How to Play Cricket: a Guide for the Confused

30 Sep 2009 in Getting Started by Neha Puntambekar

Photo: Prakhar / Feature: Sayamindu

Cricket isn’t just a game, it’s a British tradition. And, like all things British, there’s a proper way to go about it.

Cricket most likely began as a children’s game in the 15th or 16th century, so it’s really simple at heart. Hit ball with bat. Chase ball. Repeat.

Eventually, adults picked up cricket, beginning with farming communities and moving on to the British aristocracy, leading to super-complicated variations in the rules of the game.

Gear and players

Any game of cricket requires a bat, a cricket ball (made of cork and covered with leather) and two sets of three stumps (long wooden stakes). Professional players also use protective gear, like helmets, gloves, and groin guards.

Cricket is played between two teams of eleven players each. Each team is composed of specialist batsmen, bowlers, all-rounders, and a wicket keeper. Two on-field umpires, an off-field umpire, and a match referee officiate.

The basic premise

Each game is split into innings, where each team gets to bat while the other bowls (equivalent to pitching in baseball). Each inning is split into segments called “overs”, groups of six deliveries in a row by one bowler from a particular end. Bowling duties rotate with every over.

At the end of the game, the team with the most runs is declared the winner.

The field

Photo: fiverlocker

Cricket is played on a grass field, at the center of which is a 22-yard strip known as the “wicket” or the “pitch.” This is where most of the action takes place.

The wicket is marked on either end with three wooden stumps lodged into the ground. On top of the stumps balance two small wooden pieces, called bails.

In professional matches, the stumps contain tiny cameras to capture on-pitch action and vital close-ups.

The game

The game itself begins with two batsmen making their way to the pitch while the opposing team takes to the field. Batsmen try to score points by hitting the ball and running back and forth along the wicket.

If the batsman hits the ball past the boundary line, the batting team is awarded four runs automatically. If he hits it out of the ground limit, the team receives six runs.

The bowlers and fielders work at dismissing, or “getting out”, the batsmen, one at a time. The common methods of dismissing a batsman include dislodging the stumps, catching the ball before it hits the ground, and trapping him in front of the stumps. Once all the batsmen have been dismissed or the stipulated time is up, the inning ends.

Format

On the international level, cricket is played in three formats:

Photo: alza06

Test cricket – the classic form of cricket. It is played over five days, and is often considered to be the true trial of a cricketer’s skill. Test cricket is played in whites, a la Wimbledon.

One day internationals – Born in the 1970s, complete with colored uniforms. ODIs are played in two innings of 50 overs, with each team facing 300 deliveries.

Though purists claimed the format would never last, the one-day format led to the formation of cricket’s most prestigious tournament, the Cricket World Cup.

Twenty-twenty – the Twitter of Cricket formats. Added to the international calendar in 2005, twenty-twenty cricket – or T20, as it’s commonly known – is played in short bursts of 20 overs each. As the fastest-paced and most action-packed of cricket’s formats, twenty-twenty matches are usually concluded in less than 3 hours.

T20 also led to the formation of the Indian Premier League (IPL), a professional cricket league based on the structure of European football leagues. It’s a money spinner, both for players and the Indian Cricket Board, and some IPL cricketers earn as much as top English footballers.

Those are the basics: welcome to the tip of the cricketing iceberg.

Community Connection

Still have questions about cricket? Ask them in the comments section!

Panoramic Photo Essay: Scaling and Land-Sailing in San Juan

29 Sep 2009 in Climbing, hiking by Adam Roy
I was in the mountains just west of Argentina’s San Juan City when my camera decided it wasn’t up to the job.

It was the classic dilemma of landscape photography. The raw material was there, the iron-streaked crags of the Tontal range around me and the Andes on the other side of the valley. It was a tremendous landscape, sierra set against scrub desert and cloudless sky.

Yet every time the shutter clicked, all I got were bits and pieces, a couple of mountains or a scrap of valley. I felt tremendously unsatisfied.

Some terrain is just made on too grand of a scale to be boxed into a snapshot; I would never capture San Juan with such a narrow point of view. I cranked my camera into panorama mode, and watched the landscape open up.

Quebrada

1. Just west of San Juan’s provincial capital, La Quebrada del Zonda opens a path through the mountains separating San Juan City from the much higher Andes range. The area gets its name from the Zonda, a strong and very regular wind that buffets the mountains in the afternoon.

Valle

2.Looking down on Zonda itself. As San Juan receives practically no rain, fields have to be irrigated artificially with water drawn from nearby dams.

Approach

3.It takes six hours by car or days on foot to reach the town of Barreal, located on the other side of the precordillera. The peaks just east of town have a great view of the Andes on the other side of the valley, including giants like Cerro Mercedario (22,047 ft.).

Barreal

4.The greenery of Barreal ends abruptly near the western edge of the precordillera, giving way to scrub and hills streaked with rust-red iron deposits.

Leoncito

5. About 20 minutes south of Barreal is the Pampa del Leoncito, a flat clay plain that is famous as one of the world’s best spots for the sport of carrovelismo, or wind-karting. The park hosts an annual championship that draws drivers from all around Argentina and surrounding countries.

Community Connection

Want to know more? Keep an eye out – the full trip report is coming to Matador Sports soon.

The 5 Sports You Should be Watching

28 Sep 2009 in International Sports Culture by Allison Otto

Photo: e.t.

Forget baseball. Forget football. These are the five sports you should be watching.
1. Competitive air guitar

Photo: Brett L.

Lycra pants, manic hip thrusts, and competitors with names like “Pelvis Fenderbender” and “Hot Lixx Hulahan.” How can you go wrong?

Yes, unloved air guitarists everywhere finally have a place to unite. Since 1996, Finland’s Oulu Music Video Festival has hosted the Air Guitar World Championships.

Competitors are judged on stage presence, technical merit (how much they look like they’re really rockin’ out) and “airness” (how much they transform their performance into a work of art).

Check out this video for one epic air guitar performance, which also features what might just be the best use ever of a Hello Kitty breastplate.

2. Costumed (or costumeless) jogging

Trust me, there’s nothing scarier than being passed by a naked male jogger whose junk has lost its battle to San Francisco’s chilly winds. But it’s all par for the course during Bay to Breakers, the city’s annual 12 km race in honor of all things audacious and zany.

With more than 65,000 racers and 100,000 spectators, it’s one of the largest footraces in the world. If you join in, you’ll find yourself jogging alongside stormtroopers, human centipedes, Elvis impersonators, and more than a few brave souls who choose to race in nothing but their shoes.

3. Wife carrying

Photo: jurvetson

From the same brilliant minds that brought you the air guitar championships comes the zany Finnish sport of wife carrying.

The objective of this sport, which was first introduced in Sonkajarvi, Finland, is pretty simple. A male competitor must race through an obstacle course filled with sand, water, and hurdles in the shortest amount of time possible while carrying a female on his back.

The male can carry his female teammate (who doesn’t actually have to be his wife) one of three ways: over the shoulders, piggyback, or “Estonian-style”, in which the woman hangs upside down and backwards with her legs wrapped around the man’s head and her arms wrapped around his waist.

The annual world championships also feature a relay event, in which the male partner must chug a beer before passing his female teammate off to another man.

4. Man Versus Horse Marathon

Inspired by a drunken argument over who could run long distances faster, a man or a horse, comes this annual race from Llanwrtyd Wells, Wales.

The course traverses 22 miles of rough and hilly terrain. Only twice since the race’s inception in 1980 has a human runner emerged victorious.

5. Cheese rolling

Photo: Mike Warren

If you thought man versus horse was bizarre, how about man versus cheese?

At this annual race, held on Cooper’s Hill in Gloucestershire, England, participants hurl themselves downhill in pursuit of a 7-pound wheel of double Gloucestershire.

The first person to reach the bottom of the hill wins the cheese, although most participants fail to stay afoot and end up tumbling across the finish line.

Community Connection

Relive the weirdness with 5 Out-There Hybrid Sports.

The Rat Race: Adventure Racing Comes to London

25 Sep 2009 in Adventure Racing by Adam Roy

Photo: Steve Punter

Britain and Ireland’s Rat Race Urban Adventure Series is like any other adventure race, except for one detail: it doesn’t happen in the wilderness.

The race’s two-day London edition, the last of the UK season, begins on Saturday. Hundreds of teams will bike, climb, kayak, and freerun their way around the city, collecting checkpoints and completing various challenges along the way.

According to the series’ site, founder Jim Mee came up with the idea of an urban adventure race as a way to bring the sport to as many people as possible. The Rat Race is now in its sixth year.

The race is separated into three different levels. Saturday’s Mean Streets foot race is the easiest, while Sunday’s bike-based Nine2Five is more competitive and involves other challenges, such as climbing and parkour courses. The most popular division, Weekender, includes both races.

While the race’s organizers keep the course secret until the day of the event, past challenges have included everything from eating jellied eels to rappelling down the stands at Twickenham Stadium.

After the London race, the series kicks off its first-ever Australian tour with a race in Perth on November 7.

Community Connection

It’s too late to sign up for the Rat Race, but you may still be able to volunteer. Learn more at Urban Freeflow.

Friday Fun: Skysurfing Meets Extreme Ironing

25 Sep 2009 in International Sports Culture by Adam Roy
Think ironing’s just a boring chore? Maybe you just need an altitude adjustment.

Extreme ironing, one of the world´s most popular parody sports, works mostly because of its incongruity. Combining something as banal as ironing with something as exciting as mountain climbing or parkour is so nonsensical that you can’t help but love it.

These skysurfers from the UK take it even further, bringing the iron to the air to pull off some surprisingly sick moves.

Watch carefully near the end: you have to wonder what happened to that shirt.

From all of us at Matador, have an extreme weekend!

World Cup Team Profile: United States

24 Sep 2009 in soccer by Adam Roy

Photo: wjarrettc

A lot has changed for the US national team since the last World Cup. But could they be contenders in 2010?

For the sixth time in a row, America is going to the World Cup. Since beating El Salvador on September 5, the US selection has been sitting in first place in their region, with two qualifiers left.

Barring a colossal, last-minute collapse, the US is going to South Africa. How much they’ll be able to achieve there is harder to say.

Compared to much of FIFA, the US is still no soccer juggernaut. The selection has yet to win a major FIFA tournament. In the last World Cup, they weren’t able to make it past the preliminaries.

Still, they’re not the underdogs that they were four years ago. 2009 saw the US achieve one of its best results ever, a second-place finish in the Confederations Cup. As the selection prepares for South Africa, they’re commanding more respect than they have at any point in recent memory.

Photo: wjarrettc

New team, old problems

What haven’t changed much in the past four years are the US team’s weaknesses.

The Americans have had the same problems with tepid offense and second-half laziness in recent qualifiers against El Salvador and Mexico as they had in Germany.

If coach Bob Bradley wants to do better than a first-round exit this time around, he’ll have to straighten out his attack first.

Backing him up is a squad that mixes vets like Clint Dempsey and Landon Donovan with promising new talent. 19-year-old forward Jozy Altidore currently leads the squad in scoring, with five goals in qualifying, including a hat trick against Trinidad and Tobago.

The squad’s main strength is still its talent in goal, where keeper Tim Howard has been performing every bit as well as his predecessor Kasey Keller since being promoted from the second string. Defender Jonathan Spector has also played a big role in closing up the holes in defense that have caused problems for the US in international play.

Photo: wjarrettc

The US national team in brief:

Coach: Bob Bradley
FIFA ranking: 11
Ranking in CONCACAF region: 1
Best finish in World Cup play: 3rd place (1930)
Biggest win in 2010 qualifiers: 3-0 vs. Trinidad and Tobago
Biggest loss in 2010 qualifiers: 1-3 vs. Costa Rica
Key players: Tim Howard (Everton), Jozy Altidore (Hull City), Landon Donovan (Los Angeles Galaxy), Clint Dempsey (Fulham), Jonathan Spector (West Ham United)

Community Connection

Could the US be a contender for the cup in South Africa? We want to hear what you think – post your thoughts in the comments below.

Be sure to check back soon for our next World Cup profile: the South Korea-North Korea soccer rivalry.

The Polar Plunge: 5 Cold-Water Dive Destinations

23 Sep 2009 in diving by Adam Roy

Photo: Dan Hershman

Sunken schooners, frozen lakes, seaweed forests – you won’t find this in the Caribbean.

There will always be a portion of divers for whom scuba is strictly a warm-weather sport. As soon as the first fall chills hit, they either hang up their shorty wetsuits for the season or head to the tropics.

Cold water, however, is where the real adventure happens. The cold-water sites outside of the equatorial resort belt contain millions of wrecks and unusual wildlife that the resort crowd never gets to see.

From Atlantic ship graveyards to swimming with schools of hammerheads, being comfortable with chilly water opens up a world of possibilities. These are five of our favorite reasons to brave the cold.

1. Scapa Flow

Once Britain’s chief naval base, the natural harbor of Scapa Flow in the Orkney Islands is a wreck diver’s history museum. The main attraction is the wreckage of Germany’s World War I-era fleet, scuttled following its capture by British forces.

With its sandy bottom and shallow water, most of Scapa Flow’s wrecks are accessible to recreational divers, a fact which has helped make it one of the UK’s most popular dive spots.

Divers looking to visit the wrecks need to get a permit through a local dive shop, as some of the ships in Scapa Flow are protected as British war graves.

2. Straits of Mackinac

Photo: Lars

The Great Lakes contain some of the world’s best-preserved shipwrecks, some of which date back centuries. One of the greatest spots to see them is the Straits of Mackinac, which connect Lake Michigan to Lake Huron.

Historically known as a dangerous passage, the straits contain dozens of shipwrecks, at least 16 of which have been identified, located at depths ranging from 10 feet to over 200 feet. Experienced divers can also visit Mackinac Falls, a 110-foot-tall “drowned waterfall” discovered in the straits in 2007.

3. Portland, Maine

Portland is one of those places that’s dived extensively by locals and almost never by anyone else. If you can get over the current and occasionally poor visibility, Portland has some surprisingly varied diving, including shipwrecks and crumbling Civil War-era forts.

Sites around the city’s harbor offer a chance to dive in a working port with local wildlife, like flounder and Maine lobsters.

The best way to get to know Portland’s diving is to go with a local buddy. Many of Portland’s dive shops organize after-work dives at local spots.

4. Galapagos Islands

Photo: 88rabbit

Despite sitting on the equator, the waters of the Galapagos Marine Reserve are anything but warm, thanks to the Antarctic Humboldt current that flows through the islands.

The reserve hosts a stunning collection of marine life, including rays, sharks, sea snakes, turtles, penguins, and sea lions.

Due to its depth and unpredictable water conditions, Galapagos isn’t a dive for beginners. Divers should be in relatively good shape and comfortable with navigating in strong cross-current before they attempt to dive the reserve.

5. Antarctica

It may not be easy, but diving around the Antarctic ice is the ultimate cold-water scuba adventure. The rewards for those few who make the effort are otherworldly ice formations and visibility topping 500 feet, not to mention mad bragging rights.

Unless you happen to be a professional polar explorer, your best bet is to go with an organized expedition. Eco-Photo Explorers, Dive Adventures, and Victory Adventure Expeditions all run dive trips to Antarctica.

Community Connection

Tell us about your own favorite cold-water dives in the comments section.

American Football vs. Rugby: Which is Tougher?

21 Sep 2009 in football, rugby by N. Chrystine Olson
Matador attempts to put this old international sports debate to rest.
Army vs. Military Football Game
Feature photo by RonAlmog. Photo Above by Army.mil

Panelists

N. Chrystine Olson’s View – From the Perspective of an American Football Official

Rugby and gridiron compete for my loyalty in September. Tri Nations winds up, American football starts. I attempted to watch both last Saturday, contacting the only sports bar known for showing “the rugby”, hoping one screen could be dedicated to the South Africa/Australia match.

I settled into a lonely booth while every other patron focused on college football. Enjoying a pint in anticipation of the scrum, I got the bad news. They no longer subscribed to the obscure cable channel responsible for rugby. The waiter brought me a free beer, switching on the Alabama/Virginia Tech game.

The sports gods were talking to me: remember your roots. You’re American: watch football. I like rugby, but I LOVE football.

Lola Akinmade’s View – From the Perspective of a Former Competitive Rugby Player turned Editor of Matador Goods

“I found it!” I remember one player announce gleefully as he picked up his lost tooth from a muddy rugby field, a bloody grin across his face.

Matching his grin was a vibrant spark in his eyes.

Having played competitive rugby for over 10 years and choosing to retire after a knee injury, there’s a certain spirit of camaraderie that’s shared by lovers of the sport. From picnicking impromptu with the entire Tongan rugby team at a park in New Zealand to those evenings spent singing songs in Midwestern Ohio clubhouses, the underlying tone beneath the sport is one of acceptance.

We accept you just the way you are. We have a position you can play, regardless of shape, size, and height.

On Complexity

Rugby Line Out
Photo by Lola Akinmade
Chrystine’s View: American Football 1 Rugby 0

One difference: legal forward pass. Creates exponential combinations of offense. Points can be scored quickly.

Equally complex defensive strategies may result in a “pick” (interception), changing game momentum in one spectacular move.

Effective passing and a decent running game make for encyclopedic play books. No wonder teams need sky boxes and advanced telecommunications to set plays.

Just don’t pull a Belichick and hire a videographer. Bad Coach!

Lola’s View: American Football 0 Rugby 1

You can’t just throw the ball in when it goes out of bounds, you actually have to form a human tower to win it back.

You can’t just run across the finish line, you have to touch the ball to the ground for that mad run through a human obstacle course to count.

Plus any sport that demands you only pass the ball backwards while running at full speed as a 200+ pound player lumbers towards you wins the complexity battle.

On Equipment

Helmet
Photo by popofatticus
Chrystine’s View: American Football 1 Rugby 0

Gridiron players don’t just tackle, they collide.

Every player except the quarterback blocks after the ball is snapped. The average lineman runs 40 yards in 5 seconds, weighs 300 lbs.

Mandatory safety equipment for one player: helmet, face mask, chin strap, mouth protector, shoulder, tailbone, hip, thigh and knee pads.

Multiply by 100.

We win by sheer volume.

Lola’s View: American Football 0 Rugby 1

Just one piece of equipment recommended – Mouthguard! This by default makes rugby players bad asses on the field.

On Tackling

Football
Photo by Monica’s Dad
Chrystine’s View: American Football 1 Rugby 1

Call this a draw because rugby organizes their scoring drives by number of allowed tackles.

But all those controlled crashes and an “almost anything goes” philosophy to bring down the runner gives us the win.

Emphasis on the “almost”, otherwise I wouldn’t have a job every fall.

Lola’s View: American Football 1 Rugby 1

So both sports are known for bone crushing tackles. Can’t argue with that.

However, all tackling styles aren’t made equal. Watching a 150-pound lightweight back player take down a 300-pound forward in a skillfully executed tackle without a scratch is a thing of beauty.

On Handling Injuries

Rugby is a mean sport
Photo by Alex Cheek
Chrystine’s View: American Football 1 Rugby 0

That’s what all those players are for. Bring off the body and put in the second string.

No one’s irreplaceable. Besides the team’s trainer will have all the Hydrocodone, Oxytocin, and industrial strength Vicodin a damaged player can handle.

Lola’s View: American Football 0 Rugby 1

In rugby, the game stops for no man. If you’re not springing back up and shaking it off after a few minutes, we only stop to roll you off the field and pull in a substitute.

Plays & Names

49ers Kick
Photo by 123 look at me
Chrystine’s View: American Football 1 Rugby 0

Hail Mary. Statue of Liberty. Spiritual AND patriotic.

Blitz. Bootleg, Shotgun and Sprint Draw. Reminiscent of a Western starring John Wayne. Classic.

Lola’s View: American Football 0 Rugby 1

Hooker. Scrum. Maul. Ruck. Flyhalf.

I dare you to come up with cooler names for players and plays.

Sportsmanship

Rugby players greet fans
Photo by ctsnow
Chrystine’s View: American Football 0 Rugby 1

Surprise, I’m with my Lola on this one. I’ve dated both American football and rugby players.

The starting freshman QB at Virginia Tech was an ass, the All Black’s winger an absolute dream.

But on a less personal note, all the money associated with American football has created some real brats.

Can you say “Brett Favre”?

Lola’s View: American Football 0 Rugby 1

Known worldwide as the “hooligan sport played by gentlemen”, expect a nice meal and tasty adult beverages provided by the hosting team after every game.

All grievances end once you get off the pitch and into that clubhouse.

Final Score

Chrystine’s View: American Football 5 Rugby 2

So, Rugby isn’t skunked in my tally, gotta give credit where it’s due. Still wish I could have seen at least one Tri Nations match in real time. No offense to available You Tube clips, but it just isn’t the same.

Now I’m off to Capones; the Green Bay Packers open in Lambeau against the Chicago Bears.

Shouldn’t have any trouble catching that game.

Lola’s View: American Football 1 Rugby 6

Hands down, Rugby takes home the trophy. 80 minutes of nonstop ruggedness with gasp-inducing tackles and wow-extracting plays.

Plus any sport that gives you this spectacle instead of perky cheerleaders as pre-game entertainment rules!

Middlebury Haka
Photo by whiteafrican

By the Numbers: Scuba World Records

16 Sep 2009 in by the numbers by Adam Roy

Photo: acme

Robert Silva may be the scuba world’s latest record-breaker, but he’s certainly not the first. Here are a few other divers who pushed the sport to new extremes.

-Deepest open water dive: 1,083 feet (Pascal Bernabe – Corsica, 2005)
-Deepest cave dive: 927 feet (Nuno Gomes – Boesmansgat, 1996)
-Deepest dive by a woman: 725 feet (Verna Van Schaik – Boesmansgat, 2004)
-Deepest wreck dive: 672 feet (Leigh Cunninghams and Mark Andrews – MV Jolanda, 2005)
-Furthest cave traverse: 7 miles (Jarrod Jablonski and Casey McKinlay – Wakulla Springs, FL, 2007)
-Longest freshwater dive: 120 hours (Jerry Hall – Watauga, TN, 2004)
-Longest tank dive: 135 hours (Cem Karabay – Istanbul, 2009)
-Largest mass dive: 2,562 divers (North Sulawesi, Indonesia, 2009)

Breaking News: Silva Sets Scuba World Record With 48-Hour Dive

16 Sep 2009 in diving by Adam Roy

Photos: Robert Silva

In July, Matador Sports interviewed scuba diver Robert Silva about his upcoming attempt to set a new world record for longest saltwater dive. Today, we have the results.

After spending two days beneath the waters of Belize’s Hol Chan Marine Reserve, Silva surfaced at 10:37 local time on Wednesday. His 48-hour, 2-minute stay tops the previous record by nearly 12 hours.

According to local newspaper Ambergris Today, Silva was visibly exhausted upon exiting the water, and was unable to respond to questions from the media.

The paper said that support crews administered oxygen to Silva before transporting him to nearby Ramon’s Village Resort to recuperate.

Silva, a 31-year-old divemaster and warehouse lead, had originally planned to attempt the much longer freshwater record, which stands at about 120 hours. Funds raised through his dive will go to the American Cancer Society.

Community Connection

If you missed the interview, be sure to check it out at Profile: Robert Silva, Endurance Diver.

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