Posted on 08/12/2013 1:10:37 PM PDT by Maurya
An inspired spell of fast bowling from Stuart Broad catapulted England to a 74-run win over Australia in the fourth Test and sealed victory in the Ashes series. Chasing 299 for victory, Australia were well placed on 168-2 but lost their next eight wickets for 56 runs as they collapsed to 224 all out.
Tim Bresnan turned the tide when he had opener David Warner caught behind for 71 and Broad followed up with a devastating burst of 6-20 in 45 balls to finish with 11 wickets in the match.
A breathless and barely believable evening session, in which nine wickets fell, ended in fading light at 1940 BST when Broad had Peter Siddle caught at mid-off to put England 3-0 up in the series with one match to play.
(Excerpt) Read more at bbc.co.uk ...
ps: I may never understand it, but am nevertheless appreciative that something as orderly and traditional as cricket still exists in this rapidly devolving world.
Sorry. Gotta play baseball.
Yay Gryffindor !
If anything, it would be the opposite. Baseball is as you say, much simpler and quicker and doesn't require much specialist equipment other than a bat and a ball compared to cricket, but this is the other way around with 'soccer' and American football. With soccer, all you need is a ball and some coats to make goalposts, with American football you need a suit of full-padded armour for everyone on the team and one of those weird 'H' shaped goals, so why did American football take off when soccer didn't, in the same way that baseball took off but cricket didn't?
Certainly, soccer is a simpler sport than football. I'd also say that you could probably play a kind of cricket without much in the way of special equipment or preparation -- millions of children in India do -- but I guess to go whole-hog and please the purists would take more money and effort than baseball. And cricket games could take a lot longer.
I don't know the history very well, but American football probably got its first boost from colleges adopting it in preference to the European game. According to my source, soccer was popular with immigrant working people between the two world wars, but there was a lot of infighting between club owners.
In the big picture, immigration was restricted in the '20s. Next, the Depression took away the money. Then, with war coming, Italian-Americans and other immigrants wanted to prove they were Americans first and foremost and spent more time on "American" sports. Later, the war years were a bad time for all sports (no unnecessary travel), and pro football started its rise after the war.
My comment is a reference to a famous series’s of books and BBC radio programs called “hitch hikers guide to the galaxy’”
The arch enemy were from the planet Krikkit .
I’d rather see 3-gun competition take over as the #1 US sport.
Seriously.
The first ever international cricket match:
United States of America versus the British Empire’s Canadian Province, 1844. Canada won by 23 runs.
Did you get Shane Warne?
No, I didn’t get Warne, but I did get Glenn McGrath, Matt Elliot, Mark Taylor, and Gillespie’s autographs.
You watching it this year?
This is the first time I’ve been following The Ashes from start to finish.
Just following through Daily Mail. In 1998 I was in UK during The Ashes. Didn’t get tickets for it but met most of Aussie’s team at Lillywhites and got autographs.
And England takes the Third Test Match. Aussies still up 2 to 1.
On to Old Trafford.
And that’s that...Rained out...Aussies keep The Ashes.
Darnit, I was really hoping it would be 2-2 going to The Oval.
And England salvage the draw! If only the Fourth Test Match wasn’t washed out.
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