Friday, July 31, 2009

Pinch Me I Must Be Dreaming...




So as you may know, following England's a bit like following the Red Sox - they'll string you along until they gut you in the end.

But on those rare occasions where they surprise you...

Leo slept in this morning, so we didn't get to the cricket until 6:30 - a half hour into the match.

And Australia'd already lost two wickets.

Dayum!

Just watch the first over.

Seriously.

Seriously good bowling, that is...

Monday, July 27, 2009

Recruitment Time!






Hey all,

Time to make a push to bring more players into the game and increase exposure! Just download this flyer and print it out. Hang them where you can. Color or black and white - makes no difference - just do your part to grow the club!

Thanks,
Sobo

Saturday, July 25, 2009

The Captain's Cup!

The time has come!

We've gotten together, we've learned the game - we've even made cricket happen...

Now it's time to put it all together for the...



The Captain's Cup!

Mick, Eric, Kevin and myself will each captain a team, and play 3 matches apiece. On each Match Sunday, two opposing captains will pick teams from the players who are in attendance (including the other two captains!) and have a go at it!

Everyone will eventually play on each and every team - so 'team loyalty' isn't really a factor - but playing cricket in a round-robin tournment should be fun for one and all!

You'll get the chance to score runs, impress the captains and move your way up the batting order. Take wickets and you'll get to bowl more overs. Make catches and get placed in the thick of the action!

Everyone will also learn how to keep score and do a little menial umpiring. A total cricket education at absolutely no cost to you!


Each week I'll post everyone's stats so you can see how you're doing and watch how the 'teams' progress. There will be prizes for Most Runs, Wickets, Catches and so on.

So come on out this Sunday, bring all your mates and let's get a game on!

And who knows - depending on how it goes we just might play two!

:)

Sobo

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Cricket Gets Closer every Day!

Little by little, cricket makes it into our everyday consciousness... Why, I saw a bit on cricket on the Disney Channel the other day!

May your off stump evade the googly,
Sobo

Monday, July 20, 2009

What We Do In Life Echoes In Eternity...

As I sat down to the computer this morning with Leo (my own lucky lion) I was anticipating a bit of history. England, you see, hadn't beaten Australia at Lord's since 1934. 75 years of hurt, they've been called, and while Red Sox fans may pish and tish at such a small number, how many World Series had they lost in their 86 years? *Actually lost* in that period of time?

Answer: 4.

So don't talk about anguish to England, whose Most Hated Archrival has made a tradition of coming to the Home of Cricket every four years for seven plus decades and delivering a beating.

And we were 5 wickets away from that most blessed victory. All England needed was to break up a 185-run partnership under blue skies. No problem, right? I mean, we had how many runs to play with? 200?

200???

Ye Gods. Any decent side could get that in 4 hours. This was not going to be a walk in the park...

If England were going to make it happen, someone would have to step up, and fast...




Much has been said about Andrew "Freddie" Flintoff's retirement from Tests. He was The Man 4 years ago, and his injury-prone body just doesn't have enough to continue in this form of the game.

Would it hold up for four more Tests?

Would it hold up for one?





There can be no doubt how Freddie views himself - as all England supporters view him - The Gladiator. The One. With every ball he bowled, the crowd gasps, erupts, releases pent up anxiety, joy, aggression.

And with his fourth ball of the day, he made the breakthough.



The Game was, for all intents and purposes, on.

What followed was the most aggressive, leonine, KINGLY hour of bowling I've ever witnessed. Watch his dimissals of Hauritz and Siddle. Both balls seamed in three feet off the pitch at 93 miles an hour.

You couldn't have stopped them with a snow shovel.

Particularly intriguing was Flintoff's expulsion of Siddle. He had four wickets, and with two bowlers left, he was bowling his last over of the match (his injured knee still isn't right, and resting him was the priority with the match all but won).

He had only two five-wicket hauls in his career, and none at Lord's. The first five balls of his over were fierce, but Siddle blocked and dodged until the sixth... was padded away for no run.

But wait.

A no-ball!

With a grin (of thanks, perhaps?) to the umpire, Freddie strode back well short of his mark to take his final run in to a batsman at Lord's.



Unbelieveable.

Someday I'll tell Leo he was there for most of it - that I fed him bottles while we listened to Freddie bowl that day. That we sat and listened to a warrior - a gladiator - take on the best team in the world, and cut them down one by one.

And the comparison is not one I make lightly. Andrew "Freddie" Flintoff is every bit the fighter Maximus Decimus Meridius was. After all, who was in the commentator's booth on the second day of the Lord's Test match?



Forshadowing?

Destiny?

All I know is that Flintoff's bowling today will indeed echo in Eternity.

Friday, July 17, 2009

Why Do We Play Cricket?

Because sometimes it feels like this:



And, if you're at it long enough - I mean long enough to not only make friends but enemies, you might experience the sublime rapture of making him (or her) look like this:



Enjoy today's play. From the gut-wrenching first three overs of the day (we lost a wicket before I sipped my coffee!) to the thrilling clatter of wickets as the light faded, it was a day reminiscent of the great '05 series.

With a bit of "Phil Collins" thrown in.

:)

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Spock Says...

"A situation should never become so bad that a hero is required..."

Today, England needed two.

Down two wickets in the last day, someone needed to bat out the day to save the match for England. When I went to bed last night, I was hopeful that we could do it... Pietersen, Strauss, Flintoff, Collingwood... No slouches in the international arena, surely they could keep a cool head and bat out 90+ overs and save the match.

Leo slept in this morning, and by the time I logged on, England had already lost two wickets.




My immediate reaction was "OK, not that bad. Flintoff and Colly still it come - they can bat for 6-7 hours, right?"

When Freddie fell down 112 runs, we were definitely toast. Colly and the bowlers - 5 hours left. No one could save us now...

But then cricket's a funny old game, innit?

As I headed off to cricket today (NOT wearing my England kit - in case that might help our cause) I had no idea that Paul Collingwood - the Ginger Ninja - would set about becoming one of England's heroes today...

By the time he fell on the fifth day of an Ashes Test, he had batted for over 5 hours and faced 245 balls.That's a little more than facing EVERY BALL of two of our 10-over games.

Against world-class bowling.

Without getting out.



Now that he had gone, two men stood between us and THEM.

James Anderson. 49 matches in a row without being dismissed for a duck.

Monty Panesar. The first Sikh to play for England, and probably their worst batsman ever.

How did he feel?



If we could be heroes... just for one day.

All of England and Wales now threw thei hopes and dreams on the shoulders of these two.

They would have to survive 45 minutes without giving up their wicket. still down 6 runs. Fielders all round the bat.

And ever single established batsman who batted today had gotten out.

What were their chances???

Just watch the final frame and find out...








And here, someone who put it way better than I...

Saturday, July 11, 2009

A Schedule (of sorts!)

Hear ye, hear ye...

We've come up with a plan to suit one and all (more or less) and get as much cricket (and improvement) as possible out of the summer and fall.

Tomorrow's session (and every other Sunday after that) will be declared a Match Sunday, where after a short warmup we will launch straight into a 10-over match. We will then break for lunch and (time and people willing) get in another match.

On the alternate "off" Sundays, I will be hosting a Skills Sunday, where we concentrate on batting and bowling practice, fielding, laws and tactics... This is also where the kids can get involved, learn the game in a safe environment and get some time to get comfortable with all the idiosyncrasies of this wonderful game.

I'll keep posting and updating this schedule, so tune in and plan accordingly!

Thanks,
Sobo

JULY
12 - Match Sunday
19 - Skills Sunday
26 - Match Sunday
August
2 - Skills Sunday
9 - Match Sunday
16 - Skills Sunday
23 - Match Sunday
30 - Skills Sunday

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

The Ashes have begun...

Here's an adequate 3:21 representation of the beauty and elegance of what the Ashes can be...



From 2005.

If the current series can be half as exciting...

England 336-7, yo.

Monday, July 6, 2009

Ashes, Ashes, we all fall down...

Attention all members! For the love of the game, please read this.

In 2005 I was working at Orvis, and the CEO's godson had come from England for a summer internship. A strapping 6'5" lad, Max Vere-Hodge was as cheerful as he was tall, and being English, I couldn't help but become friends with him...



As I was getting to know this kid with the funny last name, I googled it and came across a cricket player with the same last name and emailed it to Max

Come to find out, it was his grandfather!

As I asked him about this thing called cricket, he informed me that a really amazing thing called the Ashes was going on right now - a series between Australia and England that England has a chance of actually winning for the first time in like 16 years. Well, being American and all, I smiled politely and said that must be nice.

What an idiot.

On the last day of the final Test, Max would come capering down the hall in a euphoric trance, dancing around and praying for rain.

"What for?" I asked, oblivious.

"Because if we draw the final Test, we win the Ashes!!!"

I had not a clue what he was on about. Praying to not play? Winning by default?

How unamerican!

Well, needless to say, I was just unschooled in the ways of cricket. And now I kick myself daily for having missed out. For it wasn't until 2007 that I would get a chance to listen to MY first Ashes series, played in Australia, alternating between listening at 11pm and 5am to an English game played half a planet away....

Bugger.

By then, I'd been bitten by the bug only to have it turn around and bite me again with some of the unluckiest, underperformed, outcaptained, outbowled, outbatted and outselected cricket in an age. The following winter and summer saw my newfound team battered and bruised to no end. I was listening when the first Test ever was forfeited - when Pakistan refused to resume play after lunch in protest of a 5-run penalty for ball tampering. The umpire in question was run out of the game, the match overturned to a draw, and then back again to a victory for England. Chaos ensued for another year and only now - with the Ashes two days away, is everything in place, everything feels right, and we're ready for another magic moment.

So if you are around the internet at all from now until August, tune into the BBC's most excellent coverage. Listen when you can. Learn what you will. Because you never know when you've missed something magical until it's gone.

Sunday, July 5, 2009

Reading a cricket scorecard...

Lesson one.

First BCCC 10-Over Match, 6/28/09 at WIllow Park

Them (36/5) beat Us (23 all out) by 13 runs




It's not that hard, really. Up top we have "Them" (i.e. not the team I was on) and below that, "Us". Reading down the left-hand side are the batters in the order they appeared. The "Runs" column is how many runs they scored (Kevin led all scorers with 9 runs?!?!?!?) then "Balls" is how many balls they faced. 4s and 6s are self-explanatory, with Mick hitting the only boundary, a towering six off of Brian! The asterisks next to Kevin and Eric's names denote that they were "not out", i.e. they made it through the last over without losing their wicket. No one on "Us" was that fortunate, however...

To the right of each team's batting figures are the bowling figures for the other team. The bowlers for "Us", Big Peter, Mick, Joe and myself display overs bowled, runs given up and wickets taken. The same goes for "Them's" bowlers below.

What do the numbers mean?

You can see that both Mick and Brian took 3 wickets apiece, but as Mick only gave up 4 runs, he fared a little better. Eric gave up 4 runs in 4 overs, or one run an over - very darned good. I myself gave up 4 runs an over - pretty expensive by comparison. If I bowled all 10 overs, They would've scored 40 runs instead of the 36 they did manage!

The most telling number, however, is the extras. Those are all the wides or no-balls that cost a run. As you can see, "Them" score 13 runs off the extras "Us" bowled. 13 runs. Can you say "margin of victory???" :)

Needless to say, extras can be deadly - keep them under control!

On the batting side, the best breakdown I can give you at this point is to look at both Mick and Eric's numbers. They both scored more runs than balls faced. This means that if they batted all 10 overs, they would have 'averaged' more than 60 runs - almost double the winning total of 36! Big Peter's 4 runs in 15 balls was a little slow for this short of a game. If he batted all 10 overs, he would've scored only 16 runs off of all 60 balls!

This should give you a rough idea of how to attack the bowling in a game. If you're facing more than twice the number of balls than runs scored, you need to get a move on and swing for the boundaries!

I hope this gives you a little clarity on what you should be doing while you're in the crease. As always, I'm here to field your questions!

Thanks for a great match - see you all next Sunday!

Sobo

Saturday, July 4, 2009

HAPPY 4TH OF JULY!


In honor of our country's birthday, I would like to give you the first team logo inspired by Bennington and it's historical relationship to the American Revolution.

Note the 13 seven-pointed stars and old '76 of the Bennington Battle Flag.

Friday, July 3, 2009

And So It Begins...



So the first couple sessions of cricket in Bennington have been a success!

We've introduced people to the game, given the vets a place to play the game they love and are building to a cricketful future.

Rookies, note Eric's straight arm... I know it FEELS impossible, but it isn't. You'll be doing this soon enough!

Stay tuned to this blog for updates, schedualing and scorecards. This will be the online home of the club!

As always, questions and comments appreciated..

Thanks!

Sobo