Cricket Explained for Baseball Fans

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  • čas přidán 11. 11. 2021
  • What is Cricket? How is Cricket played? Is Cricket like baseball? Is baseball like Cricket? These are all good questions.
    Cricket is a sport that is a lot like baseball, except it's nothing like baseball. It's a unique game, but if you are a baseball fan, you're in a unique position to understand it more quickly than someone who is just flying blindly. There are enough similarities between Cricket and Baseball that it shouldn't be too hard for you to understand how Cricket is played if you already understand how Baseball is played. Give this video a watch and you'll be a Cricket master in no time.
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Komentáře • 4,1K

  • @SportsExplained
    @SportsExplained  Před 2 lety +649

    Hey! Thanks for all the great comments. One thing that has come up a lot: At a few points I use the term "professional match" or "professional cricket" when I should have said "league" or "professional league match." International Cricket is also very professional! When I said "professional cricket" I was referring to the T20 cricket leagues that exist in India, Australia, etc. and are somewhat analogous to sports leagues in other countries, like Major League Baseball or the Premiere League. International cricket is also professional, and international play is the highest level of professional play.

    • @timbrom
      @timbrom Před 2 lety +28

      Generally any game that is not a 5-day international test match (or 3-4 day "first class" match) is referred to as a "limited overs" match, in which there is always a winner. It might be worth mentioning that it is more than possible for a test or first class match to be drawn (i.e. there is no winner), which is an entirely foreign concept in baseball (aside from the very rare "called" draw that can happen in something like the All Star Game.) Otherwise, I thought that was an excellent introduction for someone entirely new to the game. Well done!

    • @gregoryparkes-skelly8288
      @gregoryparkes-skelly8288 Před 2 lety +1

      @@timbrom There's not always a winner in the limited formats. They do occur though they are very rare these days.

    • @gregoryparkes-skelly8288
      @gregoryparkes-skelly8288 Před 2 lety +11

      I thought you did a good job of explaining what could be a confusing and somewhat intimidating sport to wrap your head around with no experience or familiarity growing up with the game.
      On the professionalism question. Players have been paid domestically for decades but not at the same level of the international players. The high profile T20 leagues are relatively new. And players can make very good livings playing on the circuit which includes leagues in India, Australia, England, South Africa, Pakistan, Bangladesh, the Caribbean, Nepal, Canada (yep Canada) and apparently there's a group looking to launch Major League Cricket in the US.

    • @pranavgandhar4604
      @pranavgandhar4604 Před 2 lety +3

      you have done really hard work,
      I will suggest you, people find cricket confusing because of they want to learn verbally rather than actual watching,
      same for baseball too

    • @pranavgandhar4604
      @pranavgandhar4604 Před 2 lety +7

      one thing was, cricket was always experimental than baseball,
      cricket was ready to change itself for better views, as it evolved from 5 day match to 3 hour match, many rule are changed to favor batsman , people want to see ball going out of stadium,
      but baseball policies are always restricted to american allys, never in the favor what people like to see,
      cricket also face critism for t20 format, but ultimately its most popular format of cricket and most understandable format for new ones in cricket,
      RICH baseball boards should do some different to gain spread in more countries. !!

  • @PFNel
    @PFNel Před 2 lety +2621

    A very small detail: If the target is 222, it means that the team that batted first scored 221 (not 222). The target is one run more than the opposing team's score. It may sound obvious, but South Africa once lost a World Cup game at least in part because they forgot that their target was one run MORE than the opposing team's total!

    • @SportsExplained
      @SportsExplained  Před 2 lety +361

      Yes, thanks!
      I did not know about South Africa! Yikes. At least this means I'm not the only one who has made this mistake.

    • @silverrahul
      @silverrahul Před 2 lety +139

      ​@@SportsExplained Yes, that south africa mistake happend when the match was interrupted by rain, and hence the match officials revised the target to a new one. But the method they use for the calculation called the Duckworth lewis method outputs the par score i.e. one less than the target score. South africa thought that it was the target.

    • @MiddleClassMafia
      @MiddleClassMafia Před 2 lety +63

      That insident is not as simple as you're telling him here. Its a way more complexed issue. The match was inturrpted by rain and all that Duckworth BS

    • @MiddleClassMafia
      @MiddleClassMafia Před 2 lety +10

      @@SportsExplained there are 11 ways that a batsman can get out.
      And leg before wickets is totally a different thing.

    • @PFNel
      @PFNel Před 2 lety +48

      @@MiddleClassMafia True. But I'm not going to get into the Duckworth-Lewis formula in a reply to someone who isn't steeped in the details of the game. And anyway, I can't, because I never bothered to learn it myself.

  • @Tj33372
    @Tj33372 Před 2 lety +1850

    The Best explanation of cricket for an American I’ve seen

    • @SportsExplained
      @SportsExplained  Před 2 lety +62

      Awesome.

    • @cricketexplained8526
      @cricketexplained8526 Před 2 lety +26

      And very good for anyone else, as baseball parlance is kept to a minimum.

    • @Kas-kw4xf
      @Kas-kw4xf Před 2 lety +12

      Agree.

    • @joeyfreitas1942
      @joeyfreitas1942 Před 2 lety +14

      I’m Canadian but I also found it helpful

    • @Kas-kw4xf
      @Kas-kw4xf Před 2 lety +2

      @@joeyfreitas1942
      Hope you put it to test and watch a game (or some of) of cricket.

  • @newlywedbeth
    @newlywedbeth Před 11 měsíci +63

    Decades! Decades! I have been waiting for someone to explain this sport to me for decades! Many thanks!

  • @sleuth2077
    @sleuth2077 Před rokem +392

    I went to Australia as an exchange student from the States and had no idea what Cricket was, but started casually messing around with it with my school mates during afternoon tea break.......which is basically just a high school version of recess. Oddly enough, I ended up having a knack for bowling, especially spin bowling and I grew quite fond of the game. I never kept up with it after returning home, so this was a nice bast from the past. Thanks for the great video!

    • @michaeldoyle8733
      @michaeldoyle8733 Před rokem +13

      Spin bowlers are the intellectuals

    • @geoffheard5768
      @geoffheard5768 Před rokem +2

      Were you a leggy, or an off spinner?

    • @sleuth2077
      @sleuth2077 Před rokem

      @@geoffheard5768 leg spin. I'm a righty

    • @shahrock6969
      @shahrock6969 Před 11 měsíci +4

      ​@@michaeldoyle8733true smart people do spin, good physical parameters do fast bowling

    • @flamingfrancis
      @flamingfrancis Před 9 měsíci

      @@michaeldoyle8733 To some degree, yes. They hang back until all the hard work has been done by the opening quicks.

  • @briandragoo2320
    @briandragoo2320 Před 2 lety +1176

    Something that I don't think you mentioned in this video that always comes up when baseball fans watch cricket is why the bowler's motion looks so strange. I'm sure it's obvious to cricket aficionados, but baseball fans need to understand that "bowling" the ball is biomechanically different to "throwing" it. Bowling is a very specific type of motion, in which only the rotation of the shoulder can be used to create the velocity for a bowled ball, whereas in baseball, the pitchers owe a great deal of their effectiveness to taking advantage of the extension of the elbow joint to create velocity. Throwing (aka chucking) the ball is illegal in cricket, and if the umpire judges that a ball has been thrown by the bowler, they will call a no-ball.

    • @cricketexplained8526
      @cricketexplained8526 Před 2 lety +51

      I sometimes wonder how a javelin thrower would do as a bowler. I would think some bowlers have done javelin throwing in their youth, coincidentally.

    • @BP-kx2ig
      @BP-kx2ig Před 2 lety +24

      @@cricketexplained8526 Watch Jeff Thompson

    • @g35tr
      @g35tr Před 2 lety +47

      Great reply. I was actually wondering why they didn't throw it more like baseball players as to get more speed on the throw (or bowl). Thanks for that info!

    • @cricketexplained8526
      @cricketexplained8526 Před 2 lety +22

      @@g35tr Yeah it's a great post. If a bowler is found to be chucking routinely at pro level, they will have to remediate, and then prove they are no longer chucking.
      I think there was one spin bowler who was asked to eliminate one specific delivery from his repertoire as he was chucking in order to bowl it. It seems bowlers are now trying to avoid bowling that particular delivery.

    • @PFNel
      @PFNel Před 2 lety +34

      @@g35tr Cricket language doesn't come naturally to a newcomer. A single delivery of the ball is not a throw or even a bowl. It's simply called a ball. So you would say "There is only one ball left in this over" or "That was a really good ball" or "That last ball was a bit wayward".

  • @pqrstsma2011
    @pqrstsma2011 Před rokem +426

    as someone who grew up watching cricket, but now living in the US, i'm looking forward to seeing a 'Baseball explained for Cricket fans' video

    • @parthasarathibiswas9239
      @parthasarathibiswas9239 Před rokem +12

      yes, we want that too. great idea for the next content.

    • @justandardprocedure
      @justandardprocedure Před rokem +24

      Knowing baseball first, cricket seems far more complicated.

    • @charlesedward5047
      @charlesedward5047 Před rokem +20

      @@justandardprocedure Exactly. You can pick up 90% of how baseball is played by watching just one full game. I tried with cricket and, nope, no idea.

    • @bipedalbob
      @bipedalbob Před rokem +8

      @@charlesedward5047 same here, you can watch a whole game and have no idea how it's played.
      I don't think it would take more than 5 minutes to explain baseball.
      Comparing the two when trying to explain one to the other is pointless really,
      The only thing they have in common is they use a bat and a ball, and even those are different. Now at least I feel I know how the game is played and can now with out thinking I might be missing something I would like, go on to ignore it completely.

    • @cricketexplained8526
      @cricketexplained8526 Před rokem +20

      @@charlesedward5047 cricket can be explained in 5 minutes, it's just a question of acclimatisation. Baseball is alien to me as I live in the UK so I needed to watch a 20 minute explainer and still didn't get it all.

  • @dhoyongjeong5006
    @dhoyongjeong5006 Před 10 měsíci +61

    As a life-long baseball fan from South Korea who has never really watched or understood cricket before, this was a great beginner's guide to cricket for baseball fans. Thanks so much!

  • @robkennard1867
    @robkennard1867 Před rokem +36

    I never understood the attraction of cricket when I was young(I'm a Brit), until I saw an interview with Ian Botham which described the intimidatory nature of bowling in test matches. It is a legitimate tactic to hurt or scare a player into a mistake or just give up their wicket. Gladitorial combat hidden within a gentlemens game!

    • @ecstasycalculus
      @ecstasycalculus Před 6 měsíci +3

      This was a key plot point in the Cricket episode of Bluey, which is an episode I highly recommend to anyone who likes cricket or just wants to learn the game.

  • @3ggshe11s
    @3ggshe11s Před rokem +325

    A friend of my wife just shared her ESPN+ subscription with her so she could watch NHL hockey. I was looking for something to watch and found the T20 World Cup. It instantly caught my interest, and it took me close to a week to wrap my head around all the basics. It's a tremendously fascinating game. Cheers to a great video!

    • @smedits2705
      @smedits2705 Před rokem +7

      Just run through some games bro i know you'll love it

    • @islandsunset
      @islandsunset Před rokem +20

      Next world is partly hosted by USA. Make sure to watch a game

    • @CrobianYT
      @CrobianYT Před rokem +17

      Best thing to do is tell others about the game. Once America (Finally) catches on with Cricket, the game will explode.

    • @naqvi2008
      @naqvi2008 Před rokem +3

      Cricket is love

    • @stevenfeil7079
      @stevenfeil7079 Před rokem

      Nothing like admitting publicly that you are a theif.

  • @rickmorgan3930
    @rickmorgan3930 Před 2 lety +59

    As a US sailor I spent 3 days aboard HMS Achilles in the Red Sea during the late70s. One afternoon, they introduced us to cricket on the flight deck of the frigate, and they got a huge laugh when we Americans threw down our bats and ran to the next 'base.' For all these years, I've wondered what the game was about and you did a great job of explaining it. Thanks much :)

  • @ohiolongs
    @ohiolongs Před 5 měsíci +15

    American here who has never understood cricket. I watched the video and was easily understand the World Cup final yesterday. Thanks so much!

  • @danieljamesmead
    @danieljamesmead Před 10 měsíci +10

    Life-long English cricket watcher here (test matches only). It's only when you watch something like this you realise what a mental game it is really. And you've only scratched the surface of the rules/etiquette really. There's so much more to do with weather, atmospheric conditions, the state of the ball, reviewing wickets, types of bowling, ground conditions, fielding positions and so on. I'd love to be able to come at it as an adult who knows nothing of it and see what I think about it all.

  • @LeviRamsey
    @LeviRamsey Před rokem +552

    There's a great book from about 15 years ago called "Playing Hard Ball", by an English cricketer who discovered baseball and even spent a spring training with the Mets. The point from that which really struck me was that the key difference to understanding each game from the other perspective was that the relative roles of batting and delivering/fielding are swapped. In baseball, the advantage is with the pitcher/fielders to the point that the batter expects to make an out with every plate appearance and it's the pitcher who's dreading letting his team down by giving up a run while in cricket the bowler can't reasonably expect to not give up a run per ball on average but woe be unto the batsman who allows a wicket to be taken. The rate at which wickets typically get taken (at least in T20) lines up fairly well with the typical rate at which runs get scored in baseball.

    • @cricketexplained8526
      @cricketexplained8526 Před rokem

      Yes, which is why anyone who likens T20 to baseball is wrong. It's false marketing. They are nothing alike except in duration.

    • @stalfithrildi5366
      @stalfithrildi5366 Před rokem +8

      What's the origin of the books title, cos around the same time an excellent history of soccer was written using the same title, taken from a World Cup winning coach; "the ball is round, the game lasts 90 minutes, and everything else is just theorising"

    • @LeviRamsey
      @LeviRamsey Před rokem +2

      @@stalfithrildi5366 Yeah, actually I got the titles confused... it's "Playing Hard Ball"

    • @NemoThorx
      @NemoThorx Před rokem +65

      This lines up well with something I've long said - that Cricket is a game of runs with rare game-changing outs, and Baseball is a game of outs with rare game-changing runs.

    • @RVNmax
      @RVNmax Před rokem +2

      @@NemoThorx Nice summary

  • @tnowikowski
    @tnowikowski Před rokem +313

    Thanks to ESPN+ and Hulu, I found myself becoming hooked on cricket during the T20 World Cup last fall. And now this spring I've been pulled in again (again on ESPN+/Hulu) by the IPL (Indian Premier League), which is another T20-format league. It's a "franchise league", like MLB franchises, but while all the teams are Indian, each team has a (limited) number of "overseas" players, many of whom are stars for their national teams, or other teams, in other formats.
    Besides quickly realizing the difference not having gloves makes in trying to catch balls hit in the air, it was the variety of bowling styles that amazed me. Baseball pitchers have got NOTHING on the range of speed, spin, and length you can see in just one T20 innings!

    • @markdowse3572
      @markdowse3572 Před rokem +37

      Well said, sir. When one sees what actually happens on a cricket field, one is amazed how little throwing a ball through the air to a batter adds to a game.
      The 'bounce' is the crucial element.
      Faster is not always better........ Intrigue follows. Mystery can develop. See the career of SHANE WARNE as a guarantee of mystery.
      M 🦘🏏😎

    • @vladtepes97
      @vladtepes97 Před rokem +7

      don't mistake 20-rubbish for cricket. it's not real cricket. it's for children with no attention span. it's the equivalent of mini-golf, beach volleyball and video games.
      there are two forms of professional cricket: first class, which includes test cricket, the pinnacle of cricket; and list A cricket, which includes One Day Internationals (odi).

    • @silverback3633
      @silverback3633 Před rokem +11

      @@markdowse3572 Yeah, the bounce which amplifies the spin, is the crucial element of this game the narrator missed out on.

    • @markdowse3572
      @markdowse3572 Před rokem +1

      @@silverback3633 Precisely, madam / sir.
      That's WHY I tried to help him out.

    • @darparniox
      @darparniox Před rokem +59

      @@vladtepes97 I also think test cricket is the best form of cricket but belittling someone over the form of cricket they choose to watch is a great way to turn away new fans to a great sport. Grow up

  • @PierreMailhot
    @PierreMailhot Před 10 měsíci +48

    I'm Canadian. I knew about the game but only started watching it (mostly World Cup T20 and IPL) on Willow each time the channel is on a free preview for a few weeks on my TV provider. It took me a few games to understand most of the basic rules. Your video is excellent and very informative for someone who knows baseball like me. It would have helped me immensely if I had found it a few years ago 🙂 Excellent job! I will be sharing this to Canadian and American friends who want to discover cricket.

    • @cricketexplained8526
      @cricketexplained8526 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Then you might be able to catch Major League Cricket in the US from 13th-30th July. It's the new USA T20 tournament with a number of famous overseas players.

    • @PierreMailhot
      @PierreMailhot Před 9 měsíci

      @@cricketexplained8526 Just got the confirmation today that Willow US and Willow Canada are going to show the Major League Cricket games. I paid the 5 CAD to add the channel to my programming here in Canada. Too bad I can't go to Texas or North Carolina this year to catch a game live. Maybe next year if the tournament is a success.

    • @DesiGameChaser27
      @DesiGameChaser27 Před 6 měsíci

      Which team do you support in cricket by the way?

    • @PierreMailhot
      @PierreMailhot Před 6 měsíci

      @@DesiGameChaser27 I do not have any preferred team or national team. I did watch a few of Canada's game recently. I still prefer T20 to ODI or Test games. Currently just watching highlights of the World Cup on Willow. I like all kind of T20 tournaments during the year.

    • @varunapathak2096
      @varunapathak2096 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@PierreMailhot Well, if you like T20 tournaments, then next T20 World Cup is in the US :) I hope you will enjoy it and yeah LA going to host cricket in 2028 Olympics as well (Yay! Finally cricket in the Olympics!)

  • @blindtomuk
    @blindtomuk Před rokem +85

    Some years ago I worked with an American from WV who had spent some time working in the UK, during which he got really into watching cricket. He told me he did not understand why it was not more popular in the US as it is a sport that you can watch for up to 5 days straight, drink beer all day and scores are in the hundreds. As he put it, "what is more American than that?"

    • @24306529
      @24306529 Před 11 měsíci +11

      that's because cricket will eat up some share of the baseball market..US companies has invested significantly in the baseball over the decades .. they can not afford cricket getting popular..the media companies as well are not putting any efforts in understanding the game of cricket..they always first mention that a game of cricket lasts for few days and that's the perception of average american about cricket.
      if you go in depth, americans tend to simplify things when it comes to sports .. Baseball -> batters hit the ball and run, fielders will try to catch or run you out .. basketball -> keep putting the ball in the ring while opponents try to stop you .. ice hockey -> score goals without worrying about the puck going outside the boundary.. only football has some complexity but it does not have a flow in the game, there many many interruptions .. anything complex than that, americans don't spend time in understanding it.
      there is another aspect of physical strength .. all american sports require the players to push the limits of physique..so much so that average person can rarely make any career in those sports..also these sports have physical contact involved in the game play..so there are chances of 'fights' during the gameplay especially considering the body built of the players.. these fights or the physical involvement in the game, somehow, excite the crowd here..
      That's not the case with the cricket..cricket requires to have an agile body..being bulky is a disadvantage in the cricket..person with an average body can make a career in cricket .. but in america, commercially, everything has to be big - go big or go home.

    • @joeldipops
      @joeldipops Před 10 měsíci

      Facing down fast bowlers requires nerves of steel though. Pretty badarse if you ask me

    • @hareeshkrishnaa5642
      @hareeshkrishnaa5642 Před 10 měsíci +1

      That's why inorder to tap into that market, they are bringing MLC (Major League Cricket), a T20 tournament going to be held in july-august in Texas and North Carolina.
      But, that 5 day match you are talking about is a Test Match. Only big nations play because of the huge money involved. Now, Currently USA is an associate cricketing nation, who will soon be participating in the World Cup qualifiers

    • @MrBrenos
      @MrBrenos Před 10 měsíci

      @@joeldipopsyep. Plus you can legally smash the ball into the batter in cricket. Baseball you can’t even flick the shirt with a pitch, or you’ll put the batter on first.

    • @Capflying
      @Capflying Před 7 měsíci +2

      ​@@MrBrenosand the bounce is what makes a cricket delivery dangerous. It can pitch wherever on the floor before you and can fail all your calculations after the bounce.

  • @Punkologist
    @Punkologist Před 2 lety +514

    Im an Australian baseball player, so I know both sports inside out. This is a great video, you did quite well. Test Cricket is still the pinnacle of the sport, the Ashes Series (Australia vs England) is a very big deal here. We will be glued to our TVs for 5 matches of 5 days each :) Twenty 20 is a bit of hit and giggle designed to draw in people with short attention spans that just want to see big hitting. Test Cricket, especially towards the end of a match if it is close can be very exciting, nail-biting stuff.

    • @markdowse3572
      @markdowse3572 Před rokem +7

      Well said sir.
      How's your baseball going, BTW?
      What do you think of the loss of legends like Marsh, Warne and Symonds in a few months? 😢😢
      M 🦘🏏😎

    • @Punkologist
      @Punkologist Před rokem +7

      @@markdowse3572 Baseball I haven't played for a few years. I'm 44 now. I have plans to return and play in our local veterans comp in summer.

    • @positivegradient
      @positivegradient Před rokem +25

      Test cricket is one of the most beautiful things in sport. Like the Ind v Aus series in 2020-21.

    • @kiranfrancis8325
      @kiranfrancis8325 Před rokem +5

      @@positivegradient The border gavaskar trophy

    • @positivegradient
      @positivegradient Před rokem

      @@kiranfrancis8325 yes

  • @cricketexplained8526
    @cricketexplained8526 Před rokem +220

    Test cricket really is the most amazing and wonderful format. It's poetry. T20 pays the bills but isn't nearly as deep. ODIs are a decent tradeoff between the extremes.

    • @lesner66
      @lesner66 Před rokem +5

      Correct

    • @dawwww
      @dawwww Před rokem +5

      Explained it perfectly!

    • @longstops1430
      @longstops1430 Před rokem +7

      Test cricket is the fine literature of the sport. It doesn't appeal to everyone but it is poetry as you describe.

    • @raymondporter2094
      @raymondporter2094 Před rokem +5

      One way to look at it is that Test Match cricket, which can last 5 days, is like a banquet with many courses, different wines and a rest between each course, ideal for conversation. There can be a total of 4 innings, and periods in each innings when the batsmen are or top or the bowlers, and the weather and pitch conditions may change from day to day or as the wicket gets older, so it may be easier to bat on day 2 than on day 5. There can be an ebb and flow so at one time it might appear that team A is doing better but a day later things might look very different.
      On the other hand, limited overs cricket (T20 games are normally over within about 3 or 4 hours depending how much time is taken for the lunch break if it's early in the day, but a 50 overs game will last all day, typically between 11am, and 6.30 pm unless the game finishes early) is more like a fast meal - a KFC or McDonald's. OK for fast consumption but rarely memorable. Who'd say "That BigMac Meal we had last month was The Best...."?

    • @jojohehe3251
      @jojohehe3251 Před rokem +6

      Test cricket is just that - a test. As a batsman (and thank you very much to the channel owner for not using the modern, stupid term "batter"), you have to exercise self-control in leaving balls which aren't suitable to hit. As a bowler, you have to consistently deliver such balls.
      There's an orthodox way to bat in unlimited overs, but time pressure throws that out the window in limited overs cricket. That means the batsman's behaviour is different, so as a bowler it's a different challenge. In unlimited overs, a batsman will be conservative and try above all else to retain his wicket (not get out). Remembering that he must defend his stumps, and if the ball hits his legs first in front of the stumps he's out LBW, he will play with a straight bat (i.e. it will be vertical) and will take a position in front of the stumps. That's his first concern, and it determines his position, which means biomechanics now come into play for the bowler's ideal "line and length" (bowling trajectory).
      If the ball is either straight at his body or rather wide of him, it's easy to play, so "too straight" or "too wide" are bad balls, which are usually punished, as are full tosses. Where a batsman gets in trouble often is when the ball is just slightly wide. Trying to hit the ball with a straight bat when it's slightly wide means your timing must be pefect, otherwise you will "nick" the ball and be caught by the wicket-keeper or one of his nearby mates, called "slips". The ball also swings (like a slider) and moves sideways when it bounces on the side of the seam. So batsmen will leave these dangerous balls in the "corridor of uncertainty".
      So in Test cricket, top bowlers consistently bowl a nagging line that obliges an orthodox batsman to "leave" the ball (not play). Just as baseball batters leave "balls" and play at strikes. The difference is, you can do this all day and it's a genuine Test of the batsman to continue leaving. One thing is, if the ball is really good, it obliges the batsman to play at it as he's not sure if it's going to threaten his off stump. That's positive bowling. If the ball is not wide enough to be worth playin gat, but so wide that the batsman knows he can safely leave it, that's poor bowling. Bowlers will do this to slow the pace of a batsman's scoring, hoping he'll get bored or lose concentration. That can admittedly be pretty boring, as can watching a long stretch of incompetent bowling where nothing is really happening and the score is just slowly creeping along. So I guess it's a Test of the fan's devotion, too.

  • @roleypoley808
    @roleypoley808 Před rokem +115

    This is magnificent and honestly makes me want to follow cricket as an adult. I’m an American who grew up with a few Indian families on our street. We would play cricket, using a brick mailbox as the wickets and bowling a tennis ball from across the road, running back and forth touching the curbs. It was so much fun and makes me wonder how popular it really could be professionally in the states if it had the same history as baseball.

    • @aquanoxopu07
      @aquanoxopu07 Před 11 měsíci +5

      It's literally the 2nd most popular sport. It better than Baseball if you check stats

    • @chriskeddie4226
      @chriskeddie4226 Před 10 měsíci +4

      Cricket is great for casual games (as you only need about 3+ people), so I hope it catches on in the states more

    • @negativeiqpoints396
      @negativeiqpoints396 Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@aquanoxopu07 better? You mean more popular?

    • @manubhatt3
      @manubhatt3 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Using tennis ball takes away all the good things while adding bad things to the sport.
      I wud always advise against using a tennis ball. If you have not played using a leather ball on a playground, then you have no idea what real cricket feels like.
      I am saying that as one who has played Cricket using plastic, tennis, Cork and Leather balls and know the difference in the play as a result. Believe me, tennis ball is the worst!

    • @kvm6
      @kvm6 Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@manubhatt3that is easy to play for a casual player. Others are heavy, more injury prone, the ball will deteriorate each time you play.

  • @theflaneur__
    @theflaneur__ Před rokem +45

    As a British Sri Lankan, this is probably the best explanation of Cricket by an American I've ever seen!

  • @keimahane
    @keimahane Před rokem +673

    As one who grew up playing baseball nearly everyday I could and then discovering Cricket as an adult about 30 years ago and now watching it even more than Baseball, I say job well done with this video. Very easy explanation for Baseball fans. I think if Americans learned the game and starting watching T20, especially the IPL, they would fall in love with it and may even want to watch some ODI or Test. Thank you for doing this video.

    • @buttorr
      @buttorr Před rokem +20

      i moved from india to the us when i was very little so watching cricket was mandatory in my household. Me and my freinds would play it everyday when they still lived in my neighborhood it was really fun

    • @kaustubhborde8148
      @kaustubhborde8148 Před rokem +25

      American will of course like cricket if they understand the laws of cricket properly.

    • @keimahane
      @keimahane Před rokem +6

      @@kaustubhborde8148 True

    • @timhannah4
      @timhannah4 Před rokem +14

      Thing is....USA never accept Sports they aren't the best at. World Series Hockey.....Really, AFL only played by a relative few. Wonder what the Football World Cup TV & attendance figures were?

    • @birendrashahi40
      @birendrashahi40 Před rokem +2

      @@timhannah4 if u.s.a play any sports they become best,they have best infrastructure and also sports culture, america is a rich country every sports wants to come to america but they want to put their money only isolated in America.

  • @MrMarcusRocks
    @MrMarcusRocks Před rokem +336

    Aussie here! Been watching cricket all my life. Mate, you did a great job. Sure, there are some minor errors here and there, but I would definitely recommend your bud to anyone wanting to learn cricket!

    • @AndyGraceMedia
      @AndyGraceMedia Před rokem +8

      Agreed - the best explanation of our beautiful game for American ears I've ever heard. Most Aussie cricket fans probably know baseball fairly well too, as many cricketers play - or certainly used to play - baseball in the off-season.
      In fact the sidearm-style baseball throws are normal now. In the old days, throws were always overarm but that baseball innovation has made its way into the game.

    • @samarpanverma5790
      @samarpanverma5790 Před rokem +4

      How many world cups you guys have, aren't you bored , now let us win 😭😭

    • @ncguy8902
      @ncguy8902 Před rokem

      @@samarpanverma5790 😀😀

    • @dansheppard2965
      @dansheppard2965 Před rokem +3

      Yeah, Pom here, and I agree with the Aussie. It's not easy to explain cricket, and you did a good job.

    • @jojohehe3251
      @jojohehe3251 Před rokem +1

      @@dansheppard2965 bloody poms

  • @stephencooper5972
    @stephencooper5972 Před rokem +88

    This video comes from an American and I have no idea of his cricket knowledge outside of this vid. But as an Australian who has been mad about cricket since I was a kid (now 47), I can’t fault it! Great vid! Obviously every single point you made could be stretched into an hour long video, but I was sitting here nodding at everything. You covered the main points, and covered them really well!

  • @Masterakoya
    @Masterakoya Před rokem +28

    Cricket 🏏 is also popular in North African countries .. love from Nigeria ♥️♥️ ♥️

  • @keriddunk1520
    @keriddunk1520 Před rokem +29

    One thing I want to add is in cricket the captains role is very important. He decides the strategy, fielding positions who should go next to bowl or bat. Take fielding or batting first based on the pitch and so many decisions. It's crucial, since usually it's not a one man show , it's a collective effort, but unlike football , there is lot more thinking that goes into the game even before every delivery of the bowl

  • @alansizer2006
    @alansizer2006 Před 2 lety +165

    Very good video. Another couple of differences you could have mentioned are:
    1. A cricket ball is harder than a baseball; and
    2. Cricket fielders don't wear gloves (only the wicketkeeper does).
    Put these two together and catching is so much more impressive.

    • @PFNel
      @PFNel Před 2 lety +1

      Well, the batsmen wear gloves too!

    • @adithyaavadhani
      @adithyaavadhani Před 2 lety +21

      @@PFNel considering how hard the ball is, and that it’s perfectly legal to hit the batsman with it, gloves and all the rest of the protective gear is definitely necessary. Now despite all of this, many many many batsmen break fingers when hit on the gloves. 6.5 oz. hard ball coming at over 90 mph can be quite deadly!

    • @saswatmohanty8132
      @saswatmohanty8132 Před 2 lety +8

      @@PFNel Yaa bcz in baseball you can't hit the batter bcz it's illegal but in cricket you are allowed to hit the batter anywhere...even in the head...One guy died in 2014 bcz of hitting of ball in his head so protection is needed for batter in cricket

    • @burkeshaw
      @burkeshaw Před 2 lety +2

      I, a Canadian, just discovered cricket with my "Willow" cable channel. Thanks Sports Explained for the crash course. Concerning the not wearing of gloves, I have often wondered how different the game would be if fielders wore a type of (baseball?) fielding glove. Catching a flyball has to hurt!!!!

    • @PFNel
      @PFNel Před 2 lety +9

      ​@@burkeshaw Well, accidents can happen, of course, and a cricket ball is hard and heavy. But it's not much of a problem for an experienced player; just a matter of presenting your hands to the ball correctly. Baseball players could do it if they had to. Cricketers in the outfield would probably prefer not to wear gloves! It's simply what you're used to.

  • @grainovsand3229
    @grainovsand3229 Před 9 měsíci +14

    I'm an Aussie who has watched cricket all of his life and I still loved this! I even didn't know that an appeal was compulsory for LBW. Looking forward to the fourth test of the Ashes tonight!

  • @thomasarthurmaj
    @thomasarthurmaj Před rokem +12

    A key point baseball fans may not know is the shape of the cricket bat, with a flat batting side that lets you control the direction you hit the ball far more than you can in baseball. A baseball batter is doing well if they can even hit the ball. It's much easier to hit the ball in cricket, hence the high scoring nature of the game. Plus the cricket ball feels a lot harder and heavier. Then there's the difference between fast bowlers and spin bowlers.

  • @DrTedEsq
    @DrTedEsq Před rokem +102

    Thank you for this.
    I recently became the manager of a department where 2/3 of the staff are hardcore cricket fans. I need to become more versed in the sport so that I have things other than work to talk about. The last time I worked with so many people who followed a sport new to me, I became an F1 fan and that was in 2007. I expect that within a year, I'll be watching cricket like my ma watches baseball.
    Cheers!

    • @AsadAli-bz2zj
      @AsadAli-bz2zj Před rokem +3

      Are u American if yes then the staff will be of subcontinent or Caribbean background.

    • @DrTedEsq
      @DrTedEsq Před rokem +22

      @@AsadAli-bz2zj I am Canadian and my staff are mostly Indian. They are all MAD for cricket. When I came in today and told my senior tech I was starting to learn about cricket, how I was wrong to compare it to baseball and I need to watch a twenty 20 match sometime soon.
      His eye lit up.

    • @aniket385
      @aniket385 Před rokem

      Stick to watching T10 on CZcams . Test ODI and even T20 are boring for newcomers . Only people who grew up watching cricket are interested in Tests . England is changing that with with Bazball in Tests.

    • @Nitin.upadhyay
      @Nitin.upadhyay Před rokem

      @@DrTedEsq lol his eyes lit up 🤣

    • @devinchandula4245
      @devinchandula4245 Před rokem

      W boss

  • @joshuarosen6242
    @joshuarosen6242 Před rokem +94

    I love the first 5 seconds of this video - Ben Stokes hitting a six on his way to an absolutely incredible victory over Australia at my local ground, Headingley. Australia may beat England more often than not but it's moments like this that keep me in love with test cricket.

    • @keriddunk1520
      @keriddunk1520 Před rokem +7

      Ah the ashes ....

    • @matrixphijr
      @matrixphijr Před rokem +5

      I actually understand what ‘hitting a six’ means now thanks to this video. Feels kinda awesome, ngl.

    • @Darfaultner
      @Darfaultner Před rokem +6

      As an Aussie, it's also those rare aoccassions where we lose that keeps it interesting.

    • @sr20veplus350z
      @sr20veplus350z Před rokem

      @@Darfaultner 🤣🤣

    • @TheKazragore
      @TheKazragore Před rokem

      @@Darfaultner Some of the best test matches come down to the final overs of the last day. Edgebaston (those who know) was a nailbiter of an Ashes test. Adelaide in the follow-up series was equally close. I remember one test Australia played against India was decided in the 3rd to last over by Michael Clarke taking 3(!) wickets in a single over. Classic stuff.

  • @shanegates678
    @shanegates678 Před rokem +19

    This Aussie cricket lover approves of this video! Well done.

  • @martinhodge394
    @martinhodge394 Před 9 měsíci +4

    My parents are British and I moved to the United States when I was 5. You did an excellent job explaining cricket in terms of baseball.

  • @blindovermatter3054
    @blindovermatter3054 Před rokem +209

    As a blind guy, I want to say that I really appreciate the text on your headings being put into speech, I’m not sure if you do this all the time as this video just popped up in my recommended, but I really really appreciate it from an accessibility standpoint. I’m learning a lot, I’m only about a third of the way through the video at this point, but this has been the best explanation of cricket that I have yet seen, and as an avid baseball fan I really appreciate the content. Thanks!

    • @Rusty_Gold85
      @Rusty_Gold85 Před rokem +12

      A friend of a friend plays Blind cricket . maybe you will search how they do that ?

    • @serbobvegana8327
      @serbobvegana8327 Před rokem +1

      What the actual fk man how does that even work

    • @blindovermatter3054
      @blindovermatter3054 Před rokem +30

      @@serbobvegana8327 there are different ways to do it, I learned to touch type when I was a kid so if you feel the F and J keys on your keyboard they have bumps on them and you can learn the entire keyboard by sense of touch just by memorizing where the letters are. with new technology, new solutions, I’m writing this right now by speaking into my phone using dictation, where I relay the words and punctuation I want my comment to say through speaking and my phone adds them via text. I use a screen reader to read everybody else’s comments which is pretty cool. We’ve come along way in the last 20 years or so. I hope this helps!

    • @serbobvegana8327
      @serbobvegana8327 Před rokem +4

      @@blindovermatter3054 okay but how do you play red dead on you channel? Im genuinely curious

    • @blindovermatter3054
      @blindovermatter3054 Před rokem +15

      @@serbobvegana8327 I have a limited amount of usable vision and I am happy to try to show how things work for me on a stream or video at some point, but the game has just enough assists to help me once in a while, though I have had to have my girlfriend with better vision complete a few missions and things for me. Not every game is perfect as far as accessibility options go, but some games have just enough to make it work for me.

  • @JudeOneThree
    @JudeOneThree Před 2 lety +105

    I’m a passionate baseball coach and umpire who has always found cricket confusing. But this video cleared up a lot of that confusion, and I find myself quite intrigued by this interesting sport. Thanks for the great info and explanation!

    • @SportsExplained
      @SportsExplained  Před 2 lety +7

      Nice!

    • @119beaker
      @119beaker Před 2 lety +10

      A big difference between cricket and baseball is respect for the umpires. You don't give the umpire so much as a dirty look for a bad decision.

    • @JudeOneThree
      @JudeOneThree Před 2 lety +2

      @@119beaker That interesting. What is recourse for bad cricket umpires? Does it seem that there are more bad cricket umpires? (Since getting on umpires for bad calls has a way of getting rid of them, and keeping the good umpires on their ‘A’ game.)

    • @119beaker
      @119beaker Před 2 lety +1

      @@JudeOneThree There are bad umpires. Steve Bucknor was a bad umpire (The cricket equivalent of Angel Hernandez but without the arrogance). But now they have a review system bad umpires are soon found out. Umpires now have to be selected annually so bad ones just drop out.

    • @davidwright4409
      @davidwright4409 Před rokem +8

      @@JudeOneThree Cricket has a review system. Each side gets a certain amount of reviews per innings (typically 2 or 3). Once the Umpire has made a call the team which had the call go against them has about 15 seconds to decide if they want to review or not. If a review is called then TV footage is analysed and the umpire's decision can be reversed. If the decision is reversed then the team keeps the review. If the Umpire's original decision is clearly correct the team loses their review. Finally, if the decision could have gone either way (common in LBWs) the Umpire's decision stands but the team keeps their review.

  • @skippy8696
    @skippy8696 Před rokem +17

    Great job on the video. I'm an Australian who's been watching cricket and playing cricket at school his entire life and I never knew that Australian broadcasts place the number of wickets first and then runs, while other places do it backwards. You'd think I would've noticed that 😅

  • @kendebusk2540
    @kendebusk2540 Před 9 měsíci +2

    My niece once married an Englishman. I asked him to explain cricket to me in 5 minutes. He replied it would take 5 days and he still wouldn't be finished :)

  • @smpanimator6536
    @smpanimator6536 Před 2 lety +36

    I was born and raised in the U.S., and like many of my fellow Americans, I understand the rules of baseball. That said, I think cricket is a little easier to figure out. One can see how runs are scored in cricket after a bit of observation. In baseball, the batting team has to go all the way around the bases to get to home to score a run, a baserunner can overrun first base but not the other bases, the force out rules are different for different bases/situations, same with tagging up and doubling off, etc.. I once saw a test match between England and Australia at Old Trafford and I got the basic idea fairly quickly, despite having never seen a cricket match before in my life.

    • @PatstarDeluxe
      @PatstarDeluxe Před rokem +6

      Yeah good point. I'm the reverse: Born and raised in NZ. Came across a baseball game when I was a kid on TV. Worked out the basics pretty easily. Then, being exposed to lots of American films and TV, you pick up more. I learned so much about American culture growing up, as I'm sure lots of kids did in NZ, Australia and the UK.

    • @manubhatt3
      @manubhatt3 Před 9 měsíci

      As a person familiar with Cricket, and who watched a Baseball game once while fully understanding and enjoying it, I think Baseball has much better pace and much more continuous tension than Cricket and Cricket has much more options and complexity than Baseball.

  • @liamh9814
    @liamh9814 Před rokem +51

    One thing that baseball fans might enjoy about cricket are the bowling styles. If you are into sliders, fast balls and the like, then you will enjoy cricket. There are two basic types of bowling: fast and spin. Within those two types there are many styles and methods of delivery. It’s whole world of fun to explore.

    • @666kingdrummer
      @666kingdrummer Před rokem +3

      I've defidently enjoy watching cricket bowling in slo-mo.
      It's poetry in motion, and some of the best by the likes of Shane Warne defy physics and blew my mind.

    • @rabiyaashraf950
      @rabiyaashraf950 Před rokem +1

      ​@@666kingdrummer check out Brett Lee, murali and Kumble too, they are legendary bowlers

    • @rabiyaashraf950
      @rabiyaashraf950 Před rokem

      ​@@666kingdrummer check out Kumble, Murali , and Brett Lee too, legendary bowlers

    • @rabiyaashraf950
      @rabiyaashraf950 Před rokem

      ​@@666kingdrummer check out Kumble, Murali , and Brett Lee too, legendary bowlers

    • @idwiw2314
      @idwiw2314 Před rokem

      Not true cricket blows

  • @petersheehan1183
    @petersheehan1183 Před rokem +9

    I've been a cricket fan for over 50 years, and this video is extremely well done. 1 or 2 very tiny mistakes. Too tiny to be even worth mentioning. Again, congratulations on a very good job.

    • @SportsExplained
      @SportsExplained  Před rokem

      Yes, and other people have probably already brought those errors up a couple dozen times, haha!
      Thanks for the kind words.

  • @Captain-Cardboard
    @Captain-Cardboard Před 9 měsíci +3

    It's really quite simple!
    You have two sides: one out in the field and one in. Each man that's in the side that's in goes out, and when he's out he comes in and the next man goes in until he's out. When they are all out, the side that's out comes in and the side that's been in goes out and tries to get those coming in, out. Sometimes you get men still in and not out.
    When a man goes out to go in, the men who are out try to get him out, and when he is out he goes in and the next man in goes out and goes in. There are two men called umpires who stay all out all the time and they decide when the men who are in are out.
    When both sides have been in and all the men are out (including those who are not out), and both sides have been out twice after all the men have been in, including those who are not out, that is the end of the game!

  • @tigersfan61979
    @tigersfan61979 Před 2 lety +295

    Once again, you've hit it out of the park, but, I guess in this case, that's not a home run, that's a boundary. :) Thanks!

    • @SportsExplained
      @SportsExplained  Před 2 lety +8

      Haha, thanks!

    • @ericvansickle4305
      @ericvansickle4305 Před 2 lety +30

      Or it's a Sixer.

    • @adamdickinson2894
      @adamdickinson2894 Před 2 lety +16

      He's hit a six

    • @AbhinavPaulPOLY2563
      @AbhinavPaulPOLY2563 Před 2 lety +2

      NIcely put

    • @liberatetheslack
      @liberatetheslack Před 2 lety +6

      @@ericvansickle4305 or if you're Indian, perhaps a 'DHL Maximum...'
      (I have no idea if that's still the phrase used to placate sponsors in the IPL, but it's one of the main reasons that I can't stand to watch it. Put the tactical timeout in that basket too.)

  • @mathewdeering
    @mathewdeering Před rokem +70

    Excellent work mate. I've been in the game as a player and umpire for 35 years, and I couldn't have done a better job myself. Bravo.

  • @heatherknopp3723
    @heatherknopp3723 Před rokem +41

    I have always thought Cricket was impossibly complicated, and I can't imagine a game where the matches that go on for days and days. And even after watching I still think it's impossibly complicated! I grew up in a baseball household - my dad coached college ball for 36 years and was on the NCAA Rules Committee for about 10 of those years. We don't even consider Cricket a real sport in our house! LOL *BUT* this showed up in my CZcams suggestions (no idea why!) so I took a chance. Overall, a great introductory video. I didn't realize that the batter was also like a goalie protecting the wickets. That's wild, but really helped me understand it better. I may watch this video again to get a better handle on it. And I would enjoy a video of someone trying to explain Baseball to a cricket fan!

    • @ValveDevGames
      @ValveDevGames Před rokem +1

      I think its all about the good feeling that you get when you hit a ball in long distance with a bat, or when you throw (in cricket we have to rotate our bowling arm) a quick and swinging ball to the batter or catching a ball that is very high in the air. Some other similarities may also exist in both these games. I have been playing cricket for the last 15 years and still it is so addictive to me. It may be because of its complicated yet being so basic and fun in nature. It would make more sense if you watch cricket keeping a perspective in mind that the main goal of the team is to score more than the other team and the other team are trying various techniques(within the laws of the game) to defend their score.

    • @rho992
      @rho992 Před rokem

      The most popular form of the game is actually T20. Which goes on for 4 hours including breaks.

    • @rabiyaashraf950
      @rabiyaashraf950 Před 11 měsíci +13

      Lol, only an American can consider a sport with frequent international World Cup series and over two billion fans, not a real sport compared to a sport where the games is played between teams from one country and considered a WORLD series, lmao.

    • @NitinSwaroop
      @NitinSwaroop Před 11 měsíci

      @@rabiyaashraf950 Exactly.. the muricans are really something.. they think nothing outside their country actually exists.. 🤣😂

    • @Sen9393
      @Sen9393 Před 11 měsíci

      Its like baseball, but with just one inning instead of 9 and two bases instead of 4. Both runners need to reach ech other's base to score 1 run . You can do it multiple times for multiple runs. If you hit a home run its automatic 6 runs, and if it bounces before reaching boundary it's an automatic 4. And no fielder is allowed to use gloves other the guy behind the batter.

  • @sea-ferring
    @sea-ferring Před rokem +8

    Extremely well done. As a cricket fan living in the US I have tried to explain this many many times with varying degrees of success. Your rundown is an excellent introduction. I always tell folks in the US that if you enjoy the pace, the game play, and the stats of baseball, you will most likely enjoy cricket for the same reasons.

  • @RolandjHearn
    @RolandjHearn Před 2 lety +129

    There are a few of these out there and each time I watched them I have wondered if a novice viewer was more confused after than before. This was not that - this was excellent. Cricket fans cannot help themselves and use game terms constantly even when they are trying to explain them. You did a great job of limiting that.

    • @SportsExplained
      @SportsExplained  Před 2 lety +4

      Thanks!

    • @prabhatpal2572
      @prabhatpal2572 Před 2 lety

      But if you are the only one following right way... you're wrong!

    • @paspax
      @paspax Před rokem +2

      @@prabhatpal2572 ..
      " if you are the only one following right way... you're wrong!"
      Lol.. That's a 'consensus = truth' argument. It's a logical fallacy and therefore false. The right way is the right way, regardless of whether or not others agree.

    • @prabhatpal2572
      @prabhatpal2572 Před rokem

      @@paspax "I agree. Let's go Brandon"

    • @Kelnx
      @Kelnx Před rokem +1

      I was able to follow it pretty well and I knew little to nothing about cricket going in. But I must say, this game sounds a bit too complicated to just "pick up" on. I love American football, but if I hadn't been into it since I was a kid as well as played on a team in school, I doubt I'd get into it now because it too is a complicated sport with tons of rules and jargon.
      Baseball on the other hand is super simple. You don't even need to know all of the terms to understand the game or even play it.

  • @Tweej
    @Tweej Před rokem +22

    I'm British (Scottish, so not naturally a cricket fan) and after many attempts to understand cricket, I became a baseball fan and only now do I get what's been going on. Good job.

    • @SportsExplained
      @SportsExplained  Před rokem

      🥳🥳

    • @tow1709
      @tow1709 Před rokem +2

      One of my best friends is Scottish and a very good cricketer. Cricket is very popular in Scotland. There is no reason why a Scottish person can not represent England at cricket, indeed England had a Scottish captain a few decades ago (Mike Denness)

  • @user-zd9jd7fz4u
    @user-zd9jd7fz4u Před 3 měsíci +1

    As a lifelong cricket player and watcher, and an Aussie, I found the explanation really good indeed.
    The biggest "hole" for me however, was the lack of explanation of the art of bowling. There are fast (swing) bowlers - who are nearly as fast as baseball pitchers - medium-pace (seam) bowlers, who are usually batsmen who are also decent bowlers, and slow (spin) bowlers who make the ball deviate off the pitch,. in all sorts of clever ways.
    It could also be explained that, of the eleven players, six are specialist batters (but one or two might be decent bowlers too), four are specialist bowlers (and generally aren't great batters), and one is the wicketkeeper ('catcher') who might also be a very good seventh batter.
    Three or four of the very best players who have ever played the game were 'all-rounders' - meaning they were world-class batters, bowlers, and fielders too. Ian Botham, Imran Khan, Kapil Dev, Greg Chappell, Garfield Sobers, Jacques Kallis.

  • @BradsSpace2
    @BradsSpace2 Před 11 měsíci +3

    I already know how to play cricket, I have no idea why I watched this whole thing. Nice video

  • @agasankagamage
    @agasankagamage Před 2 lety +35

    "P" means power play
    There are three power plays in ODI
    1. 1 to 10th over. In this power play you can have only two fielders out side the 30 yard circle marked on the field
    2. 11 to 40th over. You can place 5 fielders out side the 30 yard circle.
    3. 41 to 50th over you can have only 4 fielders out side the 30 yard circle
    In t 20s there's only one power play 1 to 6 th over. In this power play you can have only two fielders out side the 30 yard circle.
    From 07 to 20th over you can have only five or less fielders out side the 30 yard circle

  • @darrencottam1146
    @darrencottam1146 Před rokem +41

    As Australian cricket enthusiast ,I regard your video as a great introductory for baseball fans .
    You didn't get bogged down with the details,that would confuse people that don't know the game . Cheers.

  • @olivialambert4124
    @olivialambert4124 Před 11 měsíci +4

    I'm a former (youth) cricket player trying to understand baseball. This was a fantastic video. The descriptions were clear and on point, the editing had some subtle genius to it like demonstrating the full field of play before/after making the point to highlight that aspect. The only thing I can think missing would have been strategies or detailed aspects which obviously is far beyond the scope of the video. Whilst I did play I don't watch so I might be missing a few details, but overall it was an incredibly impressive explanation of the game. Very well done.

  • @bobygeevarghese2942
    @bobygeevarghese2942 Před 11 měsíci +2

    1.After a no-ball there will be a free hit for the batting side which mean the batter can hit the ball without the scare of being out (except runout which can happen on free hit ball)
    2.weather and pitch conditions can significantly affect the play i.e, may favour batter or bowler depending on conditions.
    3.Also a batter can be out when they hit their wicket when batting (during their action) but not when they run.
    4.There are 2 types of bowlers pace bowler(bowlers with lengthy runup)and slow bowlers(short runup).

  • @NhwNews
    @NhwNews Před rokem +38

    Learning cricket is like learning a language. One must be born to a cricket-playing or cricket-following family to master the rules and be able to appreciate various intricacies. I take my hat off to those who take the trouble of learning it as a "second language". The word "wicket" has at least three different meanings, "pitch" at least two and many such. Well done for having a go at learning and explaining cricket.

    • @LoneVocalist
      @LoneVocalist Před rokem +6

      Wicket = Out
      Wicket = Stumps
      Wicket = Pitch
      Cricket should've been named Wicket

    • @NhwNews
      @NhwNews Před rokem +2

      @@LoneVocalist 😂 What is 'Leg before wicket'?🦵 One side of the ground is called the 'Leg side' 🦵. There are fieldsmen kept at 'Fine Leg', 'Short Leg', etc. If the batsman misses the ball while trying to hit it and he was able to get 'runs' those are called byes and count as extras. If the ball hits any part of the body of the batsman and goes for runs they are called 'leg byes'. What's the fascination with legs?🦵🤣🤣

    • @mehulpandya4761
      @mehulpandya4761 Před rokem +2

      @@NhwNews You're not allowed to put your leg in front of the ball and stop it from hitting the wicket. You have to use the bat. But if the ball bounced on the leg side or hit anywhere other than in front of the wicket or wasn't going to hit the wicket, it isn't LBW. The leg side is the side towards the batter's leg. A bye (leg or otherwise) is where the batsman scores any runs despite not hitting the ball with the bat, and the ball was hittable (otherwise it is a wide). A leg bye in particular is when the ball hits the batsman's leg and they run and LBW doesn't apply.
      Note: When I say "leg" in the context of "hits the leg", it could be any part of the body, except the hand when it is holding the bat.

  • @johannamorgan9430
    @johannamorgan9430 Před 2 lety +149

    I went to England with a group from college 20 years ago. We were watching TV one day and a cricket match was on. Of course being Americans we knew nothing about it... When we asked one of our hosts to explain it he just said it's complicated. 😂
    Fair enough I guess. After your explanation I know way more than I did! Great job!

    • @andrewmathieson8579
      @andrewmathieson8579 Před 2 lety +19

      Here’s a fun fact: England and Australia are seen as the traditional cricket nations. They played the first official Test match in 1877 in Melbourne, Australia, which was roughly around 100 years before the first limited overs international (50 overs per side). However the first time two countries played each other in cricket was three decades earlier between United States and Canada! This is the forerunner to baseball having some origins in cricket.

    • @araparseghian2
      @araparseghian2 Před 2 lety +1

      @@andrewmathieson8579 And of course you can't discuss the role of England and Australia in cricket without mentioning The Ashes, a series of five test matches between England and Australia played every four years (more or less) since 1882.

    • @kevinyoung5728
      @kevinyoung5728 Před 2 lety

      @@araparseghian2 Well that is most appropriate. The Cincinnati Reds (Major League Baseball team) were founded in 1881. The National League of Major League Baseball was founded in 1876 while the American League came about in 1893. They joined together into the MLB in 1903. There are a few other teams still in existence today that are close to being as old as the Reds but are still a few years younger.
      I would like to point out that Baseball draws directly from Rounders rather then Cricket but I realize that even then it still has roots in Cricket. I find the the shared history between all of them awesome. The same as the origins of American Football really although that one gets a bit complicated at points.

    • @BD-yl5mh
      @BD-yl5mh Před 2 lety +7

      Yeah, unless I knew everyone in your group was engaged and wanted to listen, and we had probably at least 20 minutes to focus, I don’t think I would bother getting into an explanation of cricket with Americans lol

    • @johannamorgan9430
      @johannamorgan9430 Před 2 lety +1

      @@BD-yl5mh That's fair enough! 😂

  • @nigelhill74
    @nigelhill74 Před rokem +3

    Great video. Minor detail from the scoring in the 50 over match: When it says the target for England is 222 it means that India scored 221, not 222. To win you need to score more than the other team.
    Good to restrict the video to the most important details. For the interested here are some extra details:
    - When an over is finished the direction of play changes for the next over. E.g. if one over was bowled from the south end then the next will be bowled from the north end, and vice versa. At this point all of the fielders take up new positions accordingly. The batters do not change ends though with the fielding side.
    - Fielders can go anywhere on the field and there is a lot of strategy or tactics around where they are placed. The team captain and the current bowler usually confer on field placements and direct the rest of the team to the desired positions.
    - Bowling is different to the throwing of baseball pitches in that the arm may not be bent at the elbow during the actual delivery motion.
    - There are three basic types of bowling: fast pace, medium pace, and spin. All bowlers try to vary where (or if) the ball bounces before it reaches the batter, the direction it comes in from, how it swings in the air or after bouncing, how fast it travels. Spin bowlers add another dimension. They generally bowl much more slowly but try to impart a lot of spin on the ball in various directions to try and make the ball bounce in unexpected ways. All of the bowlers tend to have various ways of delivering the ball similar to how baseball pitchers use fast balls, curve balls, sliders, etc.
    - No-balls and wides don't count towards the 6 balls in an over. The bowler has to bowl an extra delivery for each of these. Certain outs cannot occur on a no-ball. You cannot be bowled, caught, or given out leg-before-wicket on a no ball as they are not legitimate deliveries.
    - The batters can run even if the ball is not hit. They only need to worry about whether they can get to the other end without being run out. If they did not hit it with the bat and it did not hit their leg then then runs scored are just called byes. If the ball comes off the batters leg and one or more runs are scored these are called leg byes. Byes and leg byes can even include boundaries (4 runs) if the fielders fail to stop the ball as it crosses the field.
    - For boundaries and sixes the batters do not need to run, though they are allowed to. On rarer occasions the batters can run 4, 5 or even 6 runs if the fielders are particularly sloppy at ending a play.

  • @singhoda
    @singhoda Před 11 měsíci +4

    That P2 is for powerplay 2 which is specific fielding restrictions on certain positions and lasts for certain amount of overs to keep it simple

  • @hifiaudioreview
    @hifiaudioreview Před rokem +7

    I've played both cricket and baseball a lot throughout my life, I'm now too old to play either! I enjoy them both and have no bias for one over the other. If you want to learn every single rule and nuance, I would say cricket is more complicated than baseball, but only if you want to know absolutely everything the game has to offer. On the subject of which game is easier to play, as a batter it is harder to hit the ball in cricket - there are more variations of delivery a bowler can master, than a pitcher in baseball. A batter in cricket has the added difficulty of trying to judge the bounce of the ball off the surface of the wicket - and the surface you play on has a huge effect on how the ball behaves - this is much more difficult than dealing with a ball that does not bounce before reaching you. There is also seam movement, cut, drift, swing, reverse swing, several variations of slower balls, faster balls, bouncers, yorkers, full-tosses and many types spin bowling to master in cricket. Yes, cricket is harder to master than baseball, at least that was my experience, but both games are fantastic to play and to watch. I love them both.

    • @manubhatt3
      @manubhatt3 Před 9 měsíci

      The width of Baseball tops all the factors you mentioned. Hitting a ball in Baseball is much more difficult. Just look at the average strike rate or misses in both the games.

  • @davidmurphy2903
    @davidmurphy2903 Před 2 lety +42

    Mostly nations of the 'Old Empire' play cricket, and many play rugby too. The mentality as far as international matches goes like this:
    You join your local club and work hard with the hope of being 'selected' to play 'representative' level and represent your state.
    When selected for your state you work even harder to try to win selection to then represent your country.
    Our sports are based on the premise that you have not really 'arrived' as a player until you've donned your national colours and represented your country.
    Internationals are EVERYTHING.

    • @SportsExplained
      @SportsExplained  Před 2 lety +5

      Much different paradigm than here in the United States!

    • @mrmusashi
      @mrmusashi Před rokem

      @@SportsExplained I would disagree! I think many American athletes consider making the US Olympic team one of their biggest goals. In fact, I'd say most athletes in America only have a shot at getting even national recognition if they make the Olympics. Even for NBA players, the Olympics mean a lot.

    • @openminded5393
      @openminded5393 Před rokem +1

      @@mrmusashi while true, US baseball still calls it’s finals the World Series even though it only includes US teams and the Blue Jays from Canada. Not exactly an international competition although probably the best players/teams in the world

    • @mrmusashi
      @mrmusashi Před rokem

      @@openminded5393 Can you blame them? For as long as that competition has been held, name the other baseball leagues that could have vied for the best in the world. Why would you change the name just because there are more baseball leagues around the globe?

    • @twotone3070
      @twotone3070 Před rokem +2

      I think for those who turn out every week for their local team, win, lose or draw the appeal is doing something you enjoy in the company of others. To test yourself both physically and mentally, to show respect for your opponents, your team mates and the officials, a sense of belonging that will exist long after the game has been played and the score forgotten.

  • @thetechnocrat4979
    @thetechnocrat4979 Před rokem +11

    This was a very thorough and simple to understand explanation of cricket to baseball fans. I hope that fans of both the sports will be able to understand each other better.

  • @torridscene
    @torridscene Před 9 měsíci

    Excellent video. I learned way more about Cricket from this one video than I have from a) numerous other YT videos about Cricket; b) a number of Netflix shows about Cricket, and c) actual Wikipedia articles on Cricket. Great job!

  • @losfp
    @losfp Před 2 lety +41

    A very good statement that I once heard that goes a long way towards explaining the mindset differences between cricket and baseball is this:
    In baseball, outs are cheap and runs are expensive
    In cricket, runs are cheap and outs are expensive
    That explains why DEFENCE is such a big part of the cricket batting game, while it's not such a big deal in baseball. In cricket, especially in test cricket, preserving one's wicket is vital as you don't get another chance in that innings. So you leave balls, you play defensive shots, and you decline runs if you don't think you can make your ground.
    Great video!

    • @SportsExplained
      @SportsExplained  Před 2 lety +3

      Awesome! I had never heard this, and it's a great way of looking at it.

    • @cricketexplained8526
      @cricketexplained8526 Před 2 lety +1

      Good post, though defence is far more important in first-class cricket. A batter who scores less than a run a ball in T20 would not go very far in that format.

    • @araparseghian2
      @araparseghian2 Před 2 lety +3

      That was the most difficult concept for me to grasp as a lifelong baseball player learning to play cricket. In baseball it's often in your best interest to be an aggressive hitter. But in cricket, batting aggressively can mean getting caught without scoring a single run.

    • @sympathiser_of_Germans_in_40s
      @sympathiser_of_Germans_in_40s Před rokem

      You have to be tactical with your bat and know when to go on the offensive and defensive ,a mistake in this can cost your team the game.

    • @keriddunk1520
      @keriddunk1520 Před rokem

      Not always , depends on the format and situation. For eg you have 6 balls remaining and have to score say 18 runs. Then you start whacking to get a six (home run ) aggressively. Else you lose the game

  • @ralphcrewe374
    @ralphcrewe374 Před rokem +29

    This is the first time in my life I’ve actually understood cricket. Thank you so much, A+ video.

    • @keriddunk1520
      @keriddunk1520 Před rokem +2

      Once you start watching it gets more clearer. Watch a t20 match with a person who knows cricket. If you have Indian friends they will surely know and would be glad to teach you

  • @brianarbenz1329
    @brianarbenz1329 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Well done video. It gives a U.S. baseball fan a lot to yet figure out, but it explains the basics so well. I'm off to a good start grasping Cricket. Thanks.

  • @stevekreitler9349
    @stevekreitler9349 Před rokem +1

    Having read a number of Wodehouse books centered around Cricket, it's nice to finally have some idea of what was going on in the sports scenes! Very informative video- thanks!

  • @ianshelley2371
    @ianshelley2371 Před rokem +20

    As a cricket fan, I found this to be a very good explanation of the game. Cricket rules, especially the way of being out can be complicated and you didn't fall into the trap of trying to explain this and go into too much depth. Nice one. Thanks.

  • @philipwakeling2777
    @philipwakeling2777 Před rokem +95

    One little detail you didn’t mention about overs. Each over is bowled from alternate ends. Also, all balls are thrown over arm with a straight elbow and the ball does not have to bounce. And another important detail is 10 out, all out. The 11th batsman can’t bat alone.

    • @grizwoldphantasia5005
      @grizwoldphantasia5005 Před rokem +1

      When a player is out, does that mean actually off the field? Must be, I'm thinking, otherwise the 11th wouldn't be alone. Or does it just mean no player can bat more than once per over? I got the impression any player can bowl as many times as they want, just not consecutively, so two good bowlers could switch back and forth.

    • @nickoakley8465
      @nickoakley8465 Před rokem +9

      @@grizwoldphantasia5005 Sometimes there are limitations on how many overs a bowler can bowl. Typically it is 10 overs in a 50 over match, so you need 5 bowlers (at least). You could use more. But I think the presenter did well to avoid minor details. It's not a hard game to understand if explained simply and it's been done very well here.

    • @grizwoldphantasia5005
      @grizwoldphantasia5005 Před rokem +1

      @@nickoakley8465 Thanks. My reason for thinking he did a bangup job is that it interested me in learning more.

    • @aellerton
      @aellerton Před rokem +16

      @@grizwoldphantasia5005 When a batter is out, they leave the field and - provided there are unused batters left - are replaced by the next team mate and the over continues. If needed, everyone on the team must bat - there are no pinch hitters in cricket. When the 10th batter is out, the innings comes to an end, and his batting partner is left high and dry; in the scorebook he will have a little star by his score, showing he was "not out" at the end of the innings. Batters are often ranked by their "batting average" which is the number of "at-bats" divided by the number of times they were out, so these "not-outs" help improve a batter's ranking.
      Bowlers who expend a lot of energy in their action will usually need to take a break after 8 to 10 overs or so; it's the job of the captain to keep the bowlers fresh and make tactical changes based on the pitch, the weather conditions and the strengths of the opposing batters.

    • @nsayer
      @nsayer Před rokem +1

      Related: When you list the batsmen in an inning, you list how each was put out along with their runs, but the last batsman is listed as "not out."

  • @user-ug7lc1iu4t
    @user-ug7lc1iu4t Před 10 měsíci

    It's great that you were able to convert it into a point of view that not only helped Americans wanting to watch cricket understand but you were also able to teach me a little bit about baseball. One small error though. The "popping crease" is the crease from which the bowler delivers the ball, there is a term for each end of the pitch though, the strikers end and non-strikers end, the batsman facing the delivery is at the strikers end.

  • @judewarner1536
    @judewarner1536 Před rokem

    Probably the best video explanation of cricket I have seen. There were only a couple of minor errors already pointed out so we won't go there.
    The main thing I didn't notice, or come across in a brief sampling of comments was that a ''Test Match'' (which is ALWAYS an International) can last for FIVE DAYS and still end in a DRAW! Possibly a mind-blowing concept for American sports fans who always like to see a winner.

  • @tinglydingle
    @tinglydingle Před rokem +42

    Even as a South African who's much more familiar with cricket than baseball, I found this immensely entertaining and even learned a couple of things! Rugby is my favourite sport, and I reckon a "rugby explained for NFL fans" or vice versa would be just as interesting. Excellent video, well done!

    • @flamingfrancis
      @flamingfrancis Před rokem

      South Africa has participated at Olympic level in baseball.....Sydney 2000.

    • @tinglydingle
      @tinglydingle Před rokem +1

      @@flamingfrancis I was 3 at the time and my favourite sport was probably picking my nose or something.

    • @kingspeechless1607
      @kingspeechless1607 Před rokem

      @@tinglydingle There is probably a league for that somewhere.

    • @wendydelisse9778
      @wendydelisse9778 Před rokem

      One aspect about rugby football that does not happen in American football is "putting teammates onside" after a kick has been made. If a teammate kicks a ball foreward in rugby soon after a scrum, the teammates in front, where the scrum was, are considered offside, and have a duty under the rules to get back onside by getting back either even with or slightly behind the kicker - or even with or slightly behind any other teammate who is already onside. The person kicking the ball will of course usually try to assist the process by running foreward, but will be sometimes noticeably be initially slowed from being temporarily off balance from making the kick, or might stay back in expectation of a counter kick in his direction. In that situation, a speedy back at the far edge of the field who was onside at the time of the kick or has put himself onside soon after the kick can dash straight forward in an effort to get as many teammates as possible onside as fast as possible, thus allowing as many of them as possible to legally run forward toward the opponent trying to catch the kick.
      In American football however, a couple of people on the punting team might be 30 yards in front of the kicker at the time a punt is made, and might be 10 yards ahead of all the rest of their teammates when diving at the opposing kick returner for a possible tackle a fraction of a second after he makes contact with the ball. In American football that's a legal tackle (unless the kick returner has raised up one of his forearms and waved his hand and ideally his forearm as well in a sideways back and forth motion to clearly enough signal for a fair catch as can be done in rugby football as well), but in rubgy football that type of tackle with the tacklers' teammates all still so far behind just after the ball gets caught would be a clear offside violation, due to the two advanced tacklers clearly being unquestionably ahead of the rest of their team for the entire time after the kick.

  • @Magic_beans_
    @Magic_beans_ Před 2 lety +60

    12:25 (Batsmen are not compelled to run) - This is a big one, and it helps to explain how the game can run so long and score so highly. If a batter hits a ground ball to an infielder, that at-bat is almost certainly over, probably with a force out. A batsman can just stay put and try again. In fact that’s usually the best choice since outs (wickets) are so precious.
    (Limited-over formats encourage more aggressive play, so you may occasionally see someone try to leg it out.)

    • @bearsoundzMusic
      @bearsoundzMusic Před rokem +1

      T20 makes it costly to not run. If the bowler can go through his 6 bowls, and the at-bats only manage to run on 2 of the bowls, the at-bat team has lost precious points, and has make it harder to reach the target, or build one of sufficient size.
      TL/DR:
      Every time a bowl is made correctly and there are no run-attempt, the bowler has succeed.

    • @brentfarvors192
      @brentfarvors192 Před rokem

      That is the LAMEST thing I have ever heard about a sport! "Oops, let me try that again..."; No; You are OUT! In baseball, if you hit it in the air, and the fielders can catch it, you're OUT!

    • @obscuredictionary3263
      @obscuredictionary3263 Před rokem +5

      @@brentfarvors192 You completely misunderstood him. Just like in baseball if the ball bounces and then is caught that doesn't mean the batter is out. What he is trying to say is that a batsman can not run if he doesn't wish to attempt to score. The batsman is never compelled to run and can deliberately play without attempting to score.
      So no its not about trying again. You get nothing from refusing to run. Its not about being given chances its about strategy. Sometimes its optimal not to score.
      I don't see why people like you have to be antagonistic about sports. Especially when you go on the offensive even though you completely misread his comment. Different people enjoy different sports.

    • @brentfarvors192
      @brentfarvors192 Před rokem

      @@obscuredictionary3263 Yeah, BUT, the batter is required to run, no matter where the ball is hit...So, YES; I "understood"; It's just it doesn't make any logical sense!!! Hence, my comment about them being forced to run...Name 1 other sport where the player doesn't get penalized for not completing a round...? There is none! Even in baseball, a foul is a strike against you!!!

    • @brentfarvors192
      @brentfarvors192 Před rokem +1

      @@abirlal5877 Spoilers: I KNEW THAT! That is the DUMBEST non-rule in the entire HISTORY of SPORTS!!! "Tom Brady throws the ball away"..."Do over...?" NO; You lose a down!!! No other sport allows this! NONE!!! The batter should be required to run, no matter WHERE on the field the ball is hit; It's basic logical sense...Wait a minute; Now I am starting to "get it"...

  • @jerrytracey6602
    @jerrytracey6602 Před rokem

    I nice explanation, which I have attempted to do on several occasions, just as a mental exercise. I'm English, and I love cricket, but when Channel 5 here in the UK started showing Baseball (sadly, they stopped after about 10 years), I fell in love with baseball too, and found the rules and intricacies of the game fascinating. One thing you missed was that at the end of an over, the new bowler comes on at the OPPOSITE end to the outgoing one, eradicating any advantages from playing in a particular direction.

  • @Chick6n
    @Chick6n Před 9 měsíci

    I play cricket and I was trying to explain cricket to him and Im so glad I found this video. It made it so much easier. There are still a few details I have to explain if he watches a game but this explains the simple things of cricket.

  • @TharukaDolawatta
    @TharukaDolawatta Před 2 lety +61

    As someone who has played both cricket and baseball, I can say this is a great explaination.
    Few things you can add.
    1)A red ball is used in Test cricket while a white ball is used in Limted overs cricket.
    A pink ball (newest) is used in Day and night Test Cricket.
    2) When an over is finished, the next over is bowled from the other end of the pitch.
    3)In limited overs cricket there are limits for bowlers too.
    One day - Maximum 10 overs per bowler
    t20 - Maximum 4 overs per bowler
    4)There are mainly 2 types of bowlers in cricket (Fast bowlers - Spin bowlers).
    5)Captain plays a big role in the game, unlike other sports.
    There are so many quick on-field decisions and changes captain has to do.

    • @araparseghian2
      @araparseghian2 Před 2 lety

      In the few cricket matches I've watched, I don't think I've ever seen a coach (in the capacity you might see a football coach on the sidelines/touch line). Are coaches a thing in cricket and if not, is that the reason the captain has such a big role?

    • @cricketexplained8526
      @cricketexplained8526 Před 2 lety

      @@araparseghian2 all teams at a serious level will probably have a coach but they are generally not allowed on the field during play.

    • @craigorr9713
      @craigorr9713 Před 2 lety

      Two more things I would add:
      1. The bowler's delivery is restricted so the elbow is (mostly) straight.
      2. County cricket is also considered first-class cricket, but is played over four days. It is now professional, but long ago was a mixture of amateurs and professionals. (The amateurs were typically wealthy or aristocrats and looked down on the lower class professionals.)

    • @ahogg5960
      @ahogg5960 Před 2 lety +1

      @@araparseghian2 Coaches do exist in cricket however during the game, they cannot make decisions. They can run suggestions out to the captain on the field but it's not like football where the manager is calling plays from the sidelines

    • @billycox475
      @billycox475 Před 2 lety

      I may have missed this in the video but what determines a win, runs or wickets?

  • @DaSoda70
    @DaSoda70 Před 2 lety +64

    Just wanted to say thanks for this. I've been trying to get into cricket off and on since 2019. After watching this, I caught the end of the West Indies v. India ODI game and actually understood what was going on.

    • @SportsExplained
      @SportsExplained  Před 2 lety +2

      Awesome!

    • @NoToBusinessCasual
      @NoToBusinessCasual Před 2 lety +4

      Wow !! Now that is called a great student who goes beyong just class work. 👍👍👍 Thumbs up to you and credit to the poster of this video.

    • @smoothy7873
      @smoothy7873 Před 2 lety

      Are you from the Carribean or USA?

    • @DaSoda70
      @DaSoda70 Před 2 lety

      @@smoothy7873 American

    • @smoothy7873
      @smoothy7873 Před 2 lety

      @@DaSoda70 kk

  • @tedmead7903
    @tedmead7903 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Brilliant. Beautifully explained. I'm an American that lived in the UK for all my schooling so played cricket (not my fav). The small addition is that after the over the next bowler bowls from the other end, at least that's how it was in my day (40+ yrs ago!).

    • @cricketexplained8526
      @cricketexplained8526 Před 5 měsíci

      That's still the case across outdoor cricket except for one proprietary format, non-global format that I am aware of.

  • @cjcni
    @cjcni Před rokem +1

    Great job explaining it. If I was to recommend which format for a new viewer to watch first it would definitely be the one day stuff, especially T20. Build up to watching a fully fledged test match.

  • @magpiegirl3783
    @magpiegirl3783 Před rokem +20

    For a person with a non-cricket background, you did a pretty good job of explaining the basics. Possibly could have compared the speed of the ball in both games and possibly the types of bowls (spin, fast, etc).

  • @jayfloramusic
    @jayfloramusic Před 2 lety +12

    18 seconds in and it's already the best explanation I've seen of this game.

  • @oliveinpeace9627
    @oliveinpeace9627 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Than you very much. I've been watching snippets of the game for many years, just waiting for it to make sense. Your explanation was perfect.

  • @ruanvanderwesthuizen1448

    As a cricket fan who has gotten into baseball in the past 3 years due to creators like Jomboy, Foolish Baseball, etc. this is really well done, and it included a fact that I actually did not know (the fact that the back of the crease is called the popping crease). Really well done!

    • @stephencooper5972
      @stephencooper5972 Před rokem

      The crease aligned with the stumps is the return crease. The crease that determines no balls, run outs, stumpings, runs etc is the popping crease

    • @cricketexplained8526
      @cricketexplained8526 Před rokem

      ​@@stephencooper5972 The return crease is perpendicular to the popping crease and stumps (i.e. it points up the length of the pitch and delimits laterally where the bowler's back foot can land). And the horizontal crease parallel to the popping crease is called the bowling crease.

  • @ishyandmikkischannel8811
    @ishyandmikkischannel8811 Před rokem +49

    I'm from a well known cricketing family but struggled to explain it to my American friends in my time in the US both undergrad and grad school.
    And here you did it in 10 minutes!
    Brilliant! Well done...
    PS: The one other difference is that there are no gloves or mitts for fielders in cricket - and the ball is hard. And bowlers are allowed to target the batter's body and head - helmets only came in around 1978. Given that fastest recorded ball is 100mph+ by Pakistan's Shoaib Akhtar there is always a serious risk of injury to the batter. A few years ago the Australian international Phillip Hughes instantly died when hit by such a ball - usually called a "bouncer."

    • @SportsExplained
      @SportsExplained  Před rokem +6

      Thank you for this nice comment!
      I addressed the gloves and ball in the followup video: czcams.com/video/Q0-3JlWWhyQ/video.html
      It’s nuts to me that bowling for the batter’s head is standard practice in cricket. This being said, it wasn’t very long ago that it was common for baseball pitchers to throw at batters for a number of reasons, most commonly to retaliate for some sort of disrespect, either from the batter or someone on the batter’s team. This happens much less often today.

    • @ishyandmikkischannel8811
      @ishyandmikkischannel8811 Před rokem +2

      @@SportsExplained Thank you for the link.
      Here is another link regarding a very famous story in cricket. Here Australian fast bowler Dennis Lillee regales a story about the Pakistsni legend Majid Khan. With his chiselled features, reticent manner, languid movements coupled with lighting reflexes, Majid Khan created the impression of a Pakistani version of Clint Eastwood in a Hollwood Western. Lillee and Co had destroyed all competition previously breaking bones, smashing skulls etc. Batsmen were running away. The English newspapers were full of articles by medical luminaries stating it was impossible to play bouncers at 95 mph.
      So what did Khan do instead? When Lillee said to get rid of his old hat, he said "If you can hit it you can have it."
      And then at the end of the 3rd test match Khan "hooked" a couple of bouncers from Lillee into the stands for 6 and then gifted him the hat.
      Watch Lillee talk about it from 2:30 onwards
      czcams.com/video/JoWPXlKK3Zo/video.html

    • @mayurkanth6987
      @mayurkanth6987 Před rokem +4

      @@SportsExplained cricket is a much difficult sport man.
      Just see how the best batsmen/batter in the world struggle in Swing conditioms of England or rank turners of indian subcontinent. So u jave to constantly adapt and can't be a one dimensional player.

    • @idontknow_whattowritesooo130
      @idontknow_whattowritesooo130 Před rokem +2

      @@SportsExplained for Km/h reference its 161.3 km/h and he specialized In something called a 'toecrusher', where the ball was a yorker that came so fact that it hit the batsmen toe(like the name suggests) and goes on to take a wicket most of the time

    • @headlibrarian1996
      @headlibrarian1996 Před rokem

      I saw at least one fielder in this video who was clearly wearing gloves, similar in style to 19th Century baseball gloves i.e. mostly just padding for the palm and fingers but no webbing like modern baseball gloves. The fabric was a modern synthetic not leather though.

  • @stevechapman2553
    @stevechapman2553 Před 2 lety +67

    Iwas really impressed with how well you did here - makes me want to look up Baseball explained for cricket fans 😅

    • @SportsExplained
      @SportsExplained  Před 2 lety +6

      Thanks!

    • @cricketexplained8526
      @cricketexplained8526 Před 2 lety +7

      I don't think anybody has done this, but if they have let me know

    • @BRNOOB_
      @BRNOOB_ Před 2 lety +1

      @@cricketexplained8526 sign me up too ;)

    • @pf7746
      @pf7746 Před rokem +1

      A really good explanation is in the Foreword to the International Edition of Calico Joe by John Grisham. Grisham does a really good job of explaining not only the game, but also its key tactical elements.

    • @nperry106
      @nperry106 Před rokem +1

      Ninh Ly @ninhly has a real good channel where he explains the rules of practically every sport in the world, including many I'd never heard of

  • @kirkcavanaugh1493
    @kirkcavanaugh1493 Před rokem

    I liked and subscribed immediately upon hearing the excellent way that you endeavored to shut down any potential unecessarily toxic comments by providing an alternative suggestion that would be as beneficial as your video was.

  • @earlhuff7847
    @earlhuff7847 Před rokem

    Thank you! I grew up playing only baseball and I have not ever gotten to watch a Cricket game but have heard about it. I would love to now after watching your video. Looks fun

  • @samwhite4284
    @samwhite4284 Před rokem +7

    I have played cricket my entire life and watched this whole video just because it’s interesting seeing cricket explained through the lens of a baseball fan.. it’s made me more interested in following baseball

  • @SilverBicycle
    @SilverBicycle Před rokem +40

    This is wonderful. I am a lifelong cricket fan, so loved hearing cricket explained to baseball lovers. You've asked for comments and corrections. I think you kind of touched on this when you spoke about "appealing" - when the bowling side asks the empire to decide whether they have managed to get the batter "out" or not. This is why we say that the batter was "given out", rather than "put out". "Put out" in British English means: inconvenienced. The batter is given out on the pitch, but if he/she doesn't agree with the decision, will definitely feel very put out that they're now walking back to the changing room 😆

    • @stewall101
      @stewall101 Před rokem +3

      And don't forget the call (appeal to the Umpire) of; "HOWZAT?"
      ("How's that" meaning, did we get him out or not?))

    • @cshairydude
      @cshairydude Před rokem +3

      The usual term, the one used in the Laws, is "dismissed".

    • @SilverBicycle
      @SilverBicycle Před rokem

      @@cshairydude Yes...that's true actually. Funny, the same as when someone's fired. And the wicket is called a dismissal. This is going to sound so odd to Americans.

    • @kiwitrainguy
      @kiwitrainguy Před rokem +1

      Another thing to point out is the decision itself. There is no such judgement in Cricket as "In" (or "Safe" as in Baseball), the decision is either "Out" or "Not Out". Similar in court:"Guilty" or "Not Guilty".

  • @dianef4227
    @dianef4227 Před 10 měsíci +2

    I endured cricket games as a child and sat through one baseball game (Red Sox v LA) when on holiday. Both are long, both are slow, but at least cricket is a summer daytime game where you can enjoy the sunshine….

  • @realaussiewhatsup7167
    @realaussiewhatsup7167 Před 11 měsíci

    Being an Australian,who has played cricket with all his mates since basically I've been born,great brake down my man! Awesome!.

  • @silverrahul
    @silverrahul Před 2 lety +57

    11:42 The target of 222 means india went first and scored 221, NOT 222.
    Small mistake , but might confuse someone who does not know cricket

  • @Erik_Danley
    @Erik_Danley Před 9 měsíci +1

    Thanks for the short yet fantastic comparison! As a young (like around 8 or 9 or so) American kid in the US, some neighbor kids and I played baseball in our cul-de-sac. We were sloppy and would just carry the bat with us as we ran to first base (which was probably just some hat or something we put on the asphalt). Then once in a little league baseball game I did the same thing and I should have been called out, but the coaches and ump were gracious and just took back the bat, letting me stay on first. Boy I felt stupid, but anyway it’s funny to realize that in cricket the players who bat constantly hold their bats as they run.

  • @barryschwarz
    @barryschwarz Před rokem

    From Australia, excellent description of the game to a newcomer. Very few could do it as clearly as you.

  • @thedeadquaker
    @thedeadquaker Před rokem +11

    As a life-long cricket viewer, I can say that this is a very well put-together video. It explains all the main stuff without going into too much detail (which can get confusing). Well done!

  • @willashby2250
    @willashby2250 Před 2 lety +36

    Well done! I've been playing & watching cricket for 50 years and know how difficult it is to explain. That was a fine innings!

  • @kevinvaillancourt5737
    @kevinvaillancourt5737 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Excellent video! When I was an exchange student in France, I used to hang out at a bar owned by an expat from Chicago, and he always had a Cubs game going. Two French guys asked me to explain the game to them. At first, it went pretty well, but the darn game kept conspiring against me, like when I had just got through to them about what constitutes a strike out, only for the catcher to drop the ball behind him on a swinging third strike, then kicking the ball to the dugout when trying to recover it, resulting in the struck out batter SAFE at First...sigh. I guess one has to grow up with baseball to properly understand it.

  • @patriciawood6587
    @patriciawood6587 Před 3 měsíci

    This video was great. I have been interested in learning more about cricket and had some idea, but comparing it to baseball helped me more understand the game. You were very clear in explaining each part about the game and for me, it has further increased my interest in cricket and gave me a lot of information to help me enjoy watching the games. Well done.

  • @raulv0417
    @raulv0417 Před 2 lety +22

    I've always been interested in cricket, although it's not practiced in my country (Mexico), and this is the first true and clear explanation of cricket I've ever seen. Being a baseball fan, it was relatively easy to grasp the concepts, although I struggle a little in the scorekeeping. Nevertheless, it was a very good video and thanks for the explanation.

    • @cricketexplained8526
      @cricketexplained8526 Před 2 lety

      There is a Mexican national cricket team.

    • @raulv0417
      @raulv0417 Před 2 lety +2

      @@cricketexplained8526 Go figure, I never knew it was practiced in Mexico. Anyway, thanks for your video. It made cricket easy to understand. Cheers.

    • @Rusty_Gold85
      @Rusty_Gold85 Před rokem +1

      LoNg story but hope this helps : Im a batsman , the first bowler has 6 balls to get me out . I leave the first ball bowled alone, it goes straight to wicket keeper .The second I hit the ball but goes to a player and i cannot risk a run and Yell at my other batsman " wait" . Third ball I hit and i place it in the gap so I judge by the time a fielder runs to it and throws it back at the wicket and or wicket keeper I can run up to other end and be back at my end, Crossing the white line with my bat grounded running hard . So I yell to my other batsmen in loud voice TWO !! He knows what i will be doing and I get back before my wicket is broken , Im safe my score is 2 not out. Fourth ball lifts off the pitch enough I can really hit to the boundary for FOUR . The other batsman also watches and we both run until the ball hits the boundary then I can stop even if I made the other end and go back to facing the bowler . My Score is now 6 not out. The Fifth ball I clip behind me and my batsman is my eyes and yells at me really loud so i know the intention "THREE''!! So I run down , back again then again to the end where the bowler comes in . My score 9 not out AND I dont face that bowler anymore ,the other batsman does. He faces the sixth ball and hits it high and straight over the oval fence for SIX . The Umpire signals that to the bowler and then back to where the scorers are to say " its his judgement that it was a 6. The other batsman is now 6 not out , I am 9 not out . The bowler has lost 15 runs for no wicket for just 6 balls . His Captain in the field will look his way until he gets his attention and hope he gets better when his next 6 are after the next bowler. Due to the next bowler starting at me from the other end and I face the 1st ball again. If I was Steve Smith I would be doing this for 5 hours and make 120 runs

    • @robyncalder8254
      @robyncalder8254 Před rokem

      Mexico has both a Men's and women's national cricket team. They are an affiliate country so would only be playing ODI and Twenty20 matches. Nations are ranked by the ICC - International Cricket Council and very few nations are given the status to play Test matches

    • @offal
      @offal Před rokem

      ironically the hispanic community in LA play it on the streets, they also follow the etiquette which was prodominately the point of teaching it, as it`s not an aggressive game but played with manners, mostly, dunno if it still is though but i seen a tv thing on it a few years ago and found it interesting.

  • @TheHiltonblake
    @TheHiltonblake Před rokem +4

    South African here!.. I'm very impressed with how you explained the game to other Americans.. Well done!.. I can hear that you have the jest of what cricket is about.. 😊

  • @zeitxgeist
    @zeitxgeist Před rokem

    Just randomly stumbled upon this. You did a great job! Immediately going to your other cricket ones now. You should do an AFL one, the official ones from the AFL are a bit lacking!

  • @hhvh2080
    @hhvh2080 Před dnem +1

    This is a brilliant video! Thank you! To all that disagree! Be cheerful that someone cares to learn about cricket!!!!