INDOOR CRICKET WORLD |
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A cricket oval....indoors?
So, how do you get the grass to grow indoors?With great difficulty. Therefore, the game is played on fitted carpet, similar to the synthetic pitches sometimes used in outdoor venues. As you will notice in some of my photos, the actual pitch is a different coloured carpet to the rest of the field, but mostly it is of the same material as the rest of the court. You're not getting me in there with that hard little red ball!Me neither! However, the ball is a modified cricket ball - a softer centre makes it lighter than the traditional red ball - and it's yellow!! Otherwise it is traditional in design, including the bowler's delight, a six-stitched seam. It is leather, two-piece, the same size as a traditional cricket ball, and when new is still very hard, though without the red ball's weight. An indoor ball swings much more than a red ball, and takes spin and seam to a greater degree also. And it still flies off the bat when struck well. (For those interested in some scientific analysis of why and how a cricket ball swings, here is an off-site link to a to very well referenced article on that subject). The Umpire
To
round the picture off, we should probably mention the umpire. In a game,
there is only one umpire. The umpire is also the scorer and scoreboard attendant
(entering the ball-by-ball score and running total on a score-sheet, and
on an electronic scoreboard by means of a numeric keypad). He or she sits
(some misguided souls actually stand, thereby exaggerating the already inherent
disadvantage of being situated high above the play - but that's another
story) on an elevated platform directly behind the striker's stumps, as
can be clearly seen in the photo to the right. As with players, umpires'
abilities vary greatly. However, unlike players, umpires are always right,
according to the score-sheets anyway. . . . . . 'nuff said I think.
We have a closer look at umpires in the Umpiring
section.
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