ApplePieOfDestiny wrote:
So, you're going to the cricket?
Even for the most ardent fan, you are not going to watch cricket for 7 hours. You are going to the cricket. This involves watching some cricket, but mainly chatting, eating and of course drinking. Mainly talking. Take a paper, or a book. Everyone else does and no-one will be offended. If Jonathan Trott (England) is likely to bat, take some cocaine.
There are two fundamentals to test cricket. One team has to get all of the other team out twice. And having achieved that, they must then have scored more runs than them by the time the game ends. Note that scoring runs is of secondary importance. You cannot win unless you have got the whole team out twice. Regardless as to how many runs you score.
The knowledgeable spectator before yesterday would question the Australians ability to take 20 wickets. Our bowlers are best in the world and can achieve that against any team. Australia would probably struggle to take 20 if we assume that England stop batting like numpties. But they have been all year, so...
The knowledgable spectator will also refer to the slope. Lords is built on a very discernible hill, and the wicket has this slope running across it. This is very unusual and interferes with how you bowl. If an Australian bowler is being carted all over the ground, be sure to make reference to the fact that he is struggling to come to terms with the slope. Conversely, if English bowlers are dominating, then they are using the slope to their advantage. If Ian Bell gets out, this was not due to the slope or good bowling. It is because he is shit.
There are five main ways (other rare ways) of taking a batsman out (wicket)
- Hitting his stumps with the ball (bowled). Easy to understand.
- Run out. Similarly easy to understand. Batsmen attempt a run and one batsman doesn't get back before the ball hits the wicket
- Stumped. This is like a run out, but when a batsman is playing a shot, misses, it steps forward to the keeper who 'runs him out' as he has stepped out of his crease. Will be claimed frequently when a slow bowler is playing but invariably isn't actually out.
- Caught. Would be easy to understand but bear in mind that it test cricket this isn't normally because the ball has been hoiked in the air, but arises from a feint deflection to the wicketkeeper or the fielders alongside him (slips). In such cases, or near misses, you'll see a hotspot replay on the big screen with IR cameras detecting whether it hit his bat or hands (out) or something else (not)
- LBW. It's too early to deal with explaining this, but with a lot of caveats, if the ball hits the batsmans pads at a time when the ball is between the two sets of wickets AND the ball would otherwise have hit the stumps then he is out. Due to the uncertainties involved, this is guesswork. It is however important that every spectator has an opinion which they vocalise before certainty is achieved. Key things to say at this point before Hawkeye gives a final confirmation on the big screen are "going over" (the stumps) "missing" (the stumps) or "outside the line" (it hit his pads someway to the side). The final option is the easiest to justify before you saw the replay, after the replay, going over is hardest to disprove due to the camera angle.
Umpires make the decision to give out without the benefit of the replay but teams can challenge their decision by review on the big screen, but can only do so (incorrectly) twice per innings. If they manage to get the umpire overruled (not that often, the process is weighted in favour of the initial decision) they keep that challenge to use again.
Etiquette.
Do not leave your seat during play, leave only at the end of an over (6 balls) or a wicket. Take your cue from the stairwell as stewards will only let people back in at these points.
At the bar, where the sign says "4 drinks maximum" you should read maximum as also meaning minimum.
Plan your toilet breaks well. Lords is full of old men with weak but unpowerful bladders. You may be waiting a while.
Do not make a beer snake. Do not give cups to help build a beer snake. If a beer snake is being made directly behind you, remonstrate. If a beer snake is being made in front of you, tut. If a beer snake is being built at any other area of the ground, cheer as if it is the single most entertaining discovery in the history of mankind.
The food at lords is amazing, really surprisingly good for a sports venue. I got married there on the basis of the quality of their hospitality food. However if you've not got hospitality tickets, strongly recommend booking a hamper to eat on the nursery ground in the lunch interval.
Fab advice APOD, you sir are a gent and scholar and may your pies always be destined to be appley.