Cricket
Cricket
Cricket
ON
CRICKET
BY
SAMARTH GUPTA
CLASS XII – B
ROLL NO. : 22
Teacher Incharge
……………………..
CERTIFICATE
This is to certify that project report has been
submitted by Samarth Gupta of Class XII –
B, Roll No. 22 , Board Roll No……….. He has
completed his project under my supervision.
Principal
Teacher Incharge Delhi
Public School
Jammu
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
Samarath Gupta
XIIth – B
Roll No. 22
Board Roll No…………
2016-17
INDEX
4. Fielding 7-8
5. Runs 8-13
Cricket
This article is about the outdoor sport. For the variant of
the game played indoors, see Indoor cricket. For the
insect, see Cricket (insect). For other uses, see Cricket
(disambiguation).
"Cricketer" redirects here. For other uses, see Cricketer
(disambiguation).
Cricket is a bat-and-ball game played between two
teams of 11 players on a field, at the centre of which is a
rectangular 22-yard long pitch. One team bats, trying to
score as many runs as possible while the other team
bowls and fields, trying to dismiss the batsmen and thus
limit the runs scored by the batting team. A run is scored
by the striking batsman hitting the ball with his bat,
running to the opposite end of the pitch and touching the
crease there without being dismissed. The teams switch
between batting and fielding at the end of an innings.
Cricket was first played in southern England in the 16th
century. By the end of the 18th century, it had developed
into the national sport of England. The expansion of the
British Empire led to cricket being played overseas and
by the mid-19th century the first international matches
were being held. The ICC, the game's governing body,
has 10 full members.[2] The game is most popular in
Australasia, England, the Indian subcontinent, the West
Indies and Southern Africa.
Rules and game-play
Summary
Team structure
A team consists of eleven players. Depending on his or
her primary skills, a player may be classified as a
specialist batsman or bowler. A well-balanced team
usually has five or six specialist batsmen and four or five
specialist bowlers. Teams nearly always include a
specialist wicket-keeper because of the importance of
this fielding position. Each team is headed by a captain
who is responsible for making tactical decisions such as
determining the batting order, the placement of fielders
and the rotation of bowlers.
A player who excels in both batting and bowling is
known as an all-rounder. One who excels as a batsman
and wicket-keeper is known as a "wicket-
keeper/batsman", sometimes regarded as a type of all-
rounder. True all-rounders are rare as most players focus
on either batting or bowling skills.
Bowling
Main articles: Bowler (cricket), Bowling (cricket), and
Bowling strategy (cricket)
A typical bowling action
Fielding
Fielding (cricket) and Fielding strategy (cricket)
Fielding positions in cricket for a right-handed batsman
All eleven players on the fielding side take the field
together. One of them is the wicket-keeper aka "keeper"
who operates behind the wicket being defended by the
batsman on strike. Wicket-keeping is normally a
specialist occupation and his primary job is to gather
deliveries that the batsman does not hit, so that the
batsmen cannot run byes. He wears special gloves (he is
the only fielder allowed to do so), a box over the groin,
and pads to cover his lower legs. Owing to his position
directly behind the striker, the wicket-keeper has a good
chance of getting a batsman out caught off a fine edge
from the bat. He is the only player who can get a
batsman out stumped.
Runs
Run (cricket)
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