Single-Wicket Cricket: Difference between revisions

From Protoball
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
(Categorize Tags into Eras and Regions)
Line 2: Line 2:
|Term=Single-Wicket Cricket
|Term=Single-Wicket Cricket
|Game Family=Baseball
|Game Family=Baseball
|Game Tags=1700s, 1800s, Britain, post-1900,
|Game Regions=Britain
|Description=<p>Single-wicket cricket uses teams&nbsp;smaller than the usual 11-player teams. All bowling is to a single wicket.</p>
|Game Eras=1700s,1800s,Post-1900
<p>There is, in effect, a foul ground behind the wicket, so unlike full-team cricket, only balls hit forward are deemed to&nbsp; be in play.</p>
|Description=<p>Single-wicket cricket uses teams smaller than the usual 11-player teams. All bowling is to a single wicket.</p>
<p>As late at 1969 there were annual single-wicket championships at Lord&rsquo;s in London.&nbsp; In the very early years, most cricket is believed to use a single wicket, and each references to cricket in the US usually reported very small numbers of players.&nbsp; Early cricket rules called for single-wicket play when team sizes were five or fewer.</p>
<p>There is, in effect, a foul ground behind the wicket, so unlike full-team cricket, only balls hit forward are deemed to  be in play.</p>
<p>As late at 1969 there were annual single-wicket championships at Lord’s in London.  In the very early years, most cricket is believed to use a single wicket, and each references to cricket in the US usually reported very small numbers of players.  Early cricket rules called for single-wicket play when team sizes were five or fewer.</p>
}}
}}

Revision as of 14:02, 4 July 2012

Glossary of Games
Glossary book.png

Chart: Predecessor and Derivative Games Pdf ico.gif
Predecessor Games
Derivative Games
Glossary of Games, Full List

Game Families

Baseball · Kickball · Scrub · Fungo · Hat ball · Hook-em-snivy


Untagged Games

Add a Game
Add a Family of Games
Game Single-Wicket Cricket
Game Family Baseball Baseball
Regions Britain
Eras 1700s, 1800s, Post-1900
Description

Single-wicket cricket uses teams smaller than the usual 11-player teams. All bowling is to a single wicket.

There is, in effect, a foul ground behind the wicket, so unlike full-team cricket, only balls hit forward are deemed to  be in play.

As late at 1969 there were annual single-wicket championships at Lord’s in London.  In the very early years, most cricket is believed to use a single wicket, and each references to cricket in the US usually reported very small numbers of players.  Early cricket rules called for single-wicket play when team sizes were five or fewer.

Comment Edit with form to add a comment
Query Edit with form to add a query



Comments

<comments voting="Plus" />