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Wikipedia

Cricket

Cricket is a bat-and-ball game played between two teams of eleven players on a field at the centre of which is a 22-yard (20-metre) pitch with a wicket at each end, each comprising two bails balanced on three stumps. The batting side scores runs by striking the ball bowled at one of the wickets with the bat and then running between the wickets, while the bowling and fielding side tries to prevent this (by preventing the ball from leaving the field, and getting the ball to either wicket) and dismiss each batter (so they are "out"). Means of dismissal include being bowled, when the ball hits the stumps and dislodges the bails, and by the fielding side either catching the ball after it is hit by the bat, but before it hits the ground, or hitting a wicket with the ball before a batter can cross the crease in front of the wicket. When ten batters have been dismissed, the innings ends and the teams swap roles. The game is adjudicated by two umpires, aided by a third umpire and match referee in international matches. They communicate with two off-field scorers who record the match's statistical information.

Cricket
Highest governing bodyInternational Cricket Council
First played16th century; South East England
Characteristics
ContactNo
Team members11 players per side (substitutes permitted in some circumstances)
Mixed-sexNo, separate competitions
TypeTeam sport, Bat-and-Ball
EquipmentCricket ball, Cricket bat, Wicket (Stumps, Bails), Protective equipment
VenueCricket field
GlossaryGlossary of cricket terms
Presence
Country or regionWorldwide (most popular in the Commonwealth)
Olympic(1900 Summer Olympics)

Forms of cricket range from Twenty20, with each team batting for a single innings of 20 overs (each "over" being a set of 6 fair opportunities for the batting team to score) and the game generally lasting three hours, to Test matches played over five days. Traditionally cricketers play in all-white kit, but in limited overs cricket they wear club or team colours. In addition to the basic kit, some players wear protective gear to prevent injury caused by the ball, which is a hard, solid spheroid made of compressed leather with a slightly raised sewn seam enclosing a cork core layered with tightly wound string.

The earliest reference to cricket is in South East England in the mid-16th century. It spread globally with the expansion of the British Empire, with the first international matches in the second half of the 19th century. The game's governing body is the International Cricket Council (ICC), which has over 100 members, twelve of which are full members who play Test matches. The game's rules, the Laws of Cricket, are maintained by Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) in London. The sport is followed primarily in South Asia, Australasia, the United Kingdom, Southern Africa and the West Indies.[1]

Women's cricket, which is organised and played separately, has also achieved international standard. The most successful side playing international cricket is Australia, which has won seven One Day International trophies, including five World Cups, more than any other country and has been the top-rated Test side more than any other country.

History

Origins

 
A medieval "club ball" game involving an underarm bowl towards a batter. Ball catchers are shown positioning themselves to catch a ball. Detail from the Canticles of Holy Mary, 13th century.

Cricket is one of many games in the "club ball" sphere that basically involve hitting a ball with a hand-held implement; others include baseball (which shares many similarities with cricket, both belonging in the more specific bat-and-ball games category[2]), golf, hockey, tennis, squash, badminton and table tennis.[3] In cricket's case, a key difference is the existence of a solid target structure, the wicket (originally, it is thought, a "wicket gate" through which sheep were herded), that the batter must defend.[4] The cricket historian Harry Altham identified three "groups" of "club ball" games: the "hockey group", in which the ball is driven to and from between two targets (the goals); the "golf group", in which the ball is driven towards an undefended target (the hole); and the "cricket group", in which "the ball is aimed at a mark (the wicket) and driven away from it".[5]

It is generally believed that cricket originated as a children's game in the south-eastern counties of England, sometime during the medieval period.[4] Although there are claims for prior dates, the earliest definite reference to cricket being played comes from evidence given at a court case in Guildford in January 1597 (Old Style, equating to January 1598 in the modern calendar). The case concerned ownership of a certain plot of land and the court heard the testimony of a 59-year-old coroner, John Derrick, who gave witness that:[6][7][8]

Being a scholler in the ffree schoole of Guldeford hee and diverse of his fellows did runne and play there at creckett and other plaies.

Given Derrick's age, it was about half a century earlier when he was at school and so it is certain that cricket was being played c. 1550 by boys in Surrey.[8] The view that it was originally a children's game is reinforced by Randle Cotgrave's 1611 English-French dictionary in which he defined the noun "crosse" as "the crooked staff wherewith boys play at cricket" and the verb form "crosser" as "to play at cricket".[9][10]

One possible source for the sport's name is the Old English word "cryce" (or "cricc") meaning a crutch or staff. In Samuel Johnson's Dictionary, he derived cricket from "cryce, Saxon, a stick".[6] In Old French, the word "criquet" seems to have meant a kind of club or stick.[11] Given the strong medieval trade connections between south-east England and the County of Flanders when the latter belonged to the Duchy of Burgundy, the name may have been derived from the Middle Dutch (in use in Flanders at the time) "krick"(-e), meaning a stick (crook).[11] Another possible source is the Middle Dutch word "krickstoel", meaning a long low stool used for kneeling in church and which resembled the long low wicket with two stumps used in early cricket.[12] According to Heiner Gillmeister, a European language expert of Bonn University, "cricket" derives from the Middle Dutch phrase for hockey, met de (krik ket)sen (i.e., "with the stick chase").[13] Gillmeister has suggested that not only the name but also the sport itself may be of Flemish origin.[13]

Growth of amateur and professional cricket in England

 
Evolution of the cricket bat. The original "hockey stick" (left) evolved into the straight bat from c. 1760 when pitched delivery bowling began.

Although the main object of the game has always been to score the most runs, the early form of cricket differed from the modern game in certain key technical aspects; the North American variant of cricket known as wicket retained many of these aspects.[14] The ball was bowled underarm by the bowler and along the ground towards a batter armed with a bat that in shape resembled a hockey stick; the batter defended a low, two-stump wicket; and runs were called notches because the scorers recorded them by notching tally sticks.[15][16][17]

In 1611, the year Cotgrave's dictionary was published, ecclesiastical court records at Sidlesham in Sussex state that two parishioners, Bartholomew Wyatt and Richard Latter, failed to attend church on Easter Sunday because they were playing cricket. They were fined 12d each and ordered to do penance.[18] This is the earliest mention of adult participation in cricket and it was around the same time that the earliest known organised inter-parish or village match was played – at Chevening, Kent.[6][19] In 1624, a player called Jasper Vinall died after he was accidentally struck on the head during a match between two parish teams in Sussex.[20]

Cricket remained a low-key local pursuit for much of the 17th century.[10] It is known, through numerous references found in the records of ecclesiastical court cases, to have been proscribed at times by the Puritans before and during the Commonwealth.[21][22] The problem was nearly always the issue of Sunday play as the Puritans considered cricket to be "profane" if played on the Sabbath, especially if large crowds or gambling were involved.[23][24]

According to the social historian Derek Birley, there was a "great upsurge of sport after the Restoration" in 1660.[25] Several members of the court of King Charles II took a strong interest in cricket during that era.[26] Gambling on sport became a problem significant enough for Parliament to pass the 1664 Gambling Act, limiting stakes to £100 which was, in any case, a colossal sum exceeding the annual income of 99% of the population.[25] Along with prizefighting, horse racing and blood sports, cricket was perceived to be a gambling sport.[27] Rich patrons made matches for high stakes, forming teams in which they engaged the first professional players.[28] By the end of the century, cricket had developed into a major sport that was spreading throughout England and was already being taken abroad by English mariners and colonisers – the earliest reference to cricket overseas is dated 1676.[29] A 1697 newspaper report survives of "a great cricket match" played in Sussex "for fifty guineas apiece" – this is the earliest known contest that is generally considered a First Class match.[30][31]

The patrons, and other players from the social class known as the "gentry", began to classify themselves as "amateurs"[fn 1] to establish a clear distinction from the professionals, who were invariably members of the working class, even to the point of having separate changing and dining facilities.[32] The gentry, including such high-ranking nobles as the Dukes of Richmond, exerted their honour code of noblesse oblige to claim rights of leadership in any sporting contests they took part in, especially as it was necessary for them to play alongside their "social inferiors" if they were to win their bets.[33] In time, a perception took hold that the typical amateur who played in first-class cricket, until 1962 when amateurism was abolished, was someone with a public school education who had then gone to one of Cambridge or Oxford University – society insisted that such people were "officers and gentlemen" whose destiny was to provide leadership.[34] In a purely financial sense, the cricketing amateur would theoretically claim expenses for playing while his professional counterpart played under contract and was paid a wage or match fee; in practice, many amateurs claimed more than actual expenditure and the derisive term "shamateur" was coined to describe the practice.[35][36]

English cricket in the 18th and 19th centuries

 
Francis Cotes, The Young Cricketer, 1768

The game underwent major development in the 18th century to become England's national sport.[37] Its success was underwritten by the twin necessities of patronage and betting.[38] Cricket was prominent in London as early as 1707 and, in the middle years of the century, large crowds flocked to matches on the Artillery Ground in Finsbury.[citation needed] The single wicket form of the sport attracted huge crowds and wagers to match, its popularity peaking in the 1748 season.[39] Bowling underwent an evolution around 1760 when bowlers began to pitch the ball instead of rolling or skimming it towards the batter. This caused a revolution in bat design because, to deal with the bouncing ball, it was necessary to introduce the modern straight bat in place of the old "hockey stick" shape.[40][citation needed]

The Hambledon Club was founded in the 1760s and, for the next twenty years until the formation of Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) and the opening of Lord's Old Ground in 1787, Hambledon was both the game's greatest club and its focal point.[citation needed] MCC quickly became the sport's premier club and the custodian of the Laws of Cricket. New Laws introduced in the latter part of the 18th century included the three stump wicket and leg before wicket (lbw).[41]

The 19th century saw underarm bowling superseded by first roundarm and then overarm bowling. Both developments were controversial.[42] Organisation of the game at county level led to the creation of the county clubs, starting with Sussex in 1839.[43] In December 1889, the eight leading county clubs formed the official County Championship, which began in 1890.[44]

 
The first recorded photo of a cricket match taken on 25 July 1857 by Roger Fenton

The most famous player of the 19th century was W. G. Grace, who started his long and influential career in 1865. It was especially during the career of Grace that the distinction between amateurs and professionals became blurred by the existence of players like him who were nominally amateur but, in terms of their financial gain, de facto professional. Grace himself was said to have been paid more money for playing cricket than any professional.[citation needed]

The last two decades before the First World War have been called the "Golden Age of cricket". It is a nostalgic name prompted by the collective sense of loss resulting from the war, but the period did produce some great players and memorable matches, especially as organised competition at county and Test level developed.[45]

Cricket becomes an international sport

 
The first English team to tour overseas, on board ship to North America, 1859

In 1844, the first-ever international match took place between what were essentially club teams, from the United States and Canada, in Toronto; Canada won.[46][47] In 1859, a team of English players went to North America on the first overseas tour.[48] Meanwhile, the British Empire had been instrumental in spreading the game overseas and by the middle of the 19th century it had become well established in Australia, the Caribbean, British India (which includes present-day Pakistan and Bangladesh), New Zealand, North America and South Africa.[49]

In 1862, an English team made the first tour of Australia.[50] The first Australian team to travel overseas consisted of Aboriginal stockmen which toured England in 1868.[51]

In 1876–77, an England team took part in what was retrospectively recognized as the first-ever Test match at the Melbourne Cricket Ground against Australia.[52] The rivalry between England and Australia gave birth to The Ashes in 1882, and this has remained Test cricket's most famous contest.[53] Test cricket began to expand in 1888–89 when South Africa played England.[54]

World cricket in the 20th century

 
Don Bradman of Australia had a record Test batting average of 99.94.

The inter-war years were dominated by Australia's Don Bradman, statistically the greatest Test batter of all time. Test cricket continued to expand during the 20th century with the addition of the West Indies (1928), New Zealand (1930) and India (1932) before the Second World War and then Pakistan (1952), Sri Lanka (1982), Zimbabwe (1992), Bangladesh (2000), Ireland and Afghanistan (both 2018) in the post-war period.[55][56] South Africa was banned from international cricket from 1970 to 1992 as part of the apartheid boycott.[57]

The rise of limited overs cricket

Cricket entered a new era in 1963 when English counties introduced the limited overs variant.[58] As it was sure to produce a result, limited overs cricket was lucrative and the number of matches increased.[59] The first Limited Overs International was played in 1971 and the governing International Cricket Council (ICC), seeing its potential, staged the first limited overs Cricket World Cup in 1975.[60] In the 21st century, a new limited overs form, Twenty20, made an immediate impact.[citation needed] On 22 June 2017, Afghanistan and Ireland became the 11th and 12th ICC full members, enabling them to play Test cricket.[61][62]

Laws and gameplay

 
A typical cricket field.

In cricket, the rules of the game are specified in a code called The Laws of Cricket (hereinafter called "the Laws") which has a global remit. There are 42 Laws (always written with a capital "L"). The earliest known version of the code was drafted in 1744 and, since 1788, it has been owned and maintained by its custodian, the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) in London.[63]

Playing area

Cricket is a bat-and-ball game played on a cricket field (see image, right) between two teams of eleven players each.[64] The field is usually circular or oval in shape and the edge of the playing area is marked by a boundary, which may be a fence, part of the stands, a rope, a painted line or a combination of these; the boundary must if possible be marked along its entire length.[65]

In the approximate centre of the field is a rectangular pitch (see image, below) on which a wooden target called a wicket is sited at each end; the wickets are placed 22 yards (20 m) apart.[66] The pitch is a flat surface 10 feet (3.0 m) wide, with very short grass that tends to be worn away as the game progresses (cricket can also be played on artificial surfaces, notably matting). Each wicket is made of three wooden stumps topped by two bails.[67]

 
Cricket pitch and creases

As illustrated above, the pitch is marked at each end with four white painted lines: a bowling crease, a popping crease and two return creases. The three stumps are aligned centrally on the bowling crease, which is eight feet eight inches long. The popping crease is drawn four feet in front of the bowling crease and parallel to it; although it is drawn as a twelve-foot line (six feet either side of the wicket), it is, in fact, unlimited in length. The return creases are drawn at right angles to the popping crease so that they intersect the ends of the bowling crease; each return crease is drawn as an eight-foot line, so that it extends four feet behind the bowling crease, but is also, in fact, unlimited in length.[68]

Match structure and closure

 
A modern SG cricket bat (back view).

Before a match begins, the team captains (who are also players) toss a coin to decide which team will bat first and so take the first innings.[69] Innings is the term used for each phase of play in the match.[69] In each innings, one team bats, attempting to score runs, while the other team bowls and fields the ball, attempting to restrict the scoring and dismiss the batters.[70][71] When the first innings ends, the teams change roles; there can be two to four innings depending upon the type of match. A match with four scheduled innings is played over three to five days; a match with two scheduled innings is usually completed in a single day.[69] During an innings, all eleven members of the fielding team take the field, but usually only two members of the batting team are on the field at any given time. The exception to this is if a batter has any type of illness or injury restricting his or her ability to run, in this case the batter is allowed a runner who can run between the wickets when the batter hits a scoring run or runs,[72] though this does not apply in international cricket.[73] The order of batters is usually announced just before the match, but it can be varied.[64]

The main objective of each team is to score more runs than their opponents but, in some forms of cricket, it is also necessary to dismiss all of the opposition batters in their final innings in order to win the match, which would otherwise be drawn.[74] If the team batting last is all out having scored fewer runs than their opponents, they are said to have "lost by n runs" (where n is the difference between the aggregate number of runs scored by the teams). If the team that bats last scores enough runs to win, it is said to have "won by n wickets", where n is the number of wickets left to fall. For example, a team that passes its opponents' total having lost six wickets (i.e., six of their batters have been dismissed) have won the match "by four wickets".[74]

In a two-innings-a-side match, one team's combined first and second innings total may be less than the other side's first innings total. The team with the greater score is then said to have "won by an innings and n runs", and does not need to bat again: n is the difference between the two teams' aggregate scores. If the team batting last is all out, and both sides have scored the same number of runs, then the match is a tie; this result is quite rare in matches of two innings a side with only 62 happening in first-class matches from the earliest known instance in 1741 until January 2017. In the traditional form of the game, if the time allotted for the match expires before either side can win, then the game is declared a draw.[74]

If the match has only a single innings per side, then usually a maximum number of overs applies to each innings. Such a match is called a "limited overs" or "one-day" match, and the side scoring more runs wins regardless of the number of wickets lost, so that a draw cannot occur. In some cases, ties are broken by having each team bat for a one-over innings known as a Super Over; subsequent Super Overs may be played if the first Super Over ends in a tie. If this kind of match is temporarily interrupted by bad weather, then a complex mathematical formula, known as the Duckworth–Lewis–Stern method after its developers, is often used to recalculate a new target score. A one-day match can also be declared a "no-result" if fewer than a previously agreed number of overs have been bowled by either team, in circumstances that make normal resumption of play impossible; for example, wet weather.[74]

In all forms of cricket, the umpires can abandon the match if bad light or rain makes it impossible to continue.[75] There have been instances of entire matches, even Test matches scheduled to be played over five days, being lost to bad weather without a ball being bowled: for example, the third Test of the 1970/71 series in Australia.[76]

Innings

The innings (ending with 's' in both singular and plural form) is the term used for each phase of play during a match. Depending on the type of match being played, each team has either one or two innings. Sometimes all eleven members of the batting side take a turn to bat but, for various reasons, an innings can end before they have all done so. The innings terminates if the batting team is "all out", a term defined by the Laws: "at the fall of a wicket or the retirement of a batter, further balls remain to be bowled but no further batter is available to come in".[69] In this situation, one of the batters has not been dismissed and is termed not out; this is because he has no partners left and there must always be two active batters while the innings is in progress.

An innings may end early while there are still two not out batters:[69]

  • the batting team's captain may declare the innings closed even though some of his players have not had a turn to bat: this is a tactical decision by the captain, usually because he believes his team have scored sufficient runs and need time to dismiss the opposition in their innings
  • the set number of overs (i.e., in a limited overs match) have been bowled
  • the match has ended prematurely due to bad weather or running out of time
  • in the final innings of the match, the batting side has reached its target and won the game.
Overs

The Laws state that, throughout an innings, "the ball shall be bowled from each end alternately in overs of 6 balls".[77] The name "over" came about because the umpire calls "Over!" when six balls have been bowled. At this point, another bowler is deployed at the other end, and the fielding side changes ends while the batters do not. A bowler cannot bowl two successive overs, although a bowler can (and usually does) bowl alternate overs, from the same end, for several overs which are termed a "spell". The batters do not change ends at the end of the over, and so the one who was non-striker is now the striker and vice versa. The umpires also change positions so that the one who was at "square leg" now stands behind the wicket at the non-striker's end and vice versa.[77]

Clothing and equipment

 
English cricketer W. G. Grace "taking guard" in 1883. His pads and bat are very similar to those used today. The gloves have evolved somewhat. Many modern players use more defensive equipment than were available to Grace, most notably helmets and arm guards.

The wicket-keeper (a specialised fielder behind the batter) and the batters wear protective gear because of the hardness of the ball, which can be delivered at speeds of more than 145 kilometres per hour (90 mph) and presents a major health and safety concern. Protective clothing includes pads (designed to protect the knees and shins), batting gloves or wicket-keeper's gloves for the hands, a safety helmet for the head and a box for male players inside the trousers (to protect the crotch area).[78] Some batters wear additional padding inside their shirts and trousers such as thigh pads, arm pads, rib protectors and shoulder pads. The only fielders allowed to wear protective gear are those in positions very close to the batter (i.e., if they are alongside or in front of him), but they cannot wear gloves or external leg guards.[79]

Subject to certain variations, on-field clothing generally includes a collared shirt with short or long sleeves; long trousers; woolen pullover (if needed); cricket cap (for fielding) or a safety helmet; and spiked shoes or boots to increase traction. The kit is traditionally all white and this remains the case in Test and first-class cricket but, in limited overs cricket, team colours are worn instead.[80]

Bat and ball

 
 
Two types of cricket ball, both of the same size:

i) A used white ball. White balls are mainly used in limited overs cricket, especially in matches played at night, under floodlights (left).

ii) A used red ball. Red balls are used in Test cricket, first-class cricket and some other forms of cricket (right).

The essence of the sport is that a bowler delivers (i.e., bowls) the ball from his or her end of the pitch towards the batter who, armed with a bat, is "on strike" at the other end (see next sub-section: Basic gameplay).

The bat is made of wood, usually Salix alba (white willow), and has the shape of a blade topped by a cylindrical handle. The blade must not be more than 4.25 inches (10.8 cm) wide and the total length of the bat not more than 38 inches (97 cm). There is no standard for the weight, which is usually between 2 lb 7 oz and 3 lb (1.1 and 1.4 kg).[81][82]

The ball is a hard leather-seamed spheroid, with a circumference of 9 inches (23 cm). The ball has a "seam": six rows of stitches attaching the leather shell of the ball to the string and cork interior. The seam on a new ball is prominent and helps the bowler propel it in a less predictable manner. During matches, the quality of the ball deteriorates to a point where it is no longer usable; during the course of this deterioration, its behaviour in flight will change and can influence the outcome of the match. Players will, therefore, attempt to modify the ball's behaviour by modifying its physical properties. Polishing the ball and wetting it with sweat or saliva is legal, even when the polishing is deliberately done on one side only to increase the ball's swing through the air, but the acts of rubbing other substances into the ball, scratching the surface or picking at the seam are illegal ball tampering.[83]

Player roles

Basic gameplay: bowler to batter

During normal play, thirteen players and two umpires are on the field. Two of the players are batters and the rest are all eleven members of the fielding team. The other nine players in the batting team are off the field in the pavilion. The image with overlay below shows what is happening when a ball is being bowled and which of the personnel are on or close to the pitch.[84]

In the photo, the two batters (3 & 8; wearing yellow) have taken position at each end of the pitch (6). Three members of the fielding team (4, 10 & 11; wearing dark blue) are in shot. One of the two umpires (1; wearing white hat) is stationed behind the wicket (2) at the bowler's (4) end of the pitch. The bowler (4) is bowling the ball (5) from his end of the pitch to the batter (8) at the other end who is called the "striker". The other batter (3) at the bowling end is called the "non-striker". The wicket-keeper (10), who is a specialist, is positioned behind the striker's wicket (9) and behind him stands one of the fielders in a position called "first slip" (11). While the bowler and the first slip are wearing conventional kit only, the two batters and the wicket-keeper are wearing protective gear including safety helmets, padded gloves and leg guards (pads).

While the umpire (1) in shot stands at the bowler's end of the pitch, his colleague stands in the outfield, usually in or near the fielding position called "square leg", so that he is in line with the popping crease (7) at the striker's end of the pitch. The bowling crease (not numbered) is the one on which the wicket is located between the return creases (12). The bowler (4) intends to hit the wicket (9) with the ball (5) or, at least, to prevent the striker (8) from scoring runs. The striker (8) intends, by using his bat, to defend his wicket and, if possible, to hit the ball away from the pitch in order to score runs.

Some players are skilled in both batting and bowling, or as either of these as well as wicket-keeping, so are termed all-rounders. Bowlers are classified according to their style, generally as fast bowlers, seam bowlers or spinners. Batters are classified according to whether they are right-handed or left-handed.

Fielding

 
Fielding positions in cricket for a right-handed batter

Of the eleven fielders, three are in shot in the image above. The other eight are elsewhere on the field, their positions determined on a tactical basis by the captain or the bowler. Fielders often change position between deliveries, again as directed by the captain or bowler.[79]

If a fielder is injured or becomes ill during a match, a substitute is allowed to field instead of him, but the substitute cannot bowl or act as a captain, except in the case of concussion substitutes in international cricket.[73] The substitute leaves the field when the injured player is fit to return.[85] The Laws of Cricket were updated in 2017 to allow substitutes to act as wicket-keepers.[86]

Bowling and dismissal

 
Glenn McGrath of Australia holds the world record for most wickets in the Cricket World Cup.[87]

Most bowlers are considered specialists in that they are selected for the team because of their skill as a bowler, although some are all-rounders and even specialist batters bowl occasionally. The specialists bowl several times during an innings but may not bowl two overs consecutively. If the captain wants a bowler to "change ends", another bowler must temporarily fill in so that the change is not immediate.[77]

A bowler reaches his delivery stride by means of a "run-up" and an over is deemed to have begun when the bowler starts his run-up for the first delivery of that over, the ball then being "in play".[77] Fast bowlers, needing momentum, take a lengthy run up while bowlers with a slow delivery take no more than a couple of steps before bowling. The fastest bowlers can deliver the ball at a speed of over 145 kilometres per hour (90 mph) and they sometimes rely on sheer speed to try to defeat the batter, who is forced to react very quickly.[88] Other fast bowlers rely on a mixture of speed and guile by making the ball seam or swing (i.e. curve) in flight. This type of delivery can deceive a batter into miscuing his shot, for example, so that the ball just touches the edge of the bat and can then be "caught behind" by the wicket-keeper or a slip fielder.[88] At the other end of the bowling scale is the spin bowler who bowls at a relatively slow pace and relies entirely on guile to deceive the batter. A spinner will often "buy his wicket" by "tossing one up" (in a slower, steeper parabolic path) to lure the batter into making a poor shot. The batter has to be very wary of such deliveries as they are often "flighted" or spun so that the ball will not behave quite as he expects and he could be "trapped" into getting himself out.[89] In between the pacemen and the spinners are the medium paced seamers who rely on persistent accuracy to try to contain the rate of scoring and wear down the batter's concentration.[88]

There are nine ways in which a batter can be dismissed: five relatively common and four extremely rare. The common forms of dismissal are bowled,[90] caught,[91] leg before wicket (lbw),[92] run out[93] and stumped.[94] Rare methods are hit wicket,[95] hit the ball twice,[96] obstructing the field[97] and timed out.[98] The Laws state that the fielding team, usually the bowler in practice, must appeal for a dismissal before the umpire can give his decision. If the batter is out, the umpire raises a forefinger and says "Out!"; otherwise, he will shake his head and say "Not out".[99] There is, effectively, a tenth method of dismissal, retired out, which is not an on-field dismissal as such but rather a retrospective one for which no fielder is credited.[100]

Batting, runs and extras

 
The directions in which a right-handed batter, facing down the page, intends to send the ball when playing various cricketing shots. The diagram for a left-handed batter is a mirror image of this one.

Batters take turns to bat via a batting order which is decided beforehand by the team captain and presented to the umpires, though the order remains flexible when the captain officially nominates the team.[64] Substitute batters are generally not allowed,[85] except in the case of concussion substitutes in international cricket.[73]

In order to begin batting the batter first adopts a batting stance. Standardly, this involves adopting a slight crouch with the feet pointing across the front of the wicket, looking in the direction of the bowler, and holding the bat so it passes over the feet and so its tip can rest on the ground near to the toes of the back foot.[101]

A skilled batter can use a wide array of "shots" or "strokes" in both defensive and attacking mode. The idea is to hit the ball to the best effect with the flat surface of the bat's blade. If the ball touches the side of the bat it is called an "edge". The batter does not have to play a shot and can allow the ball to go through to the wicketkeeper. Equally, he does not have to attempt a run when he hits the ball with his bat. Batters do not always seek to hit the ball as hard as possible, and a good player can score runs just by making a deft stroke with a turn of the wrists or by simply "blocking" the ball but directing it away from fielders so that he has time to take a run. A wide variety of shots are played, the batter's repertoire including strokes named according to the style of swing and the direction aimed: e.g., "cut", "drive", "hook", "pull".[102]

The batter on strike (i.e. the "striker") must prevent the ball hitting the wicket, and try to score runs by hitting the ball with his bat so that he and his partner have time to run from one end of the pitch to the other before the fielding side can return the ball. To register a run, both runners must touch the ground behind the popping crease with either their bats or their bodies (the batters carry their bats as they run). Each completed run increments the score of both the team and the striker.[103]

 
Sachin Tendulkar is the only player to have scored one hundred international centuries

The decision to attempt a run is ideally made by the batter who has the better view of the ball's progress, and this is communicated by calling: usually "yes", "no" or "wait". More than one run can be scored from a single hit: hits worth one to three runs are common, but the size of the field is such that it is usually difficult to run four or more.[103] To compensate for this, hits that reach the boundary of the field are automatically awarded four runs if the ball touches the ground en route to the boundary or six runs if the ball clears the boundary without touching the ground within the boundary. In these cases the batters do not need to run.[104] Hits for five are unusual and generally rely on the help of "overthrows" by a fielder returning the ball.

If an odd number of runs is scored by the striker, the two batters have changed ends, and the one who was non-striker is now the striker. Only the striker can score individual runs, but all runs are added to the team's total.[103]

Additional runs can be gained by the batting team as extras (called "sundries" in Australia) due to errors made by the fielding side. This is achieved in four ways: no-ball, a penalty of one extra conceded by the bowler if he breaks the rules;[105] wide, a penalty of one extra conceded by the bowler if he bowls so that the ball is out of the batter's reach;[106] bye, an extra awarded if the batter misses the ball and it goes past the wicket-keeper and gives the batters time to run in the conventional way;[107] leg bye, as for a bye except that the ball has hit the batter's body, though not his bat.[107] If the bowler has conceded a no-ball or a wide, his team incurs an additional penalty because that ball (i.e., delivery) has to be bowled again and hence the batting side has the opportunity to score more runs from this extra ball.[105][106]

Specialist roles

The captain is often the most experienced player in the team, certainly the most tactically astute, and can possess any of the main skillsets as a batter, a bowler or a wicket-keeper. Within the Laws, the captain has certain responsibilities in terms of nominating his players to the umpires before the match and ensuring that his players conduct themselves "within the spirit and traditions of the game as well as within the Laws".[64]

The wicket-keeper (sometimes called simply the "keeper") is a specialist fielder subject to various rules within the Laws about his equipment and demeanour. He is the only member of the fielding side who can effect a stumping and is the only one permitted to wear gloves and external leg guards.[108]

Depending on their primary skills, the other ten players in the team tend to be classified as specialist batters or specialist bowlers. Generally, a team will include five or six specialist batters and four or five specialist bowlers, plus the wicket-keeper.[109][110]

Umpires and scorers

 
An umpire signals a decision to the scorers

The game on the field is regulated by the two umpires, one of whom stands behind the wicket at the bowler's end, the other in a position called "square leg" which is about 15–20 metres away from the batter on strike and in line with the popping crease on which he is taking guard. The umpires have several responsibilities including adjudication on whether a ball has been correctly bowled (i.e., not a no-ball or a wide); when a run is scored; whether a batter is out (the fielding side must first appeal to the umpire, usually with the phrase "How's that?" or "Owzat?"); when intervals start and end; and the suitability of the pitch, field and weather for playing the game. The umpires are authorised to interrupt or even abandon a match due to circumstances likely to endanger the players, such as a damp pitch or deterioration of the light.[75]

Off the field in televised matches, there is usually a third umpire who can make decisions on certain incidents with the aid of video evidence. The third umpire is mandatory under the playing conditions for Test and Limited Overs International matches played between two ICC full member countries. These matches also have a match referee whose job is to ensure that play is within the Laws and the spirit of the game.[75]

The match details, including runs and dismissals, are recorded by two official scorers, one representing each team. The scorers are directed by the hand signals of an umpire (see image, right). For example, the umpire raises a forefinger to signal that the batter is out (has been dismissed); he raises both arms above his head if the batter has hit the ball for six runs. The scorers are required by the Laws to record all runs scored, wickets taken and overs bowled; in practice, they also note significant amounts of additional data relating to the game.[111]

A match's statistics are summarised on a scorecard. Prior to the popularisation of scorecards, most scoring was done by men sitting on vantage points cuttings notches on tally sticks and runs were originally called notches.[112] According to Rowland Bowen, the earliest known scorecard templates were introduced in 1776 by T. Pratt of Sevenoaks and soon came into general use.[113] It is believed that scorecards were printed and sold at Lord's for the first time in 1846.[114]

Spirit of the Game

Besides observing the Laws, cricketers must respect the "Spirit of Cricket", a concept encompassing sportsmanship, fair play and mutual respect. This spirit has long been considered an integral part of the sport but is only nebulously defined. Amidst concern that the spirit was weakening, in 2000 a Preamble was added to the Laws instructing all participants to play within the spirit of the game. The Preamble was last updated in 2017, now opening with the line:[115]

"Cricket owes much of its appeal and enjoyment to the fact that it should be played not only according to the Laws, but also within the Spirit of Cricket".

The Preamble is a short statement intended to emphasise the "positive behaviours that make cricket an exciting game that encourages leadership, friendship, and teamwork."[116] Its second line states that "the major responsibility for ensuring fair play rests with the captains, but extends to all players, match officials and, especially in junior cricket, teachers, coaches and parents."[115]

The umpires are the sole judges of fair and unfair play. They are required under the Laws to intervene in case of dangerous or unfair play or in cases of unacceptable conduct by a player.

Previous versions of the Spirit identified actions that were deemed contrary (for example, appealing knowing that the batter is not out) but all specifics are now covered in the Laws of Cricket, the relevant governing playing regulations and disciplinary codes, or left to the judgement of the umpires, captains, their clubs and governing bodies. The terse expression of the Spirit of Cricket now avoids the diversity of cultural conventions that exist in the detail of sportsmanship – or its absence.

Women's cricket

 
Mithali Raj of India, is the highest run scorer in women's international cricket.

Women's cricket was first recorded in Surrey in 1745.[117] International development began at the start of the 20th century and the first Test Match was played between Australia and England in December 1934.[118] The following year, New Zealand joined them, and in 2007 Netherland became the tenth women's Test nation when they made their debut against South Africa. In 1958, the International Women's Cricket Council was founded (it merged with the ICC in 2005).[118] In 1973, the first Cricket World Cup of any kind took place when a Women's World Cup was held in England.[118] In 2005, the International Women's Cricket Council was merged with the International Cricket Council (ICC) to form one unified body to help manage and develop cricket. The ICC Women's Rankings were launched on 1 October 2015 covering all three formats of women's cricket. In October 2018 following the ICC's decision to award T20 International status to all members, the Women's rankings were split into separate ODI (for Full Members) and T20I lists.[119]

Governance

 
ICC member nations. The (highest level) Test playing nations are shown in red; the associate member nations are shown in orange, with those with ODI status in a darker shade; suspended or former members are shown in dark grey.

The International Cricket Council (ICC), which has its headquarters in Dubai, is the global governing body of cricket. It was founded as the Imperial Cricket Conference in 1909 by representatives from England, Australia and South Africa, renamed the International Cricket Conference in 1965 and took up its current name in 1989.[118] The ICC in 2017 has 105 member nations, twelve of which hold full membership and can play Test cricket.[120] The ICC is responsible for the organisation and governance of cricket's major international tournaments, notably the men's and women's versions of the Cricket World Cup. It also appoints the umpires and referees that officiate at all sanctioned Test matches, Limited Overs Internationals and Twenty20 Internationals.

Each member nation has a national cricket board which regulates cricket matches played in its country, selects the national squad, and organises home and away tours for the national team.[121] In the West Indies, which for cricket purposes is a federation of nations, these matters are addressed by Cricket West Indies.[122]

The table below lists the ICC full members and their national cricket boards:[123]

Forms of cricket

 
A Test match between South Africa and England in January 2005. The men wearing black trousers are the umpires. Teams in Test cricket, first-class cricket and club cricket wear traditional white uniforms and use red cricket balls.

Cricket is a multi-faceted sport with multiple formats that can effectively be divided into first-class cricket, limited overs cricket and, historically, single wicket cricket.

The highest standard is Test cricket (always written with a capital "T") which is in effect the international version of first-class cricket and is restricted to teams representing the twelve countries that are full members of the ICC (see above). Although the term "Test match" was not coined until much later, Test cricket is deemed to have begun with two matches between Australia and England in the 1876–77 Australian season; since 1882, most Test series between England and Australia have been played for a trophy known as The Ashes. The term "first-class", in general usage, is applied to top-level domestic cricket. Test matches are played over five days and first-class over three to four days; in all of these matches, the teams are allotted two innings each and the draw is a valid result.[125]

Limited overs cricket is always scheduled for completion in a single day, and the teams are allotted one innings each. There are two main types: List A which normally allows fifty overs per team; and Twenty20 in which the teams have twenty overs each. Both of the limited overs forms are played internationally as Limited Overs Internationals (LOI) and Twenty20 Internationals (T20I). List A was introduced in England in the 1963 season as a knockout cup contested by the first-class county clubs. In 1969, a national league competition was established. The concept was gradually introduced to the other leading cricket countries and the first limited overs international was played in 1971. In 1975, the first Cricket World Cup took place in England. Twenty20 is a new variant of limited overs itself with the purpose being to complete the match within about three hours, usually in an evening session. The first Twenty20 World Championship was held in 2007. In addition, a few full-member cricket boards have decided to start leagues that are played in the T10 format,[126][127][128][129] in which games are intended to last approximately 90 minutes.[130][131] Limited overs matches cannot be drawn, although a tie is possible and an unfinished match is a "no result".[132][133]

Single wicket was popular in the 18th and 19th centuries and its matches were generally considered top-class. In this form, although each team may have from one to six players, there is only one batter in at a time and he must face every delivery bowled while his innings lasts. Single wicket has rarely been played since limited overs cricket began. Matches tended to have two innings per team like a full first-class one and they could end in a draw.[134]

Competitions

Cricket is played at both the international and domestic level. There is one major international championship per format, and top-level domestic competitions mirror the three main international formats. There are now a number of T20 leagues, which have spawned a "T20 freelancer" phenomenon.[135]

International competitions

Most international matches are played as parts of 'tours', when one nation travels to another for a number of weeks or months, and plays a number of matches of various sorts against the host nation. Sometimes a perpetual trophy is awarded to the winner of the Test series, the most famous of which is The Ashes.

The ICC also organises competitions that are for several countries at once, including the Cricket World Cup, ICC T20 World Cup and ICC Champions Trophy. A league competition for Test matches played as part of normal tours, the ICC World Test Championship, had been proposed several times, and its first instance began in 2019. A league competition for ODIs, the ICC Cricket World Cup Super League, began in August 2020. The ICC maintains Test rankings, ODI rankings and T20 rankings systems for the countries which play these forms of cricket.

Competitions for member nations of the ICC with Associate status include the ICC Intercontinental Cup, for first-class cricket matches, and the World Cricket League for one-day matches, the final matches of which now also serve as the ICC World Cup Qualifier.

National competitions

 
Yorkshire County Cricket Club in 1895. The team first won the County Championship in 1893.

First-class

First-class cricket in England is played for the most part by the 18 county clubs which contest the County Championship. The concept of a champion county has existed since the 18th century but the official competition was not established until 1890.[44] The most successful club has been Yorkshire, who had won 32 official titles (plus one shared) as of 2019.[136]

Australia established its national first-class championship in 1892–93 when the Sheffield Shield was introduced. In Australia, the first-class teams represent the various states.[137] New South Wales has the highest number of titles.

The other ICC full members have national championship trophies called the Ahmad Shah Abdali 4-day Tournament (Afghanistan); the National Cricket League (Bangladesh); the Ranji Trophy (India); the Inter-Provincial Championship (Ireland); the Plunket Shield (New Zealand); the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy (Pakistan); the Currie Cup (South Africa); the Premier Trophy (Sri Lanka); the Shell Shield (West Indies); and the Logan Cup (Zimbabwe).

Limited overs

Other

Club and school cricket

 
Y.M.C.A. women playing cricket as part of 'sports for troops', Sydney University, 23 April 1941

The world's earliest known cricket match was a village cricket meeting in Kent which has been deduced from a 1640 court case recording a "cricketing" of "the Weald and the Upland" versus "the Chalk Hill" at Chevening "about thirty years since" (i.e., c. 1611). Inter-parish contests became popular in the first half of the 17th century and continued to develop through the 18th with the first local leagues being founded in the second half of the 19th.[19]

At the grassroots level, local club cricket is essentially an amateur pastime for those involved but still usually involves teams playing in competitions at weekends or in the evening. Schools cricket, first known in southern England in the 17th century, has a similar scenario and both are widely played in the countries where cricket is popular.[138] Although there can be variations in game format, compared with professional cricket, the Laws are always observed and club/school matches are therefore formal and competitive events.[139] The sport has numerous informal variants such as French cricket.[140]

Culture

Influence on everyday life

Cricket has had a broad impact on popular culture, both in the Commonwealth of Nations and elsewhere. It has, for example, influenced the lexicon of these nations, especially the English language, with various phrases such as "that's not cricket" (that's unfair), "had a good innings" (lived a long life) and "sticky wicket". "On a sticky wicket" (aka "sticky dog" or "glue pot")[141] is a metaphor[142] used to describe a difficult circumstance. It originated as a term for difficult batting conditions in cricket, caused by a damp and soft pitch.[143]

In the arts and popular culture

Cricket is the subject of works by noted English poets, including William Blake and Lord Byron.[144] Beyond a Boundary (1963), written by Trinidadian C. L. R. James, is often named the best book on any sport ever written.[145]

 
Tom Wills, cricketer and co-founder of Australian football

In the visual arts, notable cricket paintings include Albert Chevallier Tayler's Kent vs Lancashire at Canterbury (1907) and Russell Drysdale's The Cricketers (1948), which has been called "possibly the most famous Australian painting of the 20th century."[146] French impressionist Camille Pissarro painted cricket on a visit to England in the 1890s.[144] Francis Bacon, an avid cricket fan, captured a batter in motion.[144] Caribbean artist Wendy Nanan's cricket images[147] are featured in a limited edition first day cover for Royal Mail's "World of Invention" stamp issue, which celebrated the London Cricket Conference 1–3 March 2007, first international workshop of its kind and part of the celebrations leading up to the 2007 Cricket World Cup.[148]

Influence on other sports

Cricket has close historical ties with Australian rules football and many players have competed at top levels in both sports.[149] In 1858, prominent Australian cricketer Tom Wills called for the formation of a "foot-ball club" with "a code of laws" to keep cricketers fit during the off-season. The Melbourne Football Club was founded the following year, and Wills and three other members codified the first laws of the game.[150] It is typically played on modified cricket fields.[151]

In England, a number of association football clubs owe their origins to cricketers who sought to play football as a means of keeping fit during the winter months. Derby County was founded as a branch of the Derbyshire County Cricket Club in 1884;[152] Aston Villa (1874) and Everton (1876) were both founded by members of church cricket teams.[153] Sheffield United's Bramall Lane ground was, from 1854, the home of the Sheffield Cricket Club, and then of Yorkshire; it was not used for football until 1862 and was shared by Yorkshire and Sheffield United from 1889 to 1973.[154]

In the late 19th century, a former cricketer, English-born Henry Chadwick of Brooklyn, New York, was credited with devising the baseball box score[155] (which he adapted from the cricket scorecard) for reporting game events. The first box score appeared in an 1859 issue of the Clipper.[156] The statistical record is so central to the game's "historical essence" that Chadwick is sometimes referred to as "the Father of Baseball" because he facilitated the popularity of the sport in its early days.[157]

See also

Related sports

Footnotes

  1. ^ The term "amateur" in this context does not mean someone who played cricket in his spare time. Many amateurs in first-class cricket were full-time players during the cricket season. Some of the game's greatest players, including W. G. Grace, held amateur status.

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Sources

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cricket, this, article, about, sport, insect, insect, other, uses, disambiguation, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, ball, game, played, between, teams, eleven, players, field, centre, which, yard, metre, pitch, with, wicket, each, each, comprising. This article is about the sport For the insect see Cricket insect For other uses see Cricket disambiguation Cricketer redirects here For other uses see Cricketer disambiguation Cricket is a bat and ball game played between two teams of eleven players on a field at the centre of which is a 22 yard 20 metre pitch with a wicket at each end each comprising two bails balanced on three stumps The batting side scores runs by striking the ball bowled at one of the wickets with the bat and then running between the wickets while the bowling and fielding side tries to prevent this by preventing the ball from leaving the field and getting the ball to either wicket and dismiss each batter so they are out Means of dismissal include being bowled when the ball hits the stumps and dislodges the bails and by the fielding side either catching the ball after it is hit by the bat but before it hits the ground or hitting a wicket with the ball before a batter can cross the crease in front of the wicket When ten batters have been dismissed the innings ends and the teams swap roles The game is adjudicated by two umpires aided by a third umpire and match referee in international matches They communicate with two off field scorers who record the match s statistical information CricketShaun Pollock of South Africa bowls to Michael Hussey of Australia during the 2005 Boxing Day Test match at the Melbourne Cricket GroundHighest governing bodyInternational Cricket CouncilFirst played16th century South East EnglandCharacteristicsContactNoTeam members11 players per side substitutes permitted in some circumstances Mixed sexNo separate competitionsTypeTeam sport Bat and BallEquipmentCricket ball Cricket bat Wicket Stumps Bails Protective equipmentVenueCricket fieldGlossaryGlossary of cricket termsPresenceCountry or regionWorldwide most popular in the Commonwealth Olympic 1900 Summer Olympics Forms of cricket range from Twenty20 with each team batting for a single innings of 20 overs each over being a set of 6 fair opportunities for the batting team to score and the game generally lasting three hours to Test matches played over five days Traditionally cricketers play in all white kit but in limited overs cricket they wear club or team colours In addition to the basic kit some players wear protective gear to prevent injury caused by the ball which is a hard solid spheroid made of compressed leather with a slightly raised sewn seam enclosing a cork core layered with tightly wound string The earliest reference to cricket is in South East England in the mid 16th century It spread globally with the expansion of the British Empire with the first international matches in the second half of the 19th century The game s governing body is the International Cricket Council ICC which has over 100 members twelve of which are full members who play Test matches The game s rules the Laws of Cricket are maintained by Marylebone Cricket Club MCC in London The sport is followed primarily in South Asia Australasia the United Kingdom Southern Africa and the West Indies 1 Women s cricket which is organised and played separately has also achieved international standard The most successful side playing international cricket is Australia which has won seven One Day International trophies including five World Cups more than any other country and has been the top rated Test side more than any other country Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins 1 2 Growth of amateur and professional cricket in England 1 3 English cricket in the 18th and 19th centuries 1 4 Cricket becomes an international sport 1 5 World cricket in the 20th century 1 6 The rise of limited overs cricket 2 Laws and gameplay 2 1 Playing area 2 2 Match structure and closure 2 2 1 Innings 2 2 1 1 Overs 2 3 Clothing and equipment 2 3 1 Bat and ball 2 4 Player roles 2 4 1 Basic gameplay bowler to batter 2 4 2 Fielding 2 4 3 Bowling and dismissal 2 4 4 Batting runs and extras 2 4 5 Specialist roles 2 5 Umpires and scorers 2 6 Spirit of the Game 3 Women s cricket 4 Governance 5 Forms of cricket 6 Competitions 6 1 International competitions 6 2 National competitions 6 2 1 First class 6 2 2 Limited overs 6 2 3 Other 6 3 Club and school cricket 7 Culture 7 1 Influence on everyday life 7 2 In the arts and popular culture 7 3 Influence on other sports 8 See also 9 Footnotes 10 Citations 11 Sources 12 Further reading 13 External linksHistoryMain article History of cricket Origins Main article History of cricket to 1725 A medieval club ball game involving an underarm bowl towards a batter Ball catchers are shown positioning themselves to catch a ball Detail from the Canticles of Holy Mary 13th century Cricket is one of many games in the club ball sphere that basically involve hitting a ball with a hand held implement others include baseball which shares many similarities with cricket both belonging in the more specific bat and ball games category 2 golf hockey tennis squash badminton and table tennis 3 In cricket s case a key difference is the existence of a solid target structure the wicket originally it is thought a wicket gate through which sheep were herded that the batter must defend 4 The cricket historian Harry Altham identified three groups of club ball games the hockey group in which the ball is driven to and from between two targets the goals the golf group in which the ball is driven towards an undefended target the hole and the cricket group in which the ball is aimed at a mark the wicket and driven away from it 5 It is generally believed that cricket originated as a children s game in the south eastern counties of England sometime during the medieval period 4 Although there are claims for prior dates the earliest definite reference to cricket being played comes from evidence given at a court case in Guildford in January 1597 Old Style equating to January 1598 in the modern calendar The case concerned ownership of a certain plot of land and the court heard the testimony of a 59 year old coroner John Derrick who gave witness that 6 7 8 Being a scholler in the ffree schoole of Guldeford hee and diverse of his fellows did runne and play there at creckett and other plaies Given Derrick s age it was about half a century earlier when he was at school and so it is certain that cricket was being played c 1550 by boys in Surrey 8 The view that it was originally a children s game is reinforced by Randle Cotgrave s 1611 English French dictionary in which he defined the noun crosse as the crooked staff wherewith boys play at cricket and the verb form crosser as to play at cricket 9 10 One possible source for the sport s name is the Old English word cryce or cricc meaning a crutch or staff In Samuel Johnson s Dictionary he derived cricket from cryce Saxon a stick 6 In Old French the word criquet seems to have meant a kind of club or stick 11 Given the strong medieval trade connections between south east England and the County of Flanders when the latter belonged to the Duchy of Burgundy the name may have been derived from the Middle Dutch in use in Flanders at the time krick e meaning a stick crook 11 Another possible source is the Middle Dutch word krickstoel meaning a long low stool used for kneeling in church and which resembled the long low wicket with two stumps used in early cricket 12 According to Heiner Gillmeister a European language expert of Bonn University cricket derives from the Middle Dutch phrase for hockey met de krik ket sen i e with the stick chase 13 Gillmeister has suggested that not only the name but also the sport itself may be of Flemish origin 13 Growth of amateur and professional cricket in England Evolution of the cricket bat The original hockey stick left evolved into the straight bat from c 1760 when pitched delivery bowling began Although the main object of the game has always been to score the most runs the early form of cricket differed from the modern game in certain key technical aspects the North American variant of cricket known as wicket retained many of these aspects 14 The ball was bowled underarm by the bowler and along the ground towards a batter armed with a bat that in shape resembled a hockey stick the batter defended a low two stump wicket and runs were called notches because the scorers recorded them by notching tally sticks 15 16 17 In 1611 the year Cotgrave s dictionary was published ecclesiastical court records at Sidlesham in Sussex state that two parishioners Bartholomew Wyatt and Richard Latter failed to attend church on Easter Sunday because they were playing cricket They were fined 12d each and ordered to do penance 18 This is the earliest mention of adult participation in cricket and it was around the same time that the earliest known organised inter parish or village match was played at Chevening Kent 6 19 In 1624 a player called Jasper Vinall died after he was accidentally struck on the head during a match between two parish teams in Sussex 20 Cricket remained a low key local pursuit for much of the 17th century 10 It is known through numerous references found in the records of ecclesiastical court cases to have been proscribed at times by the Puritans before and during the Commonwealth 21 22 The problem was nearly always the issue of Sunday play as the Puritans considered cricket to be profane if played on the Sabbath especially if large crowds or gambling were involved 23 24 According to the social historian Derek Birley there was a great upsurge of sport after the Restoration in 1660 25 Several members of the court of King Charles II took a strong interest in cricket during that era 26 Gambling on sport became a problem significant enough for Parliament to pass the 1664 Gambling Act limiting stakes to 100 which was in any case a colossal sum exceeding the annual income of 99 of the population 25 Along with prizefighting horse racing and blood sports cricket was perceived to be a gambling sport 27 Rich patrons made matches for high stakes forming teams in which they engaged the first professional players 28 By the end of the century cricket had developed into a major sport that was spreading throughout England and was already being taken abroad by English mariners and colonisers the earliest reference to cricket overseas is dated 1676 29 A 1697 newspaper report survives of a great cricket match played in Sussex for fifty guineas apiece this is the earliest known contest that is generally considered a First Class match 30 31 The patrons and other players from the social class known as the gentry began to classify themselves as amateurs fn 1 to establish a clear distinction from the professionals who were invariably members of the working class even to the point of having separate changing and dining facilities 32 The gentry including such high ranking nobles as the Dukes of Richmond exerted their honour code of noblesse oblige to claim rights of leadership in any sporting contests they took part in especially as it was necessary for them to play alongside their social inferiors if they were to win their bets 33 In time a perception took hold that the typical amateur who played in first class cricket until 1962 when amateurism was abolished was someone with a public school education who had then gone to one of Cambridge or Oxford University society insisted that such people were officers and gentlemen whose destiny was to provide leadership 34 In a purely financial sense the cricketing amateur would theoretically claim expenses for playing while his professional counterpart played under contract and was paid a wage or match fee in practice many amateurs claimed more than actual expenditure and the derisive term shamateur was coined to describe the practice 35 36 English cricket in the 18th and 19th centuries Francis Cotes The Young Cricketer 1768 The game underwent major development in the 18th century to become England s national sport 37 Its success was underwritten by the twin necessities of patronage and betting 38 Cricket was prominent in London as early as 1707 and in the middle years of the century large crowds flocked to matches on the Artillery Ground in Finsbury citation needed The single wicket form of the sport attracted huge crowds and wagers to match its popularity peaking in the 1748 season 39 Bowling underwent an evolution around 1760 when bowlers began to pitch the ball instead of rolling or skimming it towards the batter This caused a revolution in bat design because to deal with the bouncing ball it was necessary to introduce the modern straight bat in place of the old hockey stick shape 40 citation needed The Hambledon Club was founded in the 1760s and for the next twenty years until the formation of Marylebone Cricket Club MCC and the opening of Lord s Old Ground in 1787 Hambledon was both the game s greatest club and its focal point citation needed MCC quickly became the sport s premier club and the custodian of the Laws of Cricket New Laws introduced in the latter part of the 18th century included the three stump wicket and leg before wicket lbw 41 The 19th century saw underarm bowling superseded by first roundarm and then overarm bowling Both developments were controversial 42 Organisation of the game at county level led to the creation of the county clubs starting with Sussex in 1839 43 In December 1889 the eight leading county clubs formed the official County Championship which began in 1890 44 The first recorded photo of a cricket match taken on 25 July 1857 by Roger Fenton The most famous player of the 19th century was W G Grace who started his long and influential career in 1865 It was especially during the career of Grace that the distinction between amateurs and professionals became blurred by the existence of players like him who were nominally amateur but in terms of their financial gain de facto professional Grace himself was said to have been paid more money for playing cricket than any professional citation needed The last two decades before the First World War have been called the Golden Age of cricket It is a nostalgic name prompted by the collective sense of loss resulting from the war but the period did produce some great players and memorable matches especially as organised competition at county and Test level developed 45 Cricket becomes an international sport The first English team to tour overseas on board ship to North America 1859 In 1844 the first ever international match took place between what were essentially club teams from the United States and Canada in Toronto Canada won 46 47 In 1859 a team of English players went to North America on the first overseas tour 48 Meanwhile the British Empire had been instrumental in spreading the game overseas and by the middle of the 19th century it had become well established in Australia the Caribbean British India which includes present day Pakistan and Bangladesh New Zealand North America and South Africa 49 In 1862 an English team made the first tour of Australia 50 The first Australian team to travel overseas consisted of Aboriginal stockmen which toured England in 1868 51 In 1876 77 an England team took part in what was retrospectively recognized as the first ever Test match at the Melbourne Cricket Ground against Australia 52 The rivalry between England and Australia gave birth to The Ashes in 1882 and this has remained Test cricket s most famous contest 53 Test cricket began to expand in 1888 89 when South Africa played England 54 World cricket in the 20th century Don Bradman of Australia had a record Test batting average of 99 94 The inter war years were dominated by Australia s Don Bradman statistically the greatest Test batter of all time Test cricket continued to expand during the 20th century with the addition of the West Indies 1928 New Zealand 1930 and India 1932 before the Second World War and then Pakistan 1952 Sri Lanka 1982 Zimbabwe 1992 Bangladesh 2000 Ireland and Afghanistan both 2018 in the post war period 55 56 South Africa was banned from international cricket from 1970 to 1992 as part of the apartheid boycott 57 The rise of limited overs cricket Cricket entered a new era in 1963 when English counties introduced the limited overs variant 58 As it was sure to produce a result limited overs cricket was lucrative and the number of matches increased 59 The first Limited Overs International was played in 1971 and the governing International Cricket Council ICC seeing its potential staged the first limited overs Cricket World Cup in 1975 60 In the 21st century a new limited overs form Twenty20 made an immediate impact citation needed On 22 June 2017 Afghanistan and Ireland became the 11th and 12th ICC full members enabling them to play Test cricket 61 62 Laws and gameplayMain article Laws of Cricket A typical cricket field In cricket the rules of the game are specified in a code called The Laws of Cricket hereinafter called the Laws which has a global remit There are 42 Laws always written with a capital L The earliest known version of the code was drafted in 1744 and since 1788 it has been owned and maintained by its custodian the Marylebone Cricket Club MCC in London 63 Playing area Main articles Cricket field Cricket pitch Crease cricket and Wicket Cricket is a bat and ball game played on a cricket field see image right between two teams of eleven players each 64 The field is usually circular or oval in shape and the edge of the playing area is marked by a boundary which may be a fence part of the stands a rope a painted line or a combination of these the boundary must if possible be marked along its entire length 65 In the approximate centre of the field is a rectangular pitch see image below on which a wooden target called a wicket is sited at each end the wickets are placed 22 yards 20 m apart 66 The pitch is a flat surface 10 feet 3 0 m wide with very short grass that tends to be worn away as the game progresses cricket can also be played on artificial surfaces notably matting Each wicket is made of three wooden stumps topped by two bails 67 Cricket pitch and creases As illustrated above the pitch is marked at each end with four white painted lines a bowling crease a popping crease and two return creases The three stumps are aligned centrally on the bowling crease which is eight feet eight inches long The popping crease is drawn four feet in front of the bowling crease and parallel to it although it is drawn as a twelve foot line six feet either side of the wicket it is in fact unlimited in length The return creases are drawn at right angles to the popping crease so that they intersect the ends of the bowling crease each return crease is drawn as an eight foot line so that it extends four feet behind the bowling crease but is also in fact unlimited in length 68 Match structure and closure Main articles Innings and Result cricket A modern SG cricket bat back view Before a match begins the team captains who are also players toss a coin to decide which team will bat first and so take the first innings 69 Innings is the term used for each phase of play in the match 69 In each innings one team bats attempting to score runs while the other team bowls and fields the ball attempting to restrict the scoring and dismiss the batters 70 71 When the first innings ends the teams change roles there can be two to four innings depending upon the type of match A match with four scheduled innings is played over three to five days a match with two scheduled innings is usually completed in a single day 69 During an innings all eleven members of the fielding team take the field but usually only two members of the batting team are on the field at any given time The exception to this is if a batter has any type of illness or injury restricting his or her ability to run in this case the batter is allowed a runner who can run between the wickets when the batter hits a scoring run or runs 72 though this does not apply in international cricket 73 The order of batters is usually announced just before the match but it can be varied 64 The main objective of each team is to score more runs than their opponents but in some forms of cricket it is also necessary to dismiss all of the opposition batters in their final innings in order to win the match which would otherwise be drawn 74 If the team batting last is all out having scored fewer runs than their opponents they are said to have lost by n runs where n is the difference between the aggregate number of runs scored by the teams If the team that bats last scores enough runs to win it is said to have won by n wickets where n is the number of wickets left to fall For example a team that passes its opponents total having lost six wickets i e six of their batters have been dismissed have won the match by four wickets 74 In a two innings a side match one team s combined first and second innings total may be less than the other side s first innings total The team with the greater score is then said to have won by an innings and n runs and does not need to bat again n is the difference between the two teams aggregate scores If the team batting last is all out and both sides have scored the same number of runs then the match is a tie this result is quite rare in matches of two innings a side with only 62 happening in first class matches from the earliest known instance in 1741 until January 2017 In the traditional form of the game if the time allotted for the match expires before either side can win then the game is declared a draw 74 If the match has only a single innings per side then usually a maximum number of overs applies to each innings Such a match is called a limited overs or one day match and the side scoring more runs wins regardless of the number of wickets lost so that a draw cannot occur In some cases ties are broken by having each team bat for a one over innings known as a Super Over subsequent Super Overs may be played if the first Super Over ends in a tie If this kind of match is temporarily interrupted by bad weather then a complex mathematical formula known as the Duckworth Lewis Stern method after its developers is often used to recalculate a new target score A one day match can also be declared a no result if fewer than a previously agreed number of overs have been bowled by either team in circumstances that make normal resumption of play impossible for example wet weather 74 In all forms of cricket the umpires can abandon the match if bad light or rain makes it impossible to continue 75 There have been instances of entire matches even Test matches scheduled to be played over five days being lost to bad weather without a ball being bowled for example the third Test of the 1970 71 series in Australia 76 Innings Main article Innings The innings ending with s in both singular and plural form is the term used for each phase of play during a match Depending on the type of match being played each team has either one or two innings Sometimes all eleven members of the batting side take a turn to bat but for various reasons an innings can end before they have all done so The innings terminates if the batting team is all out a term defined by the Laws at the fall of a wicket or the retirement of a batter further balls remain to be bowled but no further batter is available to come in 69 In this situation one of the batters has not been dismissed and is termed not out this is because he has no partners left and there must always be two active batters while the innings is in progress An innings may end early while there are still two not out batters 69 the batting team s captain may declare the innings closed even though some of his players have not had a turn to bat this is a tactical decision by the captain usually because he believes his team have scored sufficient runs and need time to dismiss the opposition in their innings the set number of overs i e in a limited overs match have been bowled the match has ended prematurely due to bad weather or running out of time in the final innings of the match the batting side has reached its target and won the game Overs Main article Over cricket The Laws state that throughout an innings the ball shall be bowled from each end alternately in overs of 6 balls 77 The name over came about because the umpire calls Over when six balls have been bowled At this point another bowler is deployed at the other end and the fielding side changes ends while the batters do not A bowler cannot bowl two successive overs although a bowler can and usually does bowl alternate overs from the same end for several overs which are termed a spell The batters do not change ends at the end of the over and so the one who was non striker is now the striker and vice versa The umpires also change positions so that the one who was at square leg now stands behind the wicket at the non striker s end and vice versa 77 Clothing and equipment Main article Cricket clothing and equipment English cricketer W G Grace taking guard in 1883 His pads and bat are very similar to those used today The gloves have evolved somewhat Many modern players use more defensive equipment than were available to Grace most notably helmets and arm guards The wicket keeper a specialised fielder behind the batter and the batters wear protective gear because of the hardness of the ball which can be delivered at speeds of more than 145 kilometres per hour 90 mph and presents a major health and safety concern Protective clothing includes pads designed to protect the knees and shins batting gloves or wicket keeper s gloves for the hands a safety helmet for the head and a box for male players inside the trousers to protect the crotch area 78 Some batters wear additional padding inside their shirts and trousers such as thigh pads arm pads rib protectors and shoulder pads The only fielders allowed to wear protective gear are those in positions very close to the batter i e if they are alongside or in front of him but they cannot wear gloves or external leg guards 79 Subject to certain variations on field clothing generally includes a collared shirt with short or long sleeves long trousers woolen pullover if needed cricket cap for fielding or a safety helmet and spiked shoes or boots to increase traction The kit is traditionally all white and this remains the case in Test and first class cricket but in limited overs cricket team colours are worn instead 80 Bat and ball Main articles Cricket bat and Cricket ball Two types of cricket ball both of the same size i A used white ball White balls are mainly used in limited overs cricket especially in matches played at night under floodlights left ii A used red ball Red balls are used in Test cricket first class cricket and some other forms of cricket right The essence of the sport is that a bowler delivers i e bowls the ball from his or her end of the pitch towards the batter who armed with a bat is on strike at the other end see next sub section Basic gameplay The bat is made of wood usually Salix alba white willow and has the shape of a blade topped by a cylindrical handle The blade must not be more than 4 25 inches 10 8 cm wide and the total length of the bat not more than 38 inches 97 cm There is no standard for the weight which is usually between 2 lb 7 oz and 3 lb 1 1 and 1 4 kg 81 82 The ball is a hard leather seamed spheroid with a circumference of 9 inches 23 cm The ball has a seam six rows of stitches attaching the leather shell of the ball to the string and cork interior The seam on a new ball is prominent and helps the bowler propel it in a less predictable manner During matches the quality of the ball deteriorates to a point where it is no longer usable during the course of this deterioration its behaviour in flight will change and can influence the outcome of the match Players will therefore attempt to modify the ball s behaviour by modifying its physical properties Polishing the ball and wetting it with sweat or saliva is legal even when the polishing is deliberately done on one side only to increase the ball s swing through the air but the acts of rubbing other substances into the ball scratching the surface or picking at the seam are illegal ball tampering 83 Player roles Basic gameplay bowler to batter During normal play thirteen players and two umpires are on the field Two of the players are batters and the rest are all eleven members of the fielding team The other nine players in the batting team are off the field in the pavilion The image with overlay below shows what is happening when a ball is being bowled and which of the personnel are on or close to the pitch 84 1234567789101112121Umpire2Wicket3Non striking batter4Bowler5Ball6Pitch7Popping crease8Striking batter9Wicket10Wicket keeper11First slip12Return creaseIn the photo the two batters 3 amp 8 wearing yellow have taken position at each end of the pitch 6 Three members of the fielding team 4 10 amp 11 wearing dark blue are in shot One of the two umpires 1 wearing white hat is stationed behind the wicket 2 at the bowler s 4 end of the pitch The bowler 4 is bowling the ball 5 from his end of the pitch to the batter 8 at the other end who is called the striker The other batter 3 at the bowling end is called the non striker The wicket keeper 10 who is a specialist is positioned behind the striker s wicket 9 and behind him stands one of the fielders in a position called first slip 11 While the bowler and the first slip are wearing conventional kit only the two batters and the wicket keeper are wearing protective gear including safety helmets padded gloves and leg guards pads While the umpire 1 in shot stands at the bowler s end of the pitch his colleague stands in the outfield usually in or near the fielding position called square leg so that he is in line with the popping crease 7 at the striker s end of the pitch The bowling crease not numbered is the one on which the wicket is located between the return creases 12 The bowler 4 intends to hit the wicket 9 with the ball 5 or at least to prevent the striker 8 from scoring runs The striker 8 intends by using his bat to defend his wicket and if possible to hit the ball away from the pitch in order to score runs Some players are skilled in both batting and bowling or as either of these as well as wicket keeping so are termed all rounders Bowlers are classified according to their style generally as fast bowlers seam bowlers or spinners Batters are classified according to whether they are right handed or left handed Fielding Main article Fielding cricket Fielding positions in cricket for a right handed batter Of the eleven fielders three are in shot in the image above The other eight are elsewhere on the field their positions determined on a tactical basis by the captain or the bowler Fielders often change position between deliveries again as directed by the captain or bowler 79 If a fielder is injured or becomes ill during a match a substitute is allowed to field instead of him but the substitute cannot bowl or act as a captain except in the case of concussion substitutes in international cricket 73 The substitute leaves the field when the injured player is fit to return 85 The Laws of Cricket were updated in 2017 to allow substitutes to act as wicket keepers 86 Bowling and dismissal Main articles Bowling cricket and Dismissal cricket Glenn McGrath of Australia holds the world record for most wickets in the Cricket World Cup 87 Most bowlers are considered specialists in that they are selected for the team because of their skill as a bowler although some are all rounders and even specialist batters bowl occasionally The specialists bowl several times during an innings but may not bowl two overs consecutively If the captain wants a bowler to change ends another bowler must temporarily fill in so that the change is not immediate 77 A bowler reaches his delivery stride by means of a run up and an over is deemed to have begun when the bowler starts his run up for the first delivery of that over the ball then being in play 77 Fast bowlers needing momentum take a lengthy run up while bowlers with a slow delivery take no more than a couple of steps before bowling The fastest bowlers can deliver the ball at a speed of over 145 kilometres per hour 90 mph and they sometimes rely on sheer speed to try to defeat the batter who is forced to react very quickly 88 Other fast bowlers rely on a mixture of speed and guile by making the ball seam or swing i e curve in flight This type of delivery can deceive a batter into miscuing his shot for example so that the ball just touches the edge of the bat and can then be caught behind by the wicket keeper or a slip fielder 88 At the other end of the bowling scale is the spin bowler who bowls at a relatively slow pace and relies entirely on guile to deceive the batter A spinner will often buy his wicket by tossing one up in a slower steeper parabolic path to lure the batter into making a poor shot The batter has to be very wary of such deliveries as they are often flighted or spun so that the ball will not behave quite as he expects and he could be trapped into getting himself out 89 In between the pacemen and the spinners are the medium paced seamers who rely on persistent accuracy to try to contain the rate of scoring and wear down the batter s concentration 88 There are nine ways in which a batter can be dismissed five relatively common and four extremely rare The common forms of dismissal are bowled 90 caught 91 leg before wicket lbw 92 run out 93 and stumped 94 Rare methods are hit wicket 95 hit the ball twice 96 obstructing the field 97 and timed out 98 The Laws state that the fielding team usually the bowler in practice must appeal for a dismissal before the umpire can give his decision If the batter is out the umpire raises a forefinger and says Out otherwise he will shake his head and say Not out 99 There is effectively a tenth method of dismissal retired out which is not an on field dismissal as such but rather a retrospective one for which no fielder is credited 100 Batting runs and extras Main articles Batting cricket Run cricket and Extra cricket The directions in which a right handed batter facing down the page intends to send the ball when playing various cricketing shots The diagram for a left handed batter is a mirror image of this one Batters take turns to bat via a batting order which is decided beforehand by the team captain and presented to the umpires though the order remains flexible when the captain officially nominates the team 64 Substitute batters are generally not allowed 85 except in the case of concussion substitutes in international cricket 73 In order to begin batting the batter first adopts a batting stance Standardly this involves adopting a slight crouch with the feet pointing across the front of the wicket looking in the direction of the bowler and holding the bat so it passes over the feet and so its tip can rest on the ground near to the toes of the back foot 101 A skilled batter can use a wide array of shots or strokes in both defensive and attacking mode The idea is to hit the ball to the best effect with the flat surface of the bat s blade If the ball touches the side of the bat it is called an edge The batter does not have to play a shot and can allow the ball to go through to the wicketkeeper Equally he does not have to attempt a run when he hits the ball with his bat Batters do not always seek to hit the ball as hard as possible and a good player can score runs just by making a deft stroke with a turn of the wrists or by simply blocking the ball but directing it away from fielders so that he has time to take a run A wide variety of shots are played the batter s repertoire including strokes named according to the style of swing and the direction aimed e g cut drive hook pull 102 The batter on strike i e the striker must prevent the ball hitting the wicket and try to score runs by hitting the ball with his bat so that he and his partner have time to run from one end of the pitch to the other before the fielding side can return the ball To register a run both runners must touch the ground behind the popping crease with either their bats or their bodies the batters carry their bats as they run Each completed run increments the score of both the team and the striker 103 Sachin Tendulkar is the only player to have scored one hundred international centuries The decision to attempt a run is ideally made by the batter who has the better view of the ball s progress and this is communicated by calling usually yes no or wait More than one run can be scored from a single hit hits worth one to three runs are common but the size of the field is such that it is usually difficult to run four or more 103 To compensate for this hits that reach the boundary of the field are automatically awarded four runs if the ball touches the ground en route to the boundary or six runs if the ball clears the boundary without touching the ground within the boundary In these cases the batters do not need to run 104 Hits for five are unusual and generally rely on the help of overthrows by a fielder returning the ball If an odd number of runs is scored by the striker the two batters have changed ends and the one who was non striker is now the striker Only the striker can score individual runs but all runs are added to the team s total 103 Additional runs can be gained by the batting team as extras called sundries in Australia due to errors made by the fielding side This is achieved in four ways no ball a penalty of one extra conceded by the bowler if he breaks the rules 105 wide a penalty of one extra conceded by the bowler if he bowls so that the ball is out of the batter s reach 106 bye an extra awarded if the batter misses the ball and it goes past the wicket keeper and gives the batters time to run in the conventional way 107 leg bye as for a bye except that the ball has hit the batter s body though not his bat 107 If the bowler has conceded a no ball or a wide his team incurs an additional penalty because that ball i e delivery has to be bowled again and hence the batting side has the opportunity to score more runs from this extra ball 105 106 Specialist roles Main articles Captain cricket and Wicket keeper The captain is often the most experienced player in the team certainly the most tactically astute and can possess any of the main skillsets as a batter a bowler or a wicket keeper Within the Laws the captain has certain responsibilities in terms of nominating his players to the umpires before the match and ensuring that his players conduct themselves within the spirit and traditions of the game as well as within the Laws 64 The wicket keeper sometimes called simply the keeper is a specialist fielder subject to various rules within the Laws about his equipment and demeanour He is the only member of the fielding side who can effect a stumping and is the only one permitted to wear gloves and external leg guards 108 Depending on their primary skills the other ten players in the team tend to be classified as specialist batters or specialist bowlers Generally a team will include five or six specialist batters and four or five specialist bowlers plus the wicket keeper 109 110 Umpires and scorers Main articles Umpire cricket Scoring cricket and Cricket statistics An umpire signals a decision to the scorers The game on the field is regulated by the two umpires one of whom stands behind the wicket at the bowler s end the other in a position called square leg which is about 15 20 metres away from the batter on strike and in line with the popping crease on which he is taking guard The umpires have several responsibilities including adjudication on whether a ball has been correctly bowled i e not a no ball or a wide when a run is scored whether a batter is out the fielding side must first appeal to the umpire usually with the phrase How s that or Owzat when intervals start and end and the suitability of the pitch field and weather for playing the game The umpires are authorised to interrupt or even abandon a match due to circumstances likely to endanger the players such as a damp pitch or deterioration of the light 75 Off the field in televised matches there is usually a third umpire who can make decisions on certain incidents with the aid of video evidence The third umpire is mandatory under the playing conditions for Test and Limited Overs International matches played between two ICC full member countries These matches also have a match referee whose job is to ensure that play is within the Laws and the spirit of the game 75 The match details including runs and dismissals are recorded by two official scorers one representing each team The scorers are directed by the hand signals of an umpire see image right For example the umpire raises a forefinger to signal that the batter is out has been dismissed he raises both arms above his head if the batter has hit the ball for six runs The scorers are required by the Laws to record all runs scored wickets taken and overs bowled in practice they also note significant amounts of additional data relating to the game 111 A match s statistics are summarised on a scorecard Prior to the popularisation of scorecards most scoring was done by men sitting on vantage points cuttings notches on tally sticks and runs were originally called notches 112 According to Rowland Bowen the earliest known scorecard templates were introduced in 1776 by T Pratt of Sevenoaks and soon came into general use 113 It is believed that scorecards were printed and sold at Lord s for the first time in 1846 114 Spirit of the Game Main article Laws of Cricket Besides observing the Laws cricketers must respect the Spirit of Cricket a concept encompassing sportsmanship fair play and mutual respect This spirit has long been considered an integral part of the sport but is only nebulously defined Amidst concern that the spirit was weakening in 2000 a Preamble was added to the Laws instructing all participants to play within the spirit of the game The Preamble was last updated in 2017 now opening with the line 115 Cricket owes much of its appeal and enjoyment to the fact that it should be played not only according to the Laws but also within the Spirit of Cricket The Preamble is a short statement intended to emphasise the positive behaviours that make cricket an exciting game that encourages leadership friendship and teamwork 116 Its second line states that the major responsibility for ensuring fair play rests with the captains but extends to all players match officials and especially in junior cricket teachers coaches and parents 115 The umpires are the sole judges of fair and unfair play They are required under the Laws to intervene in case of dangerous or unfair play or in cases of unacceptable conduct by a player Previous versions of the Spirit identified actions that were deemed contrary for example appealing knowing that the batter is not out but all specifics are now covered in the Laws of Cricket the relevant governing playing regulations and disciplinary codes or left to the judgement of the umpires captains their clubs and governing bodies The terse expression of the Spirit of Cricket now avoids the diversity of cultural conventions that exist in the detail of sportsmanship or its absence Women s cricketMain article Women s cricket Mithali Raj of India is the highest run scorer in women s international cricket Women s cricket was first recorded in Surrey in 1745 117 International development began at the start of the 20th century and the first Test Match was played between Australia and England in December 1934 118 The following year New Zealand joined them and in 2007 Netherland became the tenth women s Test nation when they made their debut against South Africa In 1958 the International Women s Cricket Council was founded it merged with the ICC in 2005 118 In 1973 the first Cricket World Cup of any kind took place when a Women s World Cup was held in England 118 In 2005 the International Women s Cricket Council was merged with the International Cricket Council ICC to form one unified body to help manage and develop cricket The ICC Women s Rankings were launched on 1 October 2015 covering all three formats of women s cricket In October 2018 following the ICC s decision to award T20 International status to all members the Women s rankings were split into separate ODI for Full Members and T20I lists 119 GovernanceMain article International Cricket Council ICC member nations The highest level Test playing nations are shown in red the associate member nations are shown in orange with those with ODI status in a darker shade suspended or former members are shown in dark grey The International Cricket Council ICC which has its headquarters in Dubai is the global governing body of cricket It was founded as the Imperial Cricket Conference in 1909 by representatives from England Australia and South Africa renamed the International Cricket Conference in 1965 and took up its current name in 1989 118 The ICC in 2017 has 105 member nations twelve of which hold full membership and can play Test cricket 120 The ICC is responsible for the organisation and governance of cricket s major international tournaments notably the men s and women s versions of the Cricket World Cup It also appoints the umpires and referees that officiate at all sanctioned Test matches Limited Overs Internationals and Twenty20 Internationals Each member nation has a national cricket board which regulates cricket matches played in its country selects the national squad and organises home and away tours for the national team 121 In the West Indies which for cricket purposes is a federation of nations these matters are addressed by Cricket West Indies 122 The table below lists the ICC full members and their national cricket boards 123 Nation Governing body Full Member since 124 Afghanistan Afghanistan Cricket Board 22 June 2017Australia Cricket Australia 15 July 1909Bangladesh Bangladesh Cricket Board 26 June 2000England England and Wales Cricket Board 15 July 1909India Board of Control for Cricket in India 31 May 1926Ireland Cricket Ireland 22 June 2017New Zealand New Zealand Cricket 31 May 1926Pakistan Pakistan Cricket Board 28 July 1952South Africa Cricket South Africa 15 July 1909Sri Lanka Sri Lanka Cricket 21 July 1981West Indies Cricket West Indies 31 May 1926Zimbabwe Zimbabwe Cricket 6 July 1992Forms of cricketMain article Forms of cricket A Test match between South Africa and England in January 2005 The men wearing black trousers are the umpires Teams in Test cricket first class cricket and club cricket wear traditional white uniforms and use red cricket balls Cricket is a multi faceted sport with multiple formats that can effectively be divided into first class cricket limited overs cricket and historically single wicket cricket The highest standard is Test cricket always written with a capital T which is in effect the international version of first class cricket and is restricted to teams representing the twelve countries that are full members of the ICC see above Although the term Test match was not coined until much later Test cricket is deemed to have begun with two matches between Australia and England in the 1876 77 Australian season since 1882 most Test series between England and Australia have been played for a trophy known as The Ashes The term first class in general usage is applied to top level domestic cricket Test matches are played over five days and first class over three to four days in all of these matches the teams are allotted two innings each and the draw is a valid result 125 Limited overs cricket is always scheduled for completion in a single day and the teams are allotted one innings each There are two main types List A which normally allows fifty overs per team and Twenty20 in which the teams have twenty overs each Both of the limited overs forms are played internationally as Limited Overs Internationals LOI and Twenty20 Internationals T20I List A was introduced in England in the 1963 season as a knockout cup contested by the first class county clubs In 1969 a national league competition was established The concept was gradually introduced to the other leading cricket countries and the first limited overs international was played in 1971 In 1975 the first Cricket World Cup took place in England Twenty20 is a new variant of limited overs itself with the purpose being to complete the match within about three hours usually in an evening session The first Twenty20 World Championship was held in 2007 In addition a few full member cricket boards have decided to start leagues that are played in the T10 format 126 127 128 129 in which games are intended to last approximately 90 minutes 130 131 Limited overs matches cannot be drawn although a tie is possible and an unfinished match is a no result 132 133 Single wicket was popular in the 18th and 19th centuries and its matches were generally considered top class In this form although each team may have from one to six players there is only one batter in at a time and he must face every delivery bowled while his innings lasts Single wicket has rarely been played since limited overs cricket began Matches tended to have two innings per team like a full first class one and they could end in a draw 134 CompetitionsCricket is played at both the international and domestic level There is one major international championship per format and top level domestic competitions mirror the three main international formats There are now a number of T20 leagues which have spawned a T20 freelancer phenomenon 135 International competitions Main article International cricket Most international matches are played as parts of tours when one nation travels to another for a number of weeks or months and plays a number of matches of various sorts against the host nation Sometimes a perpetual trophy is awarded to the winner of the Test series the most famous of which is The Ashes The ICC also organises competitions that are for several countries at once including the Cricket World Cup ICC T20 World Cup and ICC Champions Trophy A league competition for Test matches played as part of normal tours the ICC World Test Championship had been proposed several times and its first instance began in 2019 A league competition for ODIs the ICC Cricket World Cup Super League began in August 2020 The ICC maintains Test rankings ODI rankings and T20 rankings systems for the countries which play these forms of cricket Competitions for member nations of the ICC with Associate status include the ICC Intercontinental Cup for first class cricket matches and the World Cricket League for one day matches the final matches of which now also serve as the ICC World Cup Qualifier National competitions See also Category Domestic cricket competitions Yorkshire County Cricket Club in 1895 The team first won the County Championship in 1893 First class Main article List of current first class cricket teams First class cricket in England is played for the most part by the 18 county clubs which contest the County Championship The concept of a champion county has existed since the 18th century but the official competition was not established until 1890 44 The most successful club has been Yorkshire who had won 32 official titles plus one shared as of 2019 136 Australia established its national first class championship in 1892 93 when the Sheffield Shield was introduced In Australia the first class teams represent the various states 137 New South Wales has the highest number of titles The other ICC full members have national championship trophies called the Ahmad Shah Abdali 4 day Tournament Afghanistan the National Cricket League Bangladesh the Ranji Trophy India the Inter Provincial Championship Ireland the Plunket Shield New Zealand the Quaid e Azam Trophy Pakistan the Currie Cup South Africa the Premier Trophy Sri Lanka the Shell Shield West Indies and the Logan Cup Zimbabwe Limited overs Main articles List of domestic List A cricket competitions List of domestic Twenty20 cricket competitions and T10 leagues Other See also Minor Counties Cricket Championship and Second XI Championship Club and school cricket Y M C A women playing cricket as part of sports for troops Sydney University 23 April 1941 Main articles Village cricket Club cricket and Schools cricket The world s earliest known cricket match was a village cricket meeting in Kent which has been deduced from a 1640 court case recording a cricketing of the Weald and the Upland versus the Chalk Hill at Chevening about thirty years since i e c 1611 Inter parish contests became popular in the first half of the 17th century and continued to develop through the 18th with the first local leagues being founded in the second half of the 19th 19 At the grassroots level local club cricket is essentially an amateur pastime for those involved but still usually involves teams playing in competitions at weekends or in the evening Schools cricket first known in southern England in the 17th century has a similar scenario and both are widely played in the countries where cricket is popular 138 Although there can be variations in game format compared with professional cricket the Laws are always observed and club school matches are therefore formal and competitive events 139 The sport has numerous informal variants such as French cricket 140 CultureMain page Category Cricket culture Influence on everyday life Cricket has had a broad impact on popular culture both in the Commonwealth of Nations and elsewhere It has for example influenced the lexicon of these nations especially the English language with various phrases such as that s not cricket that s unfair had a good innings lived a long life and sticky wicket On a sticky wicket aka sticky dog or glue pot 141 is a metaphor 142 used to describe a difficult circumstance It originated as a term for difficult batting conditions in cricket caused by a damp and soft pitch 143 In the arts and popular culture See also Cricket in fiction Cricket in film and television and Cricket poetry Cricket is the subject of works by noted English poets including William Blake and Lord Byron 144 Beyond a Boundary 1963 written by Trinidadian C L R James is often named the best book on any sport ever written 145 Tom Wills cricketer and co founder of Australian football In the visual arts notable cricket paintings include Albert Chevallier Tayler s Kent vs Lancashire at Canterbury 1907 and Russell Drysdale s The Cricketers 1948 which has been called possibly the most famous Australian painting of the 20th century 146 French impressionist Camille Pissarro painted cricket on a visit to England in the 1890s 144 Francis Bacon an avid cricket fan captured a batter in motion 144 Caribbean artist Wendy Nanan s cricket images 147 are featured in a limited edition first day cover for Royal Mail s World of Invention stamp issue which celebrated the London Cricket Conference 1 3 March 2007 first international workshop of its kind and part of the celebrations leading up to the 2007 Cricket World Cup 148 Influence on other sports Cricket has close historical ties with Australian rules football and many players have competed at top levels in both sports 149 In 1858 prominent Australian cricketer Tom Wills called for the formation of a foot ball club with a code of laws to keep cricketers fit during the off season The Melbourne Football Club was founded the following year and Wills and three other members codified the first laws of the game 150 It is typically played on modified cricket fields 151 In England a number of association football clubs owe their origins to cricketers who sought to play football as a means of keeping fit during the winter months Derby County was founded as a branch of the Derbyshire County Cricket Club in 1884 152 Aston Villa 1874 and Everton 1876 were both founded by members of church cricket teams 153 Sheffield United s Bramall Lane ground was from 1854 the home of the Sheffield Cricket Club and then of Yorkshire it was not used for football until 1862 and was shared by Yorkshire and Sheffield United from 1889 to 1973 154 In the late 19th century a former cricketer English born Henry Chadwick of Brooklyn New York was credited with devising the baseball box score 155 which he adapted from the cricket scorecard for reporting game events The first box score appeared in an 1859 issue of the Clipper 156 The statistical record is so central to the game s historical essence that Chadwick is sometimes referred to as the Father of Baseball because he facilitated the popularity of the sport in its early days 157 See also Cricket portalGlossary of cricket terms Willow and StumpyRelated sports Street cricket Bete ombro Brazilian version Plaquita Dominican version Baseball Comparison of baseball and cricket StoolballFootnotes The term amateur in this context does not mean someone who played cricket in his spare time Many amateurs in first class cricket were full time players during the cricket season Some of the game s greatest players including W G Grace held amateur status Citations ICC survey reveals over a billion fans 90 in subcontinent ESPNcricinfo 27 June 2018 Cricket baseball rounders and softball What s the difference www bbc co uk Retrieved 5 September 2020 Major 2007 p 17 a b Barclays 1986 p 1 Altham 1962 pp 19 20 a b c Altham 1962 p 21 Underdown 2000 p 3 a b Major 2007 p 19 Altham 1962 p 22 a b Major 2007 p 31 a b Birley 1999 p 3 Bowen 1970 p 33 a b Terry David 2000 The Seventeenth Century Game of Cricket A Reconstruction of the Game PDF The Sports Historian No 20 London The British Society of Sports History pp 33 43 Archived from the original PDF on 21 June 2009 Retrieved 2 May 2016 Hardman Ray 31 October 2013 Before There Was Baseball There Was Wicket www wnpr org Retrieved 5 September 2020 Birley 1999 p 9 Barclays 1986 pp 1 2 Major 2007 pp 21 22 McCann 2004 p xxxi a b Underdown 2000 p 4 McCann 2004 pp xxxiii xxxiv McCann 2004 pp xxxi xli Underdown 2000 pp 11 15 Birley 1999 pp 7 8 Major 2007 p 23 a b Birley 1999 p 11 A Pictorial History of Cricket by Brown Bison Books London 1988 Birley 1999 pp 11 13 Webber 1960 p 10 Haygarth 1862 p vi McCann 2004 p xli Major 2007 page 36 Major 2007 pp 268 269 Birley 1999 p 19 Williams 2012 p 23 Williams 2012 pp 94 95 Birley 1999 p 146 The Pictorial History of Cricket by Ashley Brown Bison Books London 1988 Birley 1999 pp 14 16 Ashley Cooper F S 1900 At the Sign of the Wicket Cricket 1742 1751 Cricket A Weekly Record of the Game Cardiff ACS pp 4 85 Archived from the original on 8 September 2017 Retrieved 8 September 2017 Nyren 1833 pp 153 154 Wisden Evolution of the Laws of Cricket Wisden Cricketers Almanack 100th edition 1963 ed London Sporting Handbooks Ltd pp 184 187 Birley 1999 pp 64 67 97 101 Barclays 1986 p 456 a b Annual Meeting of County Secretaries the programme for 1890 Cricket A Weekly Record of the Game Cardiff ACS 1889 pp 478 479 Archived from the original on 8 September 2017 Retrieved 3 July 2017 Frith David 1978 The Golden Age of Cricket 1890 1914 Guildford Lutterworth Press ISBN 0 7188 7022 0 Das Deb n d Cricinfo Cricket in the USA ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 9 March 2007 The Pictorial History of Cricket by Ashley Brown 1988 London Bison Books Birley 1999 pp 96 97 Barclays 1986 pp 62 78 87 99 113 127 amp 131 Birley 1999 p 97 The Australian Eleven The first Australian team National Museum of Australia Archived from the original on 8 September 2018 Retrieved 30 December 2014 Reg Hayter The Centenary Test Match Wisden 1978 pp 130 32 Lewis Wendy Simon Balderstone amp John Bowan 2006 Events That Shaped Australia New Holland p 75 ISBN 978 1 74110 492 9 Brown 1988 Wisden Dates in Cricket History Wisden Cricketers Almanack 100th edition 1963 ed London Sporting Handbooks Ltd p 183 Notes by the Editor Wisden Cricketers Almanack online ESPNcricinfo 1982 Retrieved 2 July 2017 Booth Douglas 1998 The Race Game Sport and Politics in South Africa Routledge p 88 ISBN 0 7146 4799 3 Wisden One Day Knockout Competition 1963 Wisden Cricketers Almanack 100th edition 1963 ed London Sporting Handbooks Ltd pp 1074 1076 Barclays 1986 pp 495 496 Barclays 1986 pp 496 497 Afghanistan Ireland get Test status ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 2 July 2017 Ireland amp Afghanistan awarded Test status by International Cricket Council BBC Sport 2017 Retrieved 2 July 2017 Laws Laws of Cricket MCC Retrieved 4 July 2017 a b c d Law 1 Players Laws of Cricket MCC Retrieved 1 July 2017 Law 19 Boundaries Laws of Cricket MCC Retrieved 3 July 2017 Law 7 The pitch Laws of Cricket MCC Archived from the original on 3 July 2017 Retrieved 3 July 2017 Law 8 The wickets Laws of Cricket MCC Retrieved 3 July 2017 Law 9 The bowling popping and return creases Laws of Cricket MCC Archived from the original on 3 July 2017 Retrieved 3 July 2017 a b c d e Law 12 Innings Laws of Cricket MCC Archived from the original on 2 July 2017 Retrieved 2 July 2017 Law 18 Scoring runs Laws of Cricket MCC Retrieved 2 July 2017 Law 27 Appeals Laws of Cricket MCC Archived from the original on 3 July 2017 Retrieved 2 July 2017 LAW 25 BATTER S INNINGS RUNNERS MCC www lords org Archived from the original on 8 June 2019 Retrieved 5 January 2020 a b c ICC Test Match Playing Conditions PDF ICC 1 September 2019 a b c d Law 21 The result Laws of Cricket MCC Archived from the original on 15 January 2017 Retrieved 2 July 2017 a b c Law 3 The umpires Laws of Cricket MCC Retrieved 4 July 2017 Australia v England 3rd Test 1970 71 CricketArchive Retrieved 4 July 2017 a b c d Law 22 The over Laws of Cricket MCC Archived from the original on 2 July 2017 Retrieved 4 July 2017 Appendix D Laws of Cricket MCC Archived from the original on 2 July 2017 Retrieved 7 July 2017 a b Law 41 The fielder Laws of Cricket MCC Archived from the original on 2 July 2017 Retrieved 7 July 2017 Birley 1999 p 343 Law 6 The bat Laws of Cricket MCC Archived from the original on 3 July 2017 Retrieved 4 July 2017 Appendix E The bat Laws of Cricket MCC Archived from the original on 3 July 2017 Retrieved 4 July 2017 Law 5 The ball Laws of Cricket MCC Archived from the original on 2 July 2017 Retrieved 4 July 2017 The photo was taken during an international match between Australia and Sri Lanka Muttiah Muralitharan of Sri Lanka is bowling to Australian batter Adam Gilchrist a b Law 2 Substitutes etc Laws of Cricket MCC Archived from the original on 2 July 2017 Retrieved 7 July 2017 Marylebone Cricket Club Summary of changes to the Laws of Cricket 2017 Code PDF Lords the Home of Cricket Archived from the original PDF on 27 June 2017 Retrieved 4 May 2018 Most wickets taken in an ICC World Cup career male Guinness World Records Retrieved 23 June 2015 a b c Types of fast bowling TalkCricket Retrieved 6 July 2017 Spin bowling TalkCricket Retrieved 6 July 2017 Law 30 Bowled Laws of Cricket MCC Archived from the original on 3 July 2017 Retrieved 6 July 2017 Law 32 Caught Laws of Cricket MCC Retrieved 6 July 2017 Law 36 Leg before wicket Laws of Cricket MCC Retrieved 6 July 2017 Law 38 Run out Laws of Cricket MCC Retrieved 6 July 2017 Law 39 Stumped Laws of Cricket MCC Retrieved 6 July 2017 Law 35 Hit wicket Laws of Cricket MCC Retrieved 6 July 2017 Law 34 Hit the ball twice Laws of Cricket MCC Retrieved 6 July 2017 Law 37 Obstructing the field Laws of Cricket MCC Retrieved 6 July 2017 Law 31 Timed out Laws of Cricket MCC Archived from the original on 3 July 2017 Retrieved 6 July 2017 Law 27 Appeals Laws of Cricket MCC Archived from the original on 3 July 2017 Retrieved 6 July 2017 Law 2 Section 9 Batsman retiring MCC Archived from the original on 2 July 2017 Retrieved 18 July 2017 Grip Stance Back Lift Retrieved 12 October 2019 Batting TalkCricket Retrieved 7 July 2017 a b c Law 18 Scoring runs Laws of Cricket MCC Retrieved 7 July 2017 Law 19 Boundaries Laws of Cricket MCC Retrieved 7 July 2017 a b Law 24 No ball Laws of Cricket MCC Archived from the original on 3 July 2017 Retrieved 7 July 2017 a b Law 25 Wide ball Laws of Cricket MCC Archived from the original on 2 July 2017 Retrieved 7 July 2017 a b Law 26 Bye and Leg bye Laws of Cricket MCC Archived from the original on 3 July 2017 Retrieved 7 July 2017 Law 40 The wicket keeper Laws of Cricket MCC Archived from the original on 16 April 2017 Retrieved 4 July 2017 Bowling Strategy TalkCricket Retrieved 7 July 2017 Batting Strategy TalkCricket Retrieved 7 July 2017 Law 4 The scorers Laws of Cricket MCC Archived from the original on 2 July 2017 Retrieved 4 July 2017 Bowen 1970 p 57 Bowen 1970 p 266 Bowen 1970 p 274 a b Preamble to the Laws Laws of Cricket MCC Retrieved 4 June 2020 Summary of changes to the Laws of Cricket 2017 Code PDF Laws of Cricket MCC Archived from the original PDF on 27 June 2017 Retrieved 10 September 2018 ICC History of Cricket pre 1799 ICC Retrieved 7 July 2017 a b c d ICC History of Cricket 20th century ICC Retrieved 7 July 2017 ICC Launches Global Women s T20I Team Rankings Retrieved 12 October 2018 About the ICC ICC Retrieved 7 July 2017 About the England and Wales Cricket Board ECB Retrieved 7 July 2017 Cricket West Indies Cricket West Indies Retrieved 7 July 2017 ICC Rankings International Cricket Council ICC Development International Limited Retrieved 9 February 2016 A brief history Cricinfo Retrieved 2 May 2008 Rundell Michael 2006 Dictionary of Cricket London A amp C Black Publishers Ltd p 336 ISBN 978 0 7136 7915 1 Retrieved 17 October 2011 CPL to launch inaugural T10 tournament The 6ixty in August ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 8 December 2022 Desk SportsCafe 21 November 2022 Sri Lanka becomes first full member cricket nation to introduce T10 League SportsCafe in Retrieved 8 December 2022 ZC to launch six team T10 tournament in March 2023 ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 8 December 2022 T10 League Plans Expansion To Five Locations After Thumbs Up From 2 ICC Full Members Cricket News NDTVSports com Retrieved 8 December 2022 Quint The 25 January 2021 Explained Everything You Need to Know About Cricket s T10 League TheQuint Retrieved 8 December 2022 Abu Dhabi T10 cricket league eyes global expansion www gulftoday ae Retrieved 8 December 2022 ICC clarification of limited overs ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 8 July 2017 The first official T20 ESPNcricinfo 12 March 2016 Retrieved 8 July 2017 Major 2007 pp 155 167 amp 404 410 The T20 Revolution The Freelancers Cricbuzz Retrieved 9 September 2020 Playfair Marshall Ian ed Playfair Cricket Annual 70th edition 2017 ed London Headline p 216 Harte p 175 Birley 1999 pp 9 10 Birley 1999 pp 151 152 Rules of French Cricket topend sports Retrieved 8 July 2017 Green Jonathon 1987 Dictionary of Jargon Routledge p 528 ISBN 9780710099198 Marcus Callies Wolfram R Keller Astrid Lohofer 2011 Bi directionality in the Cognitive Sciences Avenues Challenges and Limitations John Benjamins Publishing pp 73 ISBN 978 90 272 2384 5 Robert Hendrickson 2001 World English From Aloha to Zed Wiley ISBN 978 0 471 34518 3 a b c Smart Alastair 20 July 2013 The art of cricket Enough to leave you stumped The Telegraph Retrieved 12 March 2016 Rosengarten Frank 2007 Urbane Revolutionary C L R James and the Struggle for a New Society University Press of Mississippi ISBN 87 7289 096 7 p 134 Meacham Steve 6 June 2009 Montmartre with eucalypts Sydney Morning Herald Fairfax Retrieved 31 August 2009 Caribbean cricket art in the middle BBC News Retrieved 11 June 2016 Cricket Dawn of a New World Bletchley Park Post Office March 2007 Retrieved 11 June 2016 Blainey Geoffrey 2010 A Game of Our Own The Origins of Australian Football Black Inc p 186 ISBN 978 1 86395 347 4 de Moore Greg 2008 Tom Wills His Spectacular Rise and Tragic Fall Allen amp Unwin pp 77 93 94 ISBN 978 1 74175 499 5 Hess Rob 2008 A National Game The History of Australian Rules Football Viking p 44 ISBN 978 0 670 07089 3 Goldstein p 184 Goldstein pp 15 amp 184 Goldstein p 458 His Hall of Fame plaque states in part Inventor of the box score Author of the first rule book Chairman of rules committee in first nationwide baseball organization Lederer Rich By the Numbers Computer technology has deepened fans passion with the game s statistics Memories and Dreams Vol 33 No 6 Winter 2011 2012 pp 32 34 National Baseball Hall of Fame official magazine Pesca Mike 30 July 2009 The Man Who Made Baseball s Box Score a Hit National Public Radio Retrieved 8 March 2014 Arango Tim 12 November 2010 Myth of baseball s creation endures with a prominent fan The New York Times Retrieved 8 November 2014 SourcesAltham H S 1962 A History of Cricket Volume 1 to 1914 London George Allen amp Unwin Ashley Cooper F S 1900 At the Sign of the Wicket Cricket 1742 1751 Cricket A Weekly Record of the Game London Cricket Magazine OCLC 28863559 Barclays 1986 Swanton E W ed Barclays World of Cricket London Willow Books ISBN 0 00 218193 2 Birley Derek 1999 A Social History of English Cricket London Aurum Press Ltd ISBN 1 85410 710 0 Bowen Rowland 1970 Cricket A History of its Growth and Development London Eyre amp Spottiswoode ISBN 0 413 27860 3 Goldstein Dan 2000 The Rough Guide to English Football 2000 2001 London Rough Guides ISBN 1 85828 557 7 Harte Chris 1993 A History of Australian Cricket London Andre Deutsch p 175 ISBN 0 233 98825 4 Haygarth Arthur 1862 Frederick Lillywhite s Cricket Scores amp Biographies Volume 1 1744 1826 London Frederick Lillywhite Major John 2007 More Than A Game London HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 00 718364 7 McCann Tim 2004 Sussex Cricket in the Eighteenth Century Lewes Sussex Record Society ISBN 0 85445 055 6 Nyren John 1998 First published 1833 Ashley Mote ed The Cricketers of my Time London Robson Books ISBN 1 86105 168 9 Underdown David 2000 Start of Play London Allen Lane ISBN 0 713 99330 8 Webber Roy 1960 The Phoenix History of Cricket London Phoenix House Ltd Williams Charles 2012 Gentlemen amp Players The Death of Amateurism in Cricket London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 0 7538 2927 1 Further readingGuha Ramachandra 2002 A Corner of a Foreign Field The Indian History of a British Sport London Picador ISBN 0 330 49117 2 OCLC 255899689 External linksCricket at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Travel information from Wikivoyage Resources from Wikiversity Data from Wikidata Organisations and competitions International Cricket Council ICC Statistics and records ESPNcricinfoMedia Explanations of cricket What Is Cricket Get to know the sport a video produced by the International Cricket CouncilNews and other resources Cricket Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cricket amp oldid 1134105411 Player roles, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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