I am
not exactly an ardent fan of India's most popular game of cricket,
though I do like to watch an occasional game at my convenience. Ever
since, it was invented, cricket has been called a game of glorious
uncertainties because it always offered an equal chance to both
sides, one that bowled and the one that batted. The fortunes for the
teams varied along with the state of the pitch or the ground on which
the game is played as well as weather conditions. If the pitch, which
sometimes also called as wicket, cracked, it favoured certain types
of bowling. Similaraly cold windy conditions or hot humid weather
assisted certain type of bowling. All that was required was a
intelligent captain, who would take advantage of the conditions.
Things
started changing, when a game of cricket that went on and on for five
long and boring days in sun, was first changed to a format where a
fix number of balls would be bowled by either teams and the match
would be over in a day. Then came the T 20 or even shorter version,
that would be over within 3 or 4 hours only. With the abbreviated
versions of the game, came new rules and regulations.
Earlier,
cricket experts would say that the 5 day format games, known as test
matches, were won by bowlers, as they would bowl according to the
conditions of pitch and weather. There were really no conditions
imposed on them by the rules of the game. The new format one-dayers
are won by batsmen as it is believed that spectators came to watch
boundaries ( Hitting the ball to limits of the playground) being hit
rather than the ball beating the bat. To make the game one sided in
favour of the batsmen, many rules and regulations loaded against the
bowler were introduced. The first set of rules stipulated that a
bowler could bowl only one high rising ball known as bouncer in a set
of six balls also known as 'over' in cricket terminology. A bowler
could no longer bowl to the leg side of a right handed batsman and
vice versa and such ball bowled now became a wide ball. The new one
day game rules - two new balls per innings, and a maximum of four
fielders outside the circle have been introduced recently. All this
is making easy for the batsman to hit tall scores comparatively
easily.
In the
earl years of one day games, 250 runs from 50 overs was considered a
good score and a potentially match winning one. If a team was
expected to score more than six runs per over, it was assumed the
game had gone out of reach for the team batting second. With the new
rules, a score of 300 has become a commonplace achievement. Consider
the 5 one day matches, played recently between India and Australia.
The runs scored by the side that batted first were, 304, 359, 303,
350, 383. It is easy to argue that the such tall scores were scored
because two sets of bowlers from two sides have been depressingly
mediocre and both sides had talented great batsmen.
There
could be some truth in this no doubt, but this could not be the only
reason. It is obvious that the new rules loaded against the bowlers
also have contributed to these scores. It is therefore no wonder that
India's captain says that in the new format bowlers have come
completely irrelevant and we may as well get bowling machines instead
of bowlers.
Cricket
in its new format is no longer a game between a bat and a ball, it
has become a game between two sides, where the side that can hit a
ball farthest, usually wins. Batsmen get out now, because of their
mistakes. They no longer are trapped by the opposite side by
intelligent bowling and fielding.
Cricket
still has its glorious uncertainties, but run making is no longer one
of them.
5th
November 2013
There are a few things in life that you should just enjoy. Not analyze. Music, art, sports, comedy etc. If one enjoys them, one does not care to analyze them nor care to hear any analysis.
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