Tuesday, April 27, 2021

The most famous cricket teams in the world

Cricket is the second most popular sport in the world and without a doubt it is the most followed and loved sport in Asia and in many countries of the Commonwealth. According to Bettingsider24, cricket is followed by more than 2.5 billion people all over the world and in some countries such as India cricket is a real religion. 

Being a professional cricket player can really change a person’s life in such countries, becoming real superstars, on the same level as Bollywood actors or international footballers.  Cricket is followed not only by the people living in those countries, but also by the many expats around the world. The Indian community, for example, is very present in every corner of the world and the vast majority of them actively follow cricket.

What then are the most popular national cricket teams in the world? Let’s analyze some statistics to answer this question.

India – The most popular national cricket team in the world

At the top of this ranking we find without a doubt the Indian national cricket team. We know that cricket in India is more than a sport, indeed, it can be considered a real religion, widespread in large cities or even in the most rural corners. The Indian cricket team can count on about 40 million supporters, not only in the country, but also all over the world. Indian supporters don’t miss a single cricket match, wherever they are.

Virat Kohli is certainly the most important cricketer in India and in the world. Kohli is currently the captain of the Indian national cricket team and is a true superstar in the international cricket circus.

Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Pakistan – More than 20 million fans

The neighboring countries of India are also following the trend. Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka consider cricket to be the national sport and most of the population follows cricket actively. In these three countries, almost 21 million fans support their national teams (10.7 in Bangladesh, 6.8 in Pakistan and 3 in Sri Lanka).

Cricket is also a very popular sport in South Africa, due to the dual influence of British and Indian cultures, which are very present in the country. The South African cricket nation can count on the support of nearly 5 million fans

New Zealand and Australia  – How popular is cricket in Oceania?

Cricket is also very popular in Oceania, both in Australia and in New Zealand. The two countries have a certain thing for British sports like rugby and also excel in cricket. Cricket is followed by 3.6 million fans in Australia, while there are nearly 2 million fans in New Zealand.

The Australian national cricket team holds the record for World Cup victories, having won the trophy 5 times. 

England and Ireland  – What about the European cricket national teams

In England cricket is very popular, despite having a much lower number of followers than football. There are about 4 million English who practice and follow cricket assiduously. The English national cricket team is currently the World Cup holder, having won the last edition in 2019.

Cricket is also very popular in Ireland, with around 1 million followers: however, it should be noted that there are around 5 million people in Ireland! In fact, according to statistics, one in five Irishmen consistently follow cricket and the matches of the Irish national team..



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Sunday, April 25, 2021

Sports Betting vs Casino Games: Everything You Need to Know

Many people nowadays enjoy sports events by spicing things up with betting. Despite the fact that both casino games and sports betting are both forms of gambling, the two are totally two different things. Both sports betting and casino games have their advantages and disadvantages which might be relative to different players. It is easy to get carried away at times and you might end up losing a great deal of money. 

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As a rule of thumb, gamble with money that you can afford to lose! More importantly, set yourself some limits and stick to them. This guide covers everything you need to know about sports betting and casino games.

 

Money Making Potential

 

In some cases, casino players have won huge chunks of money and there is no guarantee that you will too since most casino games are purely based on luck as they heavily rely on roulette, lot machines, craps etc. Every casino game features an inbuilt house edge meaning that the probability of making a profit over the long term is zero. Basically, the house edge is their engine for driving revenue and it varies from one game to another. 

Once you have placed a bet at a casino, you have the specific odds of winning the bet and payout for the bet. Usually, the two numbers are almost never the same in a casino game. On average, for every bet you place, the casino wins 5.26%. Some games have a higher house edge while others have a lower house edge. The most you can do to improve your chances of beating the house is by choosing the bet types which offer the best chance of success. The house edge exists in sports betting as well and is factored into the odds given to bettors. The advantageous thing about sports betting is that the application of good betting practice backed up by knowledgeability about your sport of choice is likely to increase your winning chances in the long term.

 

Winning Chances

 

Unless playing games like blackjack or poker, most casino games are purely based on luck as stated previously. There’s not much you can do to increase your chance of winning. Would you become a high rolling player, you would get cashback offers, bonuses and exclusive rewards that could go a long way in helping you out. Tilt the odds in your favor especially when playing games with a low house edge such as baccarat and blackjack. Playing progressive jackpot slot games may win you easily since jackpot sums are randomly awarded. However, such games may require one to place maximum bets in order to stand a chance of being awarded the jackpot. On the other hand, sports betting is easier to employ strategies that could increase your chances o f winning. This is because it only involves a fair bit of skill. Firstly, choose a sport that you are knowledgeable about so as to make wise bets. Setting a fixed bankroll, betting strategy and identifying where to get the best ideas is a smart move that you need to consider. To score the big wins, invest in accumulator (parlay) bets unless you are planning on laying down extremely big wagers.

 

Choice and Variety Differences.

 

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There are huge differences when it comes to the variety of bets between casino betting VS sport betting. For casinos, you can enjoy a large number of games in any land or online based casino. Some of the options are; carps, blackjack, roulette, videopoker, baccarat and Pai Gow poker. On the other hand, sports betting features more variety as it offers a wide range of sports along with different leagues. For instance, football feature dozens of leagues across the world. You may be able to access soccer wager 15-20 different soccer leagues across the world. You may be able to wager 15-20 different soccer leagues at a big sport book.  Categories of wagers you can make include; parlays, prop bets, point spreads, money lines, teasers and live wagers. 

 

Availability of Bets

 

This is one of the major differences between casino betting and sports betting. For sport betting, you can only place a bet on your favorite team only when the team is playing. Additionally, it is not available 24/7 making it limited. The games are sometimes a rarity and other times played often. Thus, bettors are usually forced to place bets unless popular matches and leagues which they are not familiar with. Casino betting on the other hand is available any time of the day. Additionally, casino games do not depend on any real-world circumstances. For instance, you can play roulette during the wee hours of the mega casino.

 

Ease to get Started

 

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Sports betting requires low amounts of money and even though the game player may not win at first, with time, he masters the game and becomes a better player. Additionally, sports betting does not require any equipment to play. The sports betting app and sports betting sites allows players to play available games from the comfort of their homes, any time of the day. Unlike sports betting, casino games require a fairly large amount   of dollars as the minimum stake required to play any game. This may inconvenience new gamblers who want to try their luck.

 

Wrap Up

 

The choice of whether to go with sports betting or casino comes down to your own personal preference and needs. This article highlights  the major differences between sports betting and casino games so as to help you make better and informed decisions.



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Saturday, April 24, 2021

Derbyshire In Print

Any list of the English First Class counties must begin with Derbyshire, other for those pedants who will, if I don’t mention them, chide me for not making reference to Cambridgeshire. Between 1857 and 1871 a Cambridgeshire club played in 39 matches now reckoned to be First Class. This was therefore a generation prior to the official County Championship beginning in 1890.

Derbyshire have been around since 1870, and the first substantial history of the club, by WJ Piper, appeared in 1897. After that it would be another 73 years before another appeared, a centenary history from John Shawcroft. That one appeared only as a limited edition although it is not too difficult to find. In between there had been two small books, one by Frederick Ashley-Cooper that appeared in 1924, and in 1936 another small publication, covering the years from 1919 until its publication, was produced by the splendidly named Llewellyn Eardley-Simpson.

In 1989 publisher Christopher Helm published a series of county histories and Derbyshire’s appeared in 1989, Shawcroft reprising his earlier book. Finally, to date, in 2007 veteran journalist Edward Giles wrote The Derbyshire Chronicles, a book which does not enjoy a high profile, although it should. It is an excellent read.

There have not been too many biographical books about Derbyshire players, but there have been some very good ones. The most recent is Bill Bestwick: Rough Diamond by Mick Pope, the latest addition to the ACS Lives in Cricket series, and a fine book it is too. A pace bowler who plied his trade between 1898 and 1925 (with a ten year break between 1910 and 1919) Bestwick led an interesting life. He is the fourth Derbyshire man to appear in that particular series.

The first Derbyshire man in the ACS series, back in 2008, was on the subject of another in the county’s long line of fine opening bowlers, Bill Copson, written by Kit Bartlett. Copson was at his best in the 1930s and played three times for England on either side of World War Two. Another man featured in the series is Donald Carr. An amateur who led England in one of his two Tests Carr was a decent batsman and more than useful orthodox left arm spinner who led the county for eight summers in the late 1950s and early 1960s. In later life Carr accomplished much in administrative roles. His book is another from the pen of John Shawcroft.

Finally from the ACS, so far, is Steve Dolman’s biography of off spinner Edwin Smith, a stalwart of the side through the 1950s and 1960s and whose personal input into the book makes it one of the very best in that thoroughly worthwhile series.

There are also books on the subject of two more of the long line of quality seamers who have come from Derbyshire. Harold Rhodes was a fine bowler whose career was blighted by doubts about the legality of his action and his England career restricted to just two Tests. Eventually the powers that be decided that Rhodes bowling was fair, but the controversy had taken its toll. His autobiography, The Harold Rhodes Affair, is an interesting book.

Another two Test man, who famously made his appearances a dozen years apart, was Les Jackson, as feared a seamer as there was in the county game for the fifteen years after World War Two. Long time journalist Mike Carey wrote Les Jackson – A Derbyshire Legend.

The only other two Derbyshire players to have written autobiographies are of much more recent vintage, and both had long Test careers. Wicketkeeper Bob Taylor’s story appeared as Standing Up, Standing Back in appeared in 1985 and Devon Malcolm’s You Guys Are History in 1998.

Dominic Cork was, in the late 1990s, a hugely effective bowler for Derbyshire and England and whilst he has not, up until now, written an autobiography his diary of the 1995 summer, Uncorked, is very much of that ilk, so deserves a mention here.

Before leaving this category altogether I will mention a couple more publications which are essentially biographical. The first is Scraps From A Cricketer’s Memories, a 75 page booklet published by the club in 1980 – the cricketer concerned is Levi Wright, an amateur batsman and early captain of the club whose First Class career extended from 1883 until 1907. Even slimmer, at 48 pages, is Peter Hargreaves’ introduction to pace bowler Ole Mortensen, Derbyshire’s Dane, published when its subject first joined the county in 1983.

Which brings me on to ‘any other business’ and, firstly, my favourite book on Derbyshire cricket, and another one from John Shawcroft. Local Heroes is the story of Derbyshire’s (so far) only County Championship title in 1936. The book tells the story of the season and of the players who took them to the title and is a fascinating account of a memorable summer.

Not far behind Local Heroes is Steve Dolman’s In Their Own Words, a selection of interviews with the great and the good of Derbyshire cricket. That one is a great deal more than a selection of pen portraits, but there are a few of those as well. The bulkiest is Derek Carlaw’s contribution to Tempus Publishing’s 100 Greats series. A variation on the theme is Derbyshire Bowlers, a 56 page booklet from John Shawcroft, and a rather strange looking but entertaining home production by Idris Barrett, Derbyshire’s England Cricketers.

One last book that is deserving of mention, is The Rise and Fall of Percy Perrin. The book concerns a match between Essex and Derbyshire in 1904 in which Perrin, the man with more First Class runs than any other man never to have won a Test cap, scored 343 for Essex, yet his county still ended up losing by nine wickets. As well as a detailed description of a remarkable match the book also contains biographical details of both the players that made up both teams. The book’s author was, perhaps inevitably, John Shawcroft.

And finally, what two books should be published on Derbyshire cricketing subjects? The first one is easy enough, a biography of Alan Ward. Now, I believe, living in Queensland Ward was a pace bowler, genuinely quick and hostile. In a troubled career there were highs and lows, amongst them five England caps, and a seemingly troubled soul who never did fulfil his enormous potential. The second choice I pondered for some time, but eventually my choice is a biography of Stan Worthington. Another England player Worthington was capped nine times in the 1930s and scored a Test century against India in 1936. He was primarily a batsman, but also a decent fast medium bowler. Worthington was also, and this is what clinches his case for me, an autocratic coach at Lancashire in the 1960s.



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Saturday, April 17, 2021

The Literature of the County Game

County Cricket Matters is the English game’s mantra of the third decade of the twenty first century so, having run out of inspiration for anything else, the blog can certainly take 18 posts on the subject of the literature generated by each of the First Class counties.

I don’t claim that any of the 18 posts will be truly comprehensive, but they will be substantially so. I will look at three categories of books for each county, but not those concerned solely with statistical matters, for which I simply refer readers to the comprehensive back catalogue of the ACS, something which is gradually finding its way online, and which can be found here.

For each post I will begin with books that purport to be histories of the county concerned, followed by what for me is generally the most interesting genre, the biographies and autobiographies of individual players. If players played for more than one county I will reference them for their involvement with the club I consider to be their main county.

Books by or about overseas players are a tricky decision – I will mention a few, those which concern players who became embedded in the fabric of their counties, but on the basis that generally such books are concerned with the international game there will not be many.

Finally I will look at anything else that doesn’t easily fall into the two previous categories, and then round things off in each case with two books that haven’t been published, but which I would like to see appear.

In books as in many things size matters, and I will be the sole arbiter of what is and isn’t too ephemeral to be included, although after much thought I have decided not to include one of my own favourite categories of the game’s bibliography, benefit brochures and related material, although that is a subject I may revisit in the future.

But before I begin there are a handful of books on the subject county cricket generally, the most impressive of which is Stephen Chalke’s Summer’s Crown, a copy of which should be on the shelves of any self-respecting cricket fan.

Prior to Stephen’s masterpiece, which in simple terms amounts to the final word on the subject unless and until he decides to update it again (there was a second edition published a ??????), there have been other books that have tried to look at county cricket in the round. One such appeared in 1957, The County Cricket Championship by Roy Webber, a book which caused something of a stir, which you can read about here.

The one hundredth anniversary of the Championship was marked by a book, so 1990 saw Simon Heffer’s Daily Telegraph Centenary of County Cricket: The Hundred Best Matches appear. Whatever complaints I might have about the Telegraph and its editorial stance, when I was a lad and had no option but to read the newspaper my father bought, its coverage of the Championship was certainly comprehensive.

A couple of years later, in 1992, that fine cricket writer and social historian Eric Midwinter put together The Illustrated History of County Cricket to reinforce the message that Heffer had delivered two years previously. His book falls into two parts, the first giving an overview of the development of the Championship, in the manner you would expect from the social historian in him, and the cricket writer is then given free rein as chapters devoted to each county make up part two.

Also celebrating the county game at this point was David Lemmon, whose Cricket’s Champion Counties appeared in 1991. It looks in detail at the more successful teams in the Championship’s history rather than looking at all the winners, and is much more a descriptive book than a statistical one.

The immediate post war period saw some activity as well. In 1950 John Arlott contributed to and edited Cricket in the Counties, an anthology of writings on the subject, but not in any way a history. That came more than a decade later in 1961 when Trevor Bailey’s Championship Cricket was published, a county by county review of the post war period. Also worth reading in that era is a slim 16 page booklet entitled The Future of County Cricket and representing the transcript of a discussion between writer Denzil Batchelor and former Surrey skipper Stuart Surridge. They were agreed that change was needed, but differed as to what was required. It is an interesting dialogue and a copy of the booklet is well worth tracking down.

If the impression is sometimes created that before the Second World War all was sweetness and light in the county game the fact that it wasn’t is illustrated by the content of a 1926 book, A Searchlight on County Cricket by A County Cricketer. It is known well enough now that the County Cricketer concerned was the writer EHD Sewell, who played for three seasons for Essex as an amateur. As a writer Sewell was a man noted for the strength of his opinions, not all of which stood up to close scrutiny, but many years later Ray Illingworth for one was impressed with his book.

And finally, no look at the literature of the county game would be complete without reiterating the three words with which I began this post, County Cricket Matters, a splendid publication which should be read by all. In the unlikely event that any reader isn’t familiar with it, these are links to our reviews

Issue 1

Issue 2

Issue 3

Issue 4

Issue 5

Issue 6



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Sunday, April 11, 2021

An Early Look Into the 2021 ICC T20 Cricket World Cup

It’s surprising the shock and awe of people in general when they learn about the popularity that cricket has around the world. While for many sporting fans their taste in events usually travel towards soccer, football or basketball, cricket could easily give all of these other sports a run for their money in popularity. Just by being India’s most popular sport, cricket can easily boast having one of the biggest fan bases around, bigger than most other mainstream sporting activities. 

Well cricket fans of the world, it’s time to rejoice and get ready. After a long wait, one more than five years long and that saw two 50-overs world events, the much acclaimed ICC T20 World Cup is coming back in 2021. The top online sports betting platforms are already dishing out early odds to who will come out on top of the upcoming tournament in India so let’s break down the upcoming World Cup Tournament and who everyone should keep an eye on come October and November. 

From 2020 in Australia to 2021 in India

The ICC Top 20 World Cup, one of the most important cricket events in the world is finally coming back in 2021. While originally slated to be played in Australia in 2020, given the global coronavirus pandemic appropriate measures were taken in order to assure the health and safety of all participants, basically meaning the tournament had to be cancelled and postponed for another date. At first talks were had about having the tournament in 2022, but with the advances in the battle against COVID, the tournament will now be played between October and November, 2021 in India.

While all the action that cricket fans around the world will be back at full helm, appropriate actions will be taken in order to make sure that the best spectacle in the safest conditions can be held. Ideas of having players stay in bio-securing bubbles as well as not having crowds in attendance for the games are all strategies that have been discussed. The advances in the fight to stop the pandemic will determine how much the ICC T20 WC Tournament will have to adjust and how each team will have to prepare in their run for the title, including our top three early favorites.

England

It was in the last T20 World Cup, in a thrilling final at Eden Gardens in Kolkata that England had their last game in said tournament. A loss to the West Indies team marked the heartbreak that England had to endure on their way to then win a World Cup and come out as favorites to take home the 2021 title. The moving of English players to the IPL has easily and quietly become the best weapon towards helping England become an easy favorite to take the gold. Just the mere fact of having a base of players that can easily understand how to play through all and any of the conditions India offers automatically puts them one step ahead of the competition.

There have been 43 T20I’s played since England lost the 2016 T20 World Cup to the West Indies, having won 24 of those matches along the way. If results, plus the lineup they are bringing to the party gives  any clues, it’s that England is more than ready for the gold.

West Indies

Since we mentioned last T20 World Cup runner ups England, how can we leave out the reigning champions West Indies? In 2016, when they won their second WC Title, in India just like this upcoming time, the West Indies was a team who mastered the game especially in the shortest format. For 2021 guys like Andre Russell and captain Kieron Pollard will be back alongside a team full of power hitters with title gold in their sight.

What could be the one condition in which West Indies could be harmed on their way to the title? Their bowling or well, lack of good bowlers. If their bowlers can rally around and give some good performances to accompany the hitters, all led by Pollard, expect big things from the West Indies.

India

One would think that being the hosts of the tournament, cricket powerhouse India would easily be considered the top favorite to take the crown, and for most people they are. Why, you ask? We could get going with talking loads about the sporting talent but who are we kidding, India’s key to being favorites is that they know better than anyone what it’s like and how to thrive in local conditions.

Given the fact that all their players come from the IPL, where they play at least 14 matches per season, puts them absolutely over the top as favorites. The hopes run by not having everything go to waste with an early exit from the tournament, early meaning nothing less than reaching the finals.



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Saturday, April 10, 2021

The First Tied Test (Almost)

It was not until the 498th Test match, in early December 1960 at the ‘Gabba in Brisbane, that international cricket saw its first tie. The penultimate delivery of the match brought a wonderful throw from Joe Solomon to run out Ian Meckiff and bring to an end a pulsating contest between West Indies and Australia that was the start of what became a classic series.

That match is still talked about today, and probably rather more so than the second tied Test, the 1052nd, that was played between India and Australia at Madras in September of 1986. One wonders how the two matches might be regarded today if they had in fact been the second and third tied Tests, and the first had been, as it should have, the second Test of the 1907/08 Ashes series at the Melbourne Cricket Ground. That one was Test cricket’s 97th encounter in the thirty one years since Australia, largely by dint of Charles Bannerman’s historic innings, had won the first ever Test at the same venue.

Back in 1907 Australia were led by Monty Noble, a fine all-rounder who was coming to the end of a distinguished career. He would lead his country again in England in 1909, but at 36 that would be the end. The home side’s opening batsmen were a pair of all time greats. Number one was the immortal Victor Trumper, still in his prime and as revered then as he is today. His partner was Charlie Macartney, although the match was only the Governor-General’s second.  His great days were more than a decade away.

At first drop Australia had their first great left hander, Clem Hill. Although Hill was four years younger than Noble like his captain his best years were probably behind him, but he would remain a fine player for a while longer. He was followed by Noble and the Big Ship, Warwick Armstrong. The final two specialist batsmen were the veteran Percy McAlister and a young left hander, Vernon Ransford.

It was a top seven that in Noble, Armstrong and Macartney also contained three top class bowlers, and the attack was completed by tearaway pace bowler Tibby Cotter, left arm medium pacer Jack Saunders and a 19 year old off spinner, Gervys Hazlitt. The last man was wicketkeeper Hanson Carter, cricket’s best known undertaker.

As for England their side, and indeed the entire party, was some way short of being legitimately described as being representative of English cricket. Of those who had played in the 1905 home series only Wilfred Rhodes could be considered a first choice. The great Yorkshire slow left armer apart only skipper Arthur Jones and Colin Blythe from the 1907/08 party had featured in Stanley Jackson’s 1905 side, and they had played only twice and once respectively.

Had they been available any of the leading amateurs, CB Fry, Archie MacLaren, Stanley Jackson, Reggie Spooner, Gilbert Jessop and Tip Foster would have been preferred to Jones as captain, and the professional ranks too were depleted. Tom Hayward, Johnny Tyldesley, George Hirst and Dick Lilley all refused the terms offered by MCC. On the plus side the mercurial Sydney Barnes, who hadn’t been lured out of the leagues in 1905, had been persuaded to join the party, and a young uncapped Surrey batsman, Jack Hobbs, was also present.

For the second Test England’s opening batsmen were Hobbs, bizarrely left out of the first Test, and Frederick Fane of Essex. An amateur, and captain in Jones’ absence through illness,  Fane never figured in a home Test, and although he visited South Africa twice the 1907/08 series was his only trip to Australia. That pair were followed by George Gunn, a superb batsman but, perhaps, his character militated him playing more Test cricket than he eventually did. The tour was Gunn’s first appearance in England colours. In fact he was not even selected in the original party and, having been sent to Australia by his county, Nottinghamshire, he joined the party on Jones falling ill. Gunn took the step up to Test cricket in his stride, and scored 119 and 74 in the first Test. 

The England middle order were two more men new to Test cricket, Gunn’s county teammate Joe Hardstaff and Kent amateur Kenneth Hutchings. Following them were three all-rounders. Len Braund was a seasoned professional who had performed well in Australia in the past, and Rhodes needs no introduction. Amateur Jack Crawford played for Surrey and was a most interesting and prodigiously talented cricketer who, for a variety of reasons, never left the mark on the game that he should have.

The remaining three Englishmen were Barnes, the Derbyshire wicketkeeper Joe Humphries and Kent fast bowler Arthur Fielder. Humphries played his only Tests on the tour, and although Fielder had been a member of Pelham Warner’s side in 1903/04 he had made no impact in the one Test he was selected for. His other five caps all came in 1907/08.

What was not the most eagerly awaited series had an exciting beginning and the first Test might have been a tie as well the second. Set a fourth innings target of 274 for victory the Australians were never on top and when their eighth wicket fell at 219 it looked like England would, against expectations, go one up in the series. In the event however Cotter and Hazlitt saw Ausytalia home by two wickets.

The second Test began on New Year’s Day, and Noble won the toss and chose to bat. Very quickly Fielder got through Trumper’s defence and all but bowled him. He edged the next delivery to Gunn at third slip, but a none too difficult chance went down. The experience seemed to subdue Trumper who was not at his brilliant best.

At the close Australia were 255-7, a situation England would certainly not have been disappointed with. The only contemporary account of the tour, by Englishman Major Philip Trevor, described the wicket as perfect. Trumper eventually went for a, by his standards, watchful 49. All of the Australian batsmen got a start, but none went beyond the 61 that Noble contributed. Even so he might have gone earlier but the unfortunate Gunn, by then at mid on, put him down when he had scored just 19. Crawford was the pick of England’s bowlers and, remarkably, Barnes was the only one not to taste success, but his 17 overs for just 30 runs kept the pressure on the home batsmen.

Things got better for England next day as they took the last three Australian wickets whilst a mere 11 runs were added. They had cause to be grateful to Ransford, the last specialist batsman, whose self-inflicted run out was described by Trevor as foolish. With 5-79 Crawford took his first Test five-fer, something he was to repeat twice more before the series ended. Sadly despite being only 21 his Test career had, by then, run its course.

When England replied Hobbs, in his first Test innings, produced all the consummate skill that was to serve him and England well for the next 22 years. Fane and Gunn made 13 and 15 respectively and the most significant partnership of the innings occurred when Hobbs was joined at 61-2 by Hutchings. At 25, and just a few days older than Hobbs, Hutchings had been an immensely successful schoolboy at Tonbridge and had made a promising start for Kent in 1903.

In 1904 and 1905 Hutchings was barely seen on the First Class grounds of England, but in 1906 he came right to the forefront, averaging more than sixty for his county and being described by Wisden as the sensation of the season. He had not scored quite so heavily in 1907 but had still done enough to earn his invitation to tour. A right handed batsman with exceptionally strong wrists all contemporary writers comment on the power of Hutchings’ driving on either side of the wicket. Yorkshire’s Hirst, who generally fielded at mid off or mid on is said to have always retreated three or four yards in the field whenever Hutchings came to the crease. Perhaps more compelling evidence of his exceptional ability is that twice in a relatively short career Hutchings managed to break three bats in the course of an innings.

On 2nd January 1908 Hobbs and Hutchings put on 99 before Hobbs was dismissed for 83. Save for one difficult chance to square leg when he was 59 he had not put a foot wrong. He was replaced by Braund. With Hobbs at the other end Hutchings had batted with what Trevor described as unusual self-restraint and indeed Hobbs had outscored him. That all changed when Braund arrived however as in the final session of the day the pair put on 87, of which Braund contributed just 15. Hutchings passed his century and at the close England were very well placed just twenty runs in arrears with seven wickets standing.

A new day sadly brought a change for England. Hutchings added just nine to his overnight score, although he was not actually dismissed, for 126, until England had just got their noses in front. It was his only Test century and indeed he only managed one more half century, 59 against the 1909 Australians. Hutchings’ career never really kicked on from his wonderful summer of 1906. He did well enough in 1909 and 1910 but by 1912 he had retired from the First Class game in order to pursue business interests. Clearly a brave man Hutchings volunteered soon after the Great War began and, by then a Lieutenant, he was killed in action on the Somme in 1916.

There was no sudden collapse but, much like in the Australian innings, England’s remaining batsmen played themselves in and then got out, although it may have been different had an off drive from Crawford cleared the boundary at deep mid off rather than being superbly caught by Ransford. In the end England ended up with a lead of 116, distinctly useful but, on a wicket that was still excellent, disappointing given the start they had been given on the second day.

By the close of the third day England’s worst fears had been confirmed. The wicket was still playing well and their lead had been reduced to 20 and, Noble having gone in with Trumper himself, the experienced pair had been in no difficulty at all and scored their 96 runs at a run a minute.

On the fourth morning Australia continued on and took the lead with all their wickets still in hand before, once more, the complexion of the game quickly changed as they slumped from 126-0 to 135-3. Trumper was first to go as he was given out lbw trying to glance Crawford, and the same bowler then surprised Noble with a fast full toss that struck the batsman on the hand before falling on to his stumps. With Fielder promptly bursting through Hill’s defensive push Australia’s three best batsmen were back in the hutch with the side effectively 19-3. McAlister found himself run out not too long afterwards and suddenly everything for Australia, not for the last time, hinged on Armstrong and Macartney.

At this point the England’s bowling became, in Trevor’s words, somewhat commonplace without being really loose, and 106 were added before the next wicket fell at 268. At last Barnes had his first scalp when he bowled Armstrong. He later added Macartney and Ransford but well as he bowled he was unable to engineer the sort of collapse that England needed and Australia closed on 360-7, a useful if not yet match winning  lead of 244.

The fifth day of the match, timeless as in those days all Tests in Australia were, was the most pedestrian of the match. It began with the Australians stretching their lead to 281, although that would have disappointed England after they dismissed Cotter with just a single added. Almost straight away after that Carter, on 22 overnight, gave a chance to Hutchings. Normally a safe pair of hands England’s first innings centurion failed to grasp the opportunity and Carter ended up being the last man out for a breezy 53.

When England began their pursuit of victory they were met by accurate bowling and keen fielding by the Australians and progress was slow. To begin with Hobbs and Fane put up 54 with the former batting every bit as well as he had in the first innings before being outdone by a superb delivery from Noble. Two balls later Noble removed Gunn for a duck to complete an unhappy match for the Notts batsman who had done so well in the first Test although, to show his strength of character, he was back in the runs in the next Test.

With Gunn’s dismissal Hutchings return to the wicket with the score on 54-2. These were dangerous times and the Hutchings on show was that of his first innings partnership with Hobbs rather than the one who had batted with Braund and he and Fane took England on to 121 before Fane was dismissed for exactly 50, his highest score of the series. Trevor described his innings as most valuable, faultless and meritorious. Hutchings lasted only a few overs after Fane’s dismissal but, Australian tails well up, Hardstaff and Braund made sure England would go into the sixth day without further loss. They were 159-4.

The final day dawned with England needing 123 runs and Australia six wickets. In Trevor’s words; All the morning hopes of an English victory grew fainter and fainter, and, as the wicket was practically as good as ever, it would be childish to attempt to make excuses for the failure of batsman after batsman of whom something was expected.

The problem started with just three runs added when Hardstaff was out thought by Cotter. The fast man bounced Hardstaff who hooked, fast and well. Unfortunately for him however he picked out the man on the fence and what might have been a six proved to be his downfall. Braund and Rhodes then added 34 but were out within two runs of each other before Crawford, after greeting the Australians with one blow for six attempted another and failed in his attempt to repeat the dose. After that Humphries and Barnes came together and in the short time left until lunch there were no further alarms. In the afternoon session England’s last two wickets were going to need to find another 66 runs.

Anyone with any knowledge of cricket history knows that Barnes could be a difficult and contrary individual. Acutely aware of the value of his skills he spent little time exhausting them in the six days a week world of county cricket, preferring the leagues and the occasional overseas tour. His bowling record is magnificent, and his batting average is that of a genuine tailender. On all accounts however Barnes was not a bad batsman at all and, had he ever put his mind to it, perfectly capable of becoming a genuine all-rounder.

In the days when wicketkeepers did not have to have any batting qualifications on their CVs Humphries was one of the more able with the willow, but even so his final average in First Class cricket was only 14.19, so Australian confidence was understandably high.

After lunch Barnes knuckled down and began to look like a batsman. It has been suggested that the motivation for the quality of his batting display in this match was his dissatisfaction with the standard of the umpiring he had seen in the match. Certainly he felt that he should not have waited so long for a wicket as he did, and history records that Gunn was less than impressed with the two lbw decisions that were made against him.

Humphries wisely decided to leave the batting to Barnes whenever possible, but wasn’t afraid to look for runs himself and he managed a couple of boundaries before, when the pair had added 43, Armstrong won an lbw appeal against the England ‘keeper. As with Gunn before him it was a decision the batsman did not relish, and whilst there was no open display of dissent Humphries was clearly reluctant to leave the crease.

The score was now 243, so still 39 needed, as Fielder came out to bat. At 11.31 Fielder’s career average was inferior to those of both Humphries and Barnes, but he is one of the very few men to have scored a century from number eleven, something he achieved for Kent against Worcester in 1909 in the course of a last wicket partnership of 235 with Frank Woolley.

Fielder batted as well as Humphries before him and Barnes continued apply himself to the task. There was nothing wrong with the bowling or fielding but, slowly but surely, their last pair inched England towards their target until the scores were level. Armstrong was bowling to Barnes and the fourth ball of the Big Ship’s over was played towards Hazlitt at point. Perhaps the tension had finally got to Barnes, but he set off for a run that palpably wasn’t there. All the teenager had to do was underarm the ball to Carter and Fielder would have been run out by yards, but he had a rush of blood to the head and flung the ball at the stumps with all the power he could muster. Sadly for him and Australia Hazlitt missed, Fielder got home and England had won by one wicket. Barnes was unbeaten on 38, which was to remain his highest Test innings.

In the first Test Hazlitt had played two fighting knocks without which his side could not have won, but he had not taken a wicket. In the second Test he had failed with the bat and, although he was not given many overs, again went wicketless. It was probably inevitable after his gaffe at the denouement that he would lose his place and he duly did. There was however to be a second coming for Hazlitt. Four years later with the series already lost he was called up for the final Test of the 1911/12 Ashes series. He took four wickets, and did enough to gain selection for the 1912 Triangular tournament where he was to record his best Test figures, 7-25 (including a spell of 5-1 in 17 deliveries) in a defeat against England at the Oval.

After the Triangular tournament it was to be more than eight years before Australia played Test cricket again, but by then Hazlitt was no more. He had always had a weak heart and, a schoolmaster outside the game, he contracted influenza in 1915. He carried on with life as best he could in circumstances where, in all probability, he should have taken to his bed. The illness developed into pneumonia and in the end the weak heart gave out and the popular 27 year old was no more.

As far as the 1907/08 series was concerned the excitement died down after the second Test. Australia recorded big wins in the third and fourth Tests and although England raised their game for the dead rubber they failed by 49 runs to take that and so the series was lost 4-1.



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Thursday, April 1, 2021

What Makes Cricket So Special?

Cricket is one of the oldest sports dating back to the 13th century. There are now over a billion fans of cricket in the world. These are residents of Australia, England, India, Pakistan, and New Zealand. Thanks to such a strong community and a huge number of loyal fans, it is no wonder that cricket is ranked the second most popular sport in the world, just after football. 
If you are one of those who adore cricket and never skip a single match in the league, then you can always bet on your favorite team in the best mobile casinos for kiwis and win decent money online. In case you are rather new, we will share with you some basic rules and terminology so that you have an idea of what it is all about.

Cricket: Basic Rules of the Game

The main goal in cricket is to score more points than the opposing team. Points are earned by running between different spots until the end of the match or by knocking out an opponent with a run-out. The team consists of 11 players – all perform different roles:

  • A bowler is a player serving the ball:
  • A batsman is a person who hits the ball;
  • A striker is a player who guards the wicket;
  • The second batsman is called a non-striker;
  • The player behind the wicket is the wicketkeeper.

Specificity and Terminology of The Game

Just like any game, cricket comes with game-specific terminology. And to understand what’s happening on the field, you need to know the basic terms:

  • Over – a series of 6 innings in one direction;
  • Innings – the period of the game during which the field team can earn 10 knockouts of batsmen or carry out overs specified by the regulations;
  • The wicket – an important element of cricket; if it is destroyed, the striker is out of the game.

The next time you watch the cricket match, listen to what a sportscaster says. It will be easier for you to assess the entire picture.

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Interesting Facts About Cricket

There may be something that you do not know about cricket. Have you ever heard that:

  1. The Cricket World Cup is held every 4 years, like the Olympics or the Football World Cup;
  2. There was only one Olympiad cricket competition more than 100 years ago;
  3. The rules of the game are quite simple, but according to statistics, only residents of England, Australia, New Zealand, and India know them;
  4. Cricket matches can sometimes last more than one day;
  5. International matches can last 5 days. In the England cricket championship, matches are played for 4 days;
  6. In many countries, it is very fashionable to go to cricket.

Cricket is more than a hobby for many. It is also a good way to make money, especially if you know onions and are proficient in this sport.

Conclusion

Cricket is a special game that is full of nobility and age-old traditions. And even though cricket is not very widespread in the world, for many people, this game is the main hobby (source of income) in life.



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