last few overs in a T20 game it all gets thrown out the window & Required Run Rates that have climbed over the game to 18 have been chased.
Some examples of Run Rates at points in a game
ODIS:
Starting out chasing 8 Per Over is a bit of pressure
At the half way (25 over mark) chasing 9 per over is sort of alarm bells
T20s Starting off anything below 9 is manageable
Half way anything below 10 is manageable above 12 you panic abit
Final few overs it doesn't matter because you're just going to swing but anything below 15 is usually on the cards (Best i've seen was 26 runs off the last over)
He said it was the last over, which it ended up being, but there was actually 4 overs left of possible balls to get the runs required. At the start of the over they needed 23 off 24 balls, maxy did in 6
Super impressed when you recognised Rashid Kahn
This video didn’t really capture how epic Cummins was. He was essentially blocking for 6 balls and then Maxi would get 12 off the next 6 as he couldn’t run. It was a circus.
Gotta watch this game to appreciate just how good this was. Just ended up giving a casual.double century with the "stand and deliver". Magical
in this instance, needing 77 off 76 isn't where the difficulty lies, it's being 7 wickets down while trying to chase it down that's the pressure point.
I watched this match live in the stadium, it was fun! gud vid
cricket is game of strong mind
Just watch the World Cup starting June 2nd 2024 USA vs CANADA.... USA hosting with West Indies. Watch the games and listen to the commentary and you will quickly learn the game. A game of patience and excitement unrivaled....Playing is more fun than watching. Try it...You don't have to be fit.... most guys I know play with a beer in one hand.... Have fun.
The Cummins guy himself could bat very well, just that everyone after him was trash and he didn't want Maxwell to come under pressure in case he got out. Cummins is the Australian captain so he has the responsibility to make sure his team wins.
If you liked that - AB De Villiers - fastest 100 in an ODI. or pretty much any videos about Chris Gayle.
THE GREATEST ODI INNINGS EVER!!
at 02:35 - There are a BUNCH of different ways to be out in Cricket, most explained vids only touch the baiscs - Caught, Bowled, LBW, Stumped and run out. Batters can also be timed out by taking too long to get to the crease on the loss of the previous wicket, out by handling the ball, obstruction, hittting the ball twice and others. But they are incredibly rare.
You can watch cricket for another 50 years and you will never see anything like that again. The most boss cricket innings of all time. No matter what your criteria. Just the perfect instance of the right guy and the right moment happening at the right time. And the Afghans are no slouch. Amazing stuff.
The 200 was awesome, but i think we should cummings performance an applause too. All he was trying to do was giving maxwell the strike at all times, it was the only way to win as he is mainly a bowler and not a batter so much!
@11:15 it wasn't the final over, Maxwell ended the game early with a few overs to spare. so technically it was the final over, but the game could have continued if there were still more runs needed to get to the target score.
Awesome, Legendary, a true Hero, what the word Hero encompasses. If you have a heart, this performance will touch it, lift it. Aho!
No Australian man had scored a 200 in an ODI, and nobody’s had scored one in a second innings coming in in the middle order. I watched in awe
Maxi was given out LBW (leg before wicket) which means the ball hit him on the legs/pads without touching the bat - ie: Leg Before Wicket... meaning if it did not hit his leg it would hit the wickets.. The umpire made a mistake in this instance as the ball would not have hit the wickets - but gone over the top of them.
That performance is just not human. Mad respect for The Big Show.
Welcome to the big show
5:07 a run a ball is not a lot nowadays in the modern game. It used to be a big deal but now scoring at 10 runs per over is pretty standard hitting. If you get to the final over and need like 14 runs or less, many teams would think they are a chance. There was an IPL game recently where they needed 28 runs from the last 5 balls of the game and the batsman hit 5x 6's to win the game - batters really have so many big scoring tools in the kit nowadays from the advent of T20 it's incredible.
Hey man, love the video. Glad you're getting into this wonderful sport. I wanted to answer some of your questions and clear the confusion
2:13 - What happened was an appeal for "LBW" (Leg before wicket) and yes this is one of the ways that a batter can be given out. If you block the ball with your legs (and not the bat) and the umpire (referee) believes that the ball was going to go on and hit the stumps (the three poles behind the batter), then he is out. However, in the modern game each team gets 2 TV reviews, in case they think that the decision from the umpire is wrong. What happens then is, they use some methods like ball tracking technology and different camera angles to review a decision. In this case, the umpire's original decision was reversed, so Maxwell got to stay on.
5:00 - So every time the bowler throws the ball in, that's one ball. So yes, they needed 77 runs from 76 balls at that stage. Those odds are actually pretty good (especially in this format of the game, will cover later). This is because as you know one ball can go for a 6 or a 4, or 1,2,3 - if the batters can run across 1,2 or 3 times before the ball is retrieved and thrown back. Now here's why in this game, the 77 from 76 was harder to get. This is because Australia only have 3 "wickets" left - basically 3 more times that a batter can get out. Maxwell is the only one who can bat, the rest are bowlers in the team, so their ability to sensibly hit the ball around is questionable. Also at this point Maxwell has no legs. So normally 77 of 76 are good odds, but it was a lot harder in this scenario and required Maxwell to just whack it around and hope he doesn't get out.
10:55 - So one "over" is made up of 6 balls. A bowler comes on and he can deliver the ball six times. In this format of the game that we're watching (It's called an ODI - one day international), there are 50 overs a side. So 50 times, a bowler comes in and bowls a delivery 6 times.
This means that in total each side get 300 balls to score from. (50*6 = 300). So Afghanistan scored 291 in their 50 overs and so the target for Australia was 292 in their 50 overs.
It is important to note that the other limiting factor for a batting team is the number of wickets. A team has 11 people, 2 people need to be out there at a time, so the max times a batter can get out in a team is 10 times. So, Australia at point are 7 down already (all their top batters are gone, and Maxi is still surviving).
Saying that this was the "Final Over" can be a little misleading. It ended up being the final over cause Maxwell finished the match by scoring the required runs, however Australia did have 3 more overs after this, had they needed it. Notice it says 46.1 (that means 46 overs and 1 ball have been bowled).
This is one of the greatest individual performances in the history of the game, it was unbelievable watching as a fan. Australia ended up winning the World Cup, and they are statistically the best team in the sport, they've won 6 out of the 13 world cups played. INSANE Record!
Any more questions about the game give me a buzz. I am a passionate fan.
If you haven't already - check out the 2019 world cup final between England and New Zealand. It was an absolute nail-biter. You could compare it the 2022 Fifa world cup final.
Final thoughts - compared to a lot of other sports, cricket is very strategic. The batters, bowlers and fielders have to constantly think and take calculated risks. It's the sport where the captain and his strategy has a lot of impact on whether a game will be won or lost because you are constantly trying to out-think and out-play the other team. It's like chess on a field.
There are nine ways to be given out, and one way that a batter can decide to be out.
The most common ways: caught, bowled, LBW, run out, stumped.
The uncommon ways: hit wicket, hit ball twice, obstructing the field, timed out.
The batter can also retire himself out at any time. Very rare at the top levels.
There was until 2017 also a law for out "handled the ball". This has now been included under the "obstructing the field" law.
Correct! Although when you retire (most commonly hurt) you're not actually hurt. You can bat again (once another batsman gets out) if you feel able to.
@@patrickguretti2300 That's right. I didn't include it in the "outs" because "retired hurt" is not out and is recorded on the records as "retired not out". However, you can retire yourself out, effectively declaring your own batting innings over, and you cannot return.
“Five ways to be given out” would be the correct terminology
or dismissed.
10 ways
@@MD-br2my you obviously didn’t watch the video
The reason 77 of 76 was difficult was because they only had 3 wickets in hand. If they had more wickets in hand it's actually very easy.
so that form of getting out were trying to describe, is called Leg Before Wicket (AKA: LBW). Its when the ball hits the batter's leg (before the bat) and the ball is projected to have hit the stump had the ball not hit the batter's leg and continued on its unimpeded trajectory.
Greatest innings ever. I'm nearly 50.
Best inning i have ever seen 😍💥
there's 11 ways to get out in cricket.
Bowled: The bowler hits the stumps and dislodges the bails.
Caught: A fielder catches the ball hit by the batter before it bounces.
LBW (leg before wicket): The umpire decides that the batter was in the way of the ball and would have hit it if they had not been there.
Stumped: The wicketkeeper catches the ball before it bounces after the batter misses it or steps out of their crease.
Hit wicket: The batter hits their stumps with their body or bat.
Run out: A fielder throws the ball at the stumps and dislodges the bails before the batter enters their crease.
Timed out: The batter does not reach the crease within three minutes of being called upon to bat.
Handled the ball: The batter touches the ball with their hand, except when it is necessary to prevent an injury.
Obstructing the field: The batter intentionally prevents a fielder from catching the ball.
Hit the ball twice: The batter hits the ball twice in a row.
Retired out: The batter chooses to leave the field without being dismissed.
You can be out caught, LBW (leg before wicket), bowled, stumped or runout. There are other more technical ways to go put but they are rare.
There's actually 11 ways to get out:
- bowled
- caught
- stumped
- run out
- leg before wicket
- hit wicket
- Mankaded out (this is a form of run out where the bowler gets the non striking batsman out for taking too much of a lead before the delivery is bowled. Usually the bowler warns the batsman not to do it. First done by a in Indian bowler Vinoo Mankad.)
- handling the ball (batsman touches the ball)
- hitting the ball twice (hits a still moving ball with his bat a second time.)
- interfering with the field (moves in a way to block a throw from hitting the stumps)
- timed out (new batsman does not take his guard at the crease within five minutes of the last batsman going out.)
The last four are kind of considered not in the spirit of the play and are rarely, if ever appealed. One notable exception was a Sri Lankan batsman earning the dubious distinction of being the first ever batsman to be timed out. There was an uproar in cricketing circles about how that was not in the spirit of the game, especially when the batsman had faulty equipment (his helmet.)
Not to be pedantic, but a Mankad is just a run out.
Names so after the guy who famously did it years ago.
Isn’t considered gentlemanly but it’s in the rules.
That wasn't the final over available, because their were 24 balls left, 4x6. There were three more to go, but they weren't needed.
Maxwell's game that day was out of this world. He sounded like an alien to the cricket fans that day.
It's not a one man show usually in cricket. But it happened so that day that 7 top order batsmen got out and maxwell was all alone with tail enders who can hardly score runs as their primary skill is to bowl and batting is just a supportive role they play in the game.
Cummins stood the ground that day rotating the strike to maxi. His effort is commedable too. Because had he got out that day, the last two players cannot even hold the bat properly. Cummins just cannot hit big shots and he is not that good technically with the bat as he is basically a bowler but he stood the ground. But the last two players who were to come if anyone had got out cannot even hold the bat properly.
You watch a few more games. You will start understanding how the players are structured in the batting line up.
If you wish to hear, here is how it is. There will normally be 5-7 specialist batsmen and 5-6 specialist bowlers. Some of the batsmen can bowl and some of the bowlers can bat relatively well.
1. When the innings starts, ball will be new. This new ball when pitches on the pitch during the bowling, it swings. So usually the opening batsmen are good with such new balls.
2. Those who come to bat after 1/2 wickets down, to 4 wickets down are specialist team players who stand the ground and build the innings to play for next 20-30-40 overs in a 50 over game. They are usually not big hitters of the ball but are technically very sound batsmen.
3. Usually those who come after 5-7 wickets are big hitters again as there is high probability that they come to the ground after 35/40 overs and the team needs quickest runs at that point in time.
4. Next set of players usually who come after 7 wickets are specialist bowlers in the team but are there to support scoring the runs.
Now bowling,
1. Team captain decides the bowling structure based on the kind of pitch. If the pitch looks bouncy then he usually picks 3 fast bowlers and of the pitch is slow then he usually picks 2-3 spinners.
2. When the ball is new spinners usually dont bowl as the ball does not spin consistently. Usually fast bowlers bowl for the first 10 overs in the match.
3. Usually by the end of 10 overs, ball starts getting old and spinners can grip the ball well, there comes spin bowling. And when the ball gets too old like over 25-30 overs, the ball can reverse swing with the fast bowlers.
When the intensity of swing or spin is more, the more difficult it is for the batsman to bat as he needs to make near instinctive judgement and also read the bowler very carefully.
And yesterday captain Cummins helped bat Australia to another victory, partnering with Carey to score the last 61 runs required to beat New Zealand in the second test of their tour.
cummins has a 15 ball fifty in ipl before so e could certainly turn it on if he wanted
@@yeetusdeletus2681 cannot confidently say that it can happen all the time as its not a consistent thing for him. Such instances are just flukes.
Fair comparison with Kobe and basketball, but there's one HUGE difference - in cricket, the batsman is one ball away from ending his involvement in the game. It's a bit like life - you usually only get one chance. Also, you can play well and still get out. Whereas in basketball the only way to finish the game early is either injury, replaced, or be ejected.
Wasn’t the last over. You are right it’s 6 balls per over, so it was 4 overs. FYI, this is the goat batting performance in the 50 over game.
Ways to get 'out' in cricket
1) Clean bowled out
2) Caught out (ball in the air, doesn't hit the deck)
3) Run out
4) LBW (Leg Before Wicket) Blocking stumps with no bat involvement
5) Stumped out (Wicket keeper catches the ball and breaks the stumps if you're out of your crease)
Plus a few more obscure ones…
Hit wicket
Interference
Timed out
Handling the ball.
And the most obscure one, being English and not knowing the rules 😂
One thing to remember though in looking at 'great batsmen' is that in these limited over games (ODI and T20) the rules are amended so as to make it easier to bat .... eg restrictions on where the fielding team can put their men, restrictions on where the bowlers can bowl the ball as in much stricter definition of wides, restrictions on how many overs a bowler can bowl ( in T20 bowlers are limited to 4 overs or 26 balls. You can have the greatest bowler in the world but he can only bowl 26 balls). Basically these formats are designed to make it easy for batsmen to score runs because the powers that be think that's what the TV audience wants to see. Test and First Class cricket is where you get a fair game between bat and ball and it's where the 'great' batsmen make their name and go down in history.
you having said all that is is still one of the best inning ever and is probably equivalent to a triple century in test cricket or even better, plus there are down sides that you neglected to mention , such as a limited about of balls to score off and the ball is never as old as a test cricket ball which makes the ball harder to hit as well, in sixty plus years of cricket having watched some of the best batsmen ever from Chappel ,to Barry Richards Vivian Richards, Sachin Tendulka, Virat Kohle to mention a few I have never seen better i think you are severely under rating the performance. your main point is mute because all the greatest batsmen get the same conditions and no one else has even come close and on one leg as well so what the fuck are you saying.
You are right, and it's called LBW (leg before wicket)
Baseball & Cricket Have So Many Great Games👍U.S.A Are Doing T20 Cricket World Cup🏏Go Hard👊
I couldn't be bothered reading if someone has explained this, so if they have, I apologise. If the ball hits you on the leg in front of the wicket, you can be given out LBW, Leg Before Wicket. Maxwell's LBW was overturned because it showed the ball was missing the stumps. Before all this technology, that was out "plumb LBW".
Watch Kapil Dev's 175 against Zimbabwe in 1983 WC which India eventually won, this innings of Maxwell is similar to that.
@Luke’s Sports Academy You should do a reaction to the Aussie Race Horse *"WINX"* and her 33 Straight Wins....😮 Absolutely Amazing to watch.
There are actually 10 ways you can be given 'out' although a few of them are not realistically a threat.
1. Bowled
2. Caught
3. LBW
4. Stumped
5. Run Out
6. Hit Wicket
7. Handling the Ball
8. Obstruction
9. Timed Out
10. Hitting the Ball Twice
6 through 10 happen rarely, with 6 & 7 happening on rare occasion, 8, slightly more rarely and the others almost unheard of.
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There are more than 5 ways to get out. Bowled, caught, and LBW are the three most common ways, but you can also be dismissed (out) by...
- Run out (where the stumps are broken by the ball when attempting a run)
- Stumped (where the stumps are broken by the wicket keeper after you've missed the ball and are out of your crease)
- Obstructing the field (generally any deliberate attempt to stop the fielder from getting you out - getting in the way, pushing them out of the way, changing your running line to stop them having a direct throw at the stumps etc.)
- Hit wicket (where part of your body or equipment breaks the stumps while making a shot or avoiding the ball)
- Timed out (taking too long to get to the middle after the previous batter is dismissed)
- Handling the ball (using your hand to stop the ball from hitting the stumps)
- Hitting the ball twice (there is an exemption to this one, though: if you’re doing it to prevent the ball from hitting the stumps or to prevent injury)
Oh, and technically there's an 11th way - retired out. Retired out is when you sacrifice your time at bat despite not having been dismissed. This is not to be confused with retired hurt. If you're retired hurt, it means you've suffered an injury while batting and need to leave the field of play for treatment. You can return later on in the innings and continue where you left. You can't do that if you retire out.
There are officially 10 modes of dismissal in cricket:
- Caught
- Bowled
- Leg Before Wicket (LBW)
- Stumped
- Run Out
- Hit Wicket
- Handling the Ball
- Timed Out
- Obstructing the Field
- Hitting the Ball Twice
And there's a bonus method that most people forget:
- Retiring (but nor Retiring Hurt, that's different). When a batsman retires he is technically out.
Handled the Ball hasn't been a mode of dismissal since 2017. The laws folded that in with Obstructing the Field. The 10th mode of dismissal is "Retired Out"
@@benjaminterracini6114Oh, I didn't know that! Makes sense when you think about it. Thanks for the new knowledge.
And you can retire hurt and come back later, but if you just retire you can’t come back on.
Maxwell was given out LBW (leg before wicket) and it looked a reasonable decision by the umpire. On being referred to the third umpire the technology showed it would have gone over the wicket. The LBW law, in effect, prevents batsmen from being able to hide the wicket with their body without any risk.
Theres 10 Ways to Get out.
1. Caught
2. Bowled (Ball hits stumps)
3. LBW (Blocking ball from hitting stumps with part of the body.
4. Runout (Leaving crease and not making it back without bat grounded inside the crease)
5. Stumped (Wicket keeper taking out the stumps while your outside the crease),
6. Hit Wicket (Batter breaks stumps with his bat or body while attempting to play a shot)
7. Double Hit (Hitting the ball twice Rarest out).
8. Handling the ball (Using your hand to prevent the ball from hitting the stumps
9. Obstructing the filed
10. Timed out (taking 3 mins to be ready to bat in a test match or 2 mins in other types of matches).
and of course you can retire hurt but that's not exactly an out.
Cricket is a awesome game. The Aussies are the most successful Cricket team for wins , world cup especially. They have won 6 i think. Where as every other teams have won at best 2 from other countries, some have won only 1 and teams like south Africa, new Zealand and other countries have won 0
The Aussies have basically every cricket tournament trophy that exists. You should watch Maxwell vs Netherlands , Maxwell broke the record for the fastest 100 from 40 balls i think. It was a few games before this game that you watched the highlights from
The 5 ways of being out.
LBW(leg before wicket) if the ball would have hit the stumps.
Caught...self explanatory
Run out- as the baters are running between the wicket the ball dislodges the bails.
Stumped- the batsmen is outside of the "crease" and the ball passes the bat from the bowler and the keeper takes off the bails
Timed out- if the batsmen messes around (i believe its 2 and a half minutes) he given out for being slow to face the next delivery
Ways to get out (lose your wicket):
The 5 common ones
1. Bowled (bowler bowls the ball, it hits the wicket)
2. Caught (batsman hits the ball in the air, fielder catches it before it bounces)
3. LBW (leg before wicket, ball was going to hit the wicket but the batsman's body was in the way)
4. Run Out (wickets are broken with the ball by the fielding team while the batsmen attempt to run and score)
5. Stumped (Batsman goes out of the safe zone as they try to hit it, they miss and wicket keeper breaks the wicket with the ball)
The 5 uncommon ones
6. Hit wicket (Batsman accidentally breaks the wicket themselves as they try to hit the ball)
7. Hitting the ball twice (You can hit the ball more than once if you're doing so to protect your wicket, but if you do it trying to score, you're out)
8. Obstructing the Field (You intentionally get in the way of the ball or a fielder while the ball is in play)
9. Retired Out (Batsman willingly leaves the field, if you retire due to injury you are retired hurt, not considered out, instead and can return to play later)
10. Timed Out (You take too long to get on to the field after the previous batter is out)
You forgot "handled the ball" Law 33 of the Laws of Cricket
@@ahdoodeclair Handled the Ball was folded into law 37 "Obstructing the Field" in 2017.
you HAVE to watch the GradeCricketer's review of this game. They're Aussies, and they loved it!
Kohli's performance against Pakistan in 2022 t20 World Cup has got to be next if you're interested in such one man performances.
Coming soon to the U.S and West Indies the T20 World Cup….. Twenty overs each team…. May 2024…. Worth having a look at.
Altogether there are 10 ways of being dismissed in cricket. They are caught, bowled, lbw, run out, stumped as the common ones. Additionally there is 'hit wicket (batsman hits his own wicket), 'hit the ball twice' (in one stroke other than defending his wicket), 'obstructing the field (obstructing a member of the fielding team)', timed out (new batsman taking too long to get to the wicket), and retired out.
It's not the first time that he's done it. He has destroyed better teams than Afghanistan, BUT as you saw, he could have been out before he even got to double figures. He's like that. If you want him out you have to get him early because once he hits his straps it's game over.
that look from maxi. Yeah mate i got this shiz.
10:48 No he meant final over where he ends the game and not the final over of the match.
"This is the last over."
You are correct. It was NOT the last over. 23 balls means just under 4 overs remaining (4 x 6 = 24).
Australia is the real madrid of cricket
Only better
77 in 76 is reachable but that catch here is Maxi couldn't run between the wicket to pick up the singles and Australia did not have enough wicket in hands too. If Maxi had gotten himself out trying to hit it outta park there was no other batter left after who could make Australia win that day.
Mind you he's one of the oldest!!!! Always good
Common ways to get out in cricket are bowled, LBW (trapped in front of the stumps), caught, stumped, run out. Other less common ways to get out are hit wicket, handled the ball, double hit, obstructing the field and timed out.
It's the IPL (Indian Premier League) at the moment. We could watch a live game together!!!
Caught, LBW, Bowled, Stumped, Runout. 2.30 was an LBW call. Leg Before Wicket.