5/5 Pawan K. 2 years ago on Google β’ 72 reviews
This
ground
creates
many
history
Many
crickets
come
here
and
play
a
match
Very
big
ground
and
very
beautiful
Cricket
is
main
game
Many
talented
couches
is
here
And
many
talented
players
And
also
many
talented
children
here
Cricket
is
a
bat-and-ball
game
played
between
two
teams
of
eleven
players
on
a
field
at
the
centre
of
which
is
a
22-yard
(20-metre)
pitch
with
a
wicket
at
each
end,
each
comprising
two
bails
balanced
on
three
stumps.
The
game
proceeds
when
a
player
on
the
fielding
team,
called
the
bowler,
"bowls"
(propels)
the
ball
from
one
end
of
the
pitch
towards
the
wicket
at
the
other
end.
The
batting
side's
players
score
runs
by
striking
the
bowled
ball
with
a
bat
and
running
between
the
wickets,
while
the
bowling
side
tries
to
prevent
this
by
keeping
the
ball
within
the
field
and
getting
it
to
either
wicket,
and
dismiss
each
batter
(so
they
are
"out").
Means
of
dismissal
include
being
bowled,
when
the
ball
hits
the
stumps
and
dislodges
the
bails,
and
by
the
fielding
side
either
catching
a
hit
ball
before
it
touches
the
ground,
or
hitting
a
wicket
with
the
ball
before
a
batter
can
cross
the
crease
line
in
front
of
the
wicket
to
complete
a
run.
When
ten
batters
have
been
dismissed,
the
innings
ends
and
the
teams
swap
roles.
The
game
is
adjudicated
by
two
umpires,
aided
by
a
third
umpire
and
match
referee
in
international
matches.
Forms
of
cricket
range
from
Twenty20,
with
each
team
batting
for
a
single
innings
of
20
overs
and
the
game
generally
lasting
three
hours,
to
Test
matches
played
over
five
days.
Traditionally
cricketers
play
in
all-white
kit,
but
in
limited
overs
cricket
they
wear
club
or
team
colours.
In
addition
to
the
basic
kit,
some
players
wear
protective
gear
to
prevent
injury
caused
by
the
ball,
which
is
a
hard,
solid
spheroid
made
of
compressed
leather
with
a
slightly
raised
sewn
seam
enclosing
a
cork
core
layered
with
tightly
wound
string.
The
earliest
reference
to
cricket
is
in
South
East
England
in
the
mid-16th
century.
It
spread
globally
with
the
expansion
of
the
British
Empire,
with
the
first
international
matches
in
the
second
half
of
the
19th
century.
The
game's
governing
body
is
the
International
Cricket
Council
(ICC),
which
has
over
100
members,
twelve
of
which
are
full
members
who
play
Test
matches.
The
game's
rules,
the
Laws
of
Cricket,
are
maintained
by
Marylebone
Cricket
Club
(MCC)
in
London.
The
sport
is
followed
primarily
in
the
Indian
subcontinent,
Australasia,
the
United
Kingdom,
southern
Africa
and
the
West
Indies.[1]
Women's
cricket,
which
is
organised
and
played
separately,
has
also
achieved
international
standard.
The
most
successful
side
playing
international
cricket
is
Australia,
which
has
won
seven
One
Day
International
trophies,
including
five
World
Cups,
more
than
any
other
country
and
has
been
the
top-rated
Test
side
more
than
any
other
country.
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