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cricket  The urn containing the Ashes, a cremated cricket bail. So great a tradition surrounds the Ashes that when English national newspaper correspondence in the late 1990s questioned whether the urn genuinely contained ashes, and, if so, exactly what cricket equipment had been immolated, there was an expression of outrage from the cricketing establishment.   The Australian test cricket team, who won the series (then called the MCC) against England in Australia during the 1936–37 season. This win allowed them to take the Ashes (a cremated cricket bail) for the second time in a row. The batting star of the Australian team was Donald Bradman (1908– ).   An early game of cricket, being played at the Artillery Ground, London. This scene was painted in 1785, after the style of Francis Hayman. The Marylebone Cricket Club, the original organizing and governing body of the game, was founded in 1787. Bat-and-ball game between two teams of 11 players each. It is played with a small solid ball and long flat-sided wooden bats, on a round or oval field, at the centre of which is a finely mown pitch, 20 m/22 yd long. At each end of the pitch is a wicket made up of three upright wooden sticks (stumps), surmounted by two smaller sticks (bails). The object of the game is to score more runs than the opposing team. A run is normally scored by the batsman striking the ball and exchanging ends with his or her partner until the ball is returned by a fielder, or by hitting the ball to the boundary line for an automatic four or six runs. | A batsman stands at each wicket and is bowled a stipulated number of balls (usually six), after which another bowler bowls from the other wicket. A batsman can make an ‘out’ in several ways. Games comprise either one or two innings per team. The exact origins are unknown. The first rules were drawn up in 1774 and modified following the formation of the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) in 1787. The International Cricket Council (ICC) held an international series at Disney World in 1998, and plans to stage some World Cup matches in the USA and Canada in 2007. This represents a major step in introducing the game to the US market. |
History The exact origins of cricket are unknown, but it certainly dates back to the 16th century. The name is thought to have originated from the Anglo-Saxon word cricc, meaning a shepherd's staff. The first players were the shepherds of south-east England, who used their crooks as bats and the wicket gate and movable bail of the sheep pens as a target for the bowlers. In the 18th century, runs were recorded by notches cut on a stick. The wicket consisted of two stumps and a crosspiece (the third stump was added in the late 1770s). Until about 1773 bats retained the curve akin to a hockey stick, suited to deal with the prevalent under-arm bowling of the time. By about 1780 the straight bat was in almost universal use to counter the advance in bowling technique whereby the ball rose from the pitch on a ‘length’. The first major alteration in the laws for which the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) was responsible was the licence given to the bowler in 1835 to raise his arm as high as the shoulder and bowl round-arm. Formerly he was compelled to deliver the ball underarm and the new method had for years been the subject of heated argument. This concession was the prelude to the legalization of over-arm bowling in 1864. Modern bat blades are made of willow (salix coerulea) with handles of compressed cane and rubber; early bats were in one piece. The early Victorian period saw the introduction of protective clothing. |
Test cricket and the International Cricket Council The first Test match held in England was in 1880. In 1882 Australia's victory over England at the Oval inspired a journalist to write a mock obituary notice of English cricket, in which he coined the term the Ashes. The introduction of the six-ball over in England in 1900 aided higher scoring; bowlers countered the batting dominance by the practice of swerve bowling (by fast bowlers), and the introduction in the early 1900s of the ‘googly’, a style quickly adopted around the world. In 1909 the Imperial Cricket Conference, renamed the International Cricket Conference (ICC) in 1965 and the International Cricket Council in 1989, was set up with England, Australia, and South Africa as founder members; they were later joined by the West Indies, New Zealand, India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Zimbabwe, and Bangladesh. |
cricketIn zoology, an insect belonging to any of various families, especially the Gryllidae, of the order Orthoptera. Crickets are related to grasshoppers. They have somewhat flattened bodies and long antennae. The males make a chirping noise by rubbing together special areas on the forewings. The females have a long needlelike egglaying organ (ovipositor). There are around 900 species known worldwide.
cricket - events| c. 1550 | England | An English court case of 1598 refers to ‘crickett’ being played at the ‘Free School’ at Guildford, Surrey, at this time. It is the first certain reference to cricket. | | 1646 | UK | The first recorded cricket match in England is played at Coxheath, Kent. | | c. 1767 | UK | The Hambledon Club, the first great cricket club, is formed near the village of Hambledon in Hampshire, England. | | 1787 | UK | The Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) is founded by Thomas Lord and members of the White Conduit Club, at Thomas Lord's new private ground at Dorset Square, Marylebone, London, England. | | 30 May 1788 | UK | The Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) in London, England, codifies the laws of cricket in England. | | 16 March 1872 | UK | A crowd of 2,000 at the Oval cricket ground in London, England, watch Wanderers, a team of ex-public school players, defeat the Royal Engineers 1–0 to win the inaugural Football Association (FA) Cup final. | | 15–19 March 1877 | Australia, UK | Australia defeats England by 45 runs in the first ever Test cricket match, played in Melbourne, Australia. Approximately 20,000 spectators attend the match over the four days of play. | | July 1934 | | English cricketer Jack Hobbs plays his 1,315th and final first class innings. Since making his county debut for Surrey in 1905 he had scored a record 61,237 first class runs, including 197 centuries. | | 19 August 1946 | England | Walter Hammond of England becomes the first batsman to score 7,000 runs in Test cricket. | | 27–31 July 1956 | England | In the fourth cricket Test between England and Australia at Old Trafford, Manchester, the England offspinner Jim Laker becomes the first bowler to take all ten wickets in a Test match innings. His match analysis of 19–90 beats the previous Test record of 17–159 set by S F Barnes in 1913–14. | | 18–20 July 1962 | UK | The Gentlemen v. Players cricket match, established in 1806, is played for the last time at Lord's, London, England, as the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) votes to abolish the distinction between amateurs (‘gentlemen’) and professionals (‘players’). | | 15 August 1964 | UK | The England cricketer Fred Trueman becomes the first bowler to take 300 Test wickets, in the final Test against Australia at The Oval, London, England. | | 4 August 1976 | UK | The Marylebone Cricket Club in London, England, allows a women's cricket match to be played on its Lord's ground for the first time in its 190-year history. England defeats Australia in a limited overs match. | | May–November 1977 | Australia | After failing to win the rights to televise Test cricket in Australia, Kerry Packer, owner of the Australian Channel Nine Television, signs up 66 leading players to participate in his own series of matches; all are barred from Test cricket. | | 7 March 1987 | India | Sunil Gavaskar of India, playing in his 124th Test cricket match, against Pakistan in Ahmedabad, India, becomes the first batsman to score 10,000 Test runs. | | 31 August 1998 | UK | On the final day of a one-off Test between England and Sri Lanka at the Oval, London, Sri Lanka's Muttiah Muralitharan takes 9-65 in England's second innings to help Sri Lanka achieve its first Test victory in England. | | 10 October 2003 | Australia | Australian cricketer Matthew Hayden scores 380 runs in a Test match innings against Zimbabwe in Perth, breaking the previous record of 375 for the highest ever individual score in international cricket. | | 26 November 2005 | Australia | The West Indian cricketer Brian Lara, who already holds the record for the highest individual Test score, becomes the most prolific run-scorer in Test history during a match against Australia in Adelaide. He surpasses the previous record set by Australia's Allan Border. | | 29 July 2006 | Sri Lanka | During a Test match against South Africa in Colombo, Sri Lanka's Mahela Jayawardene and Kumar Sangakkara score the highest partnership ever recorded – 624 runs – in first-class cricket. | | 3 December 2007 | Sri Lanka | Sri Lankan cricketer Muttiah Muralitharan sets a new world bowling record as he takes his 709th Test wicket in a match against the visiting England team. |
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