Are Americans on the verge of embracing one of the world’s most popular sports? We may soon find out.
World Cup cricket has come to the U.S. for the first time. USA Cricket and Cricket West Indies are co-hosting the 2024 ICC T20 World Cup, with 16 of the 55 matches to be played in the U.S., at venues in Florida, Texas and New York.
The tournament starts with U.S. vs. Canada on June 1 at Grand Prairie Stadium near Dallas, and concludes with the championship game on June 29 in Barbados.
Twenty teams make up the field: USA, West Indies, England, Pakistan, India, New Zealand, South Africa, Sri Lanka, Australia, Netherlands, Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Ireland, Scotland, Canada, Nepal, Oman, Namibia, Uganda and Papua New Guinea.
Games will be televised on Willow TV. (Viewers can sign up for Willow TV directly, or add it to a live TV streaming service like Sling or DirecTV Stream.)
World Cup cricket is here:Facts, tickets, where to watch
Cricket was listed as the second most watched sport in the world – behind soccer – by the 2023 World Atlas. While it is most popular in South Asia, Australia and England, it is played in 125 countries.
The audiences for key cricket matches have crushed the number of viewers for the most-watched Super Bowl. The 2023 Super Bowl between the Kansas City Chiefs and Philadelphia Eagles drew 115 million viewers, the most ever. The most-watched cricket match, the 2011 World Cup final between Sri Lanka and India, drew over 500 million viewers. At least four other matches since have pulled in hundreds of millions of viewers.
Cricket is a simple game in that one team tries to score more runs than the other team by hitting a ball with a bat. But like many sports, it has layers upon layers of rules and variations. The root strategy is pretty straightforward: the fielding team tries to bowl (or pitch) the ball past the batter to hit the wicket behind the batter, causing an out. A batter stands in front of the wicket using the bat to direct the ball away from the wicket by hitting the ball and scorings runs. Let’s look at more basics of the game to provide a foundation for understanding cricket.
Cricket is played on a round or oval grass field with a rectangular flat strip in the middle, called a pitch. Like baseball fields, the outfield areas can vary. But the size of the pitch remains consistent, like the pitching mound and bases in baseball.
Lines on the pitch are called creases, marking the areas where batters hit and bowlers throw the ball (popping crease and return crease create a sort of batters box), and where wickets are placed (bowling crease). More on wickets later.
The boundary is the rope or fence around the perimeter of the outfield.
Protective gear for players: Batters, called batsmen or strikers, wear helmets, leg pads and batting gloves. The wicket keeper, similar to baseball’s catcher, also wears leg pads and gloves. No other players wear protective equipment. Fielders catch hits bare-handed.
Bat and ball: The bat is a flat-fronted willow wood blade attached to a cane handle. The ball has a leather covering over a cork center wrapped with string and is usually red or white.
Wicket: A wicket is made up of three stumps (posts) and two bails (small sticks). Stumps stand upright 28 inches high and are fixed to the ground such that a ball could not pass between the stumps. Two bails, each 4¾ inches long, sit on top of the stumps. One wicket is placed at each end of the pitch.
To win the game, a team must score more runs than its opponent. The two teams each have 11 players. There are also two umpires, whose decisions are final. No replays.
Games are played in innings (innings being both singular and plural; there is no “inning.”) In each innings one team bats and one team fields.
The number of innings varies from two to six depending on the format being played. Historically, cricket matches have been all-day or multi-day affairs. In 2003 a shorter version of the game, called Twenty20 or T20, was introduced and has grown in popularity around the world. It can be played in about three hours, making it more akin to other major spectator sports. T20 matches have two innings, with each team taking one turn at batting while the opponent fields.
Two batters, called batsmen or strikers, from the same team take positions at each end of the pitch. The other nine players stand off the field waiting their turn to bat. A batter continues to bat until he or she gets out. Each team has 10 wickets to start the game. When the wicket has gone down 10 times, the innings ends and the batting team can no longer score.
The fielding team has all 11 players on the field. One is the bowler, who pitches, or bowls, the ball to the batter. Behind the batter is a wicket keeper, playing a role similar to a catcher in baseball. The other nine players take positions in the field to catch hit balls. Fielders take strategic positions in a full circle around the pitch as the batter can hit the ball in any direction.
In each innings of T20 cricket, a maximum of 20 overs (six pitches equals an over) can be thrown. After each over, the batsmen switch ends of the pitch and a new bowler comes in. No bowler can throw more than four overs in an innings. And no bowler can throw two consecutive overs. Bowls can bounce once before reaching the batsman.
Runs are commonly scored three ways: when a hit clears the boundary on the fly (6 runs), a hit reaches the boundary without being fielded (4 runs), and a ball is hit in the field (a single) and the batsmen at opposite ends of the pitch run shuttle-style back and forth between the wickets, scoring one run on each exchange.
Additional runs can be scored without a hit from the bat. Fielding “extras” result in a run for the batting team when the ball gets through to the wicketkeeper and the batters can run for a score (similar to a passed ball in baseball). If the bowled ball strikes any part of the batter’s body, batsmen can also try to score a run. Bowling “extras”, called by the umpire for a variety of illegal pitches, also result in a run for the batting team. Penalty runs can also be awarded for fielding infractions, but these are pretty rare.
As in baseball there are several ways to get a batter out. But, in a sense, what happens around baseball’s four bases is condensed to take place between two wickets in cricket.
Like most major sports, statistics abound to detail the progress of a game. Here's an example of how a live score update might be presented on TV:
An innings is over when 10 of 11 batting players have gotten out. A batting team must have two batsmen on the pitch at all times, so when only one player remains, the innings ends and teams change positions on the field. An innings can also end if the maximum bowls (20 overs) for an innings have been thrown.
In a two-innings game, each team has one chance to score as many runs as it can. The game is over when the second team concludes batting. The winner is the team with the most runs.
At the end of a game, the final score line often looks like this:
Tracing its roots back to the 16th century, cricket became an established sport in England in the 18th century. In the ensuing centuries, the sport had evolved and become, in the eyes of those new to cricket, very complicated. But the interest around the world attests to the attraction people have to the sport. Most Americans are in the beginning stages of learning to appreciate cricket. 2024 will offer more opportunities to keep learning.
Sources: USA Cricket (usacricket.org), Major League Cricket (majorleaguecricket.com), International Cricket Council (ICC), cricketmastery.com, dimensions.com, World Atlas, staff reporting
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