Comments

You must log in or register to comment.

jachiche OP t1_itvjgvp wrote

Very well deserved win for Ireland, even if they did get some help from the rain at the end. Balbirnie and Tucker batted beautifully, although the lower order collapse looked to have thrown away all that good work.

Then an excellent bowling performance. England just could not get the Irish bowlers away and got completely bogged down. That Fionn Hand wicket was a thing of beauty.

187

Johnnnnb t1_itw0ipj wrote

So I’d this where people who couldn’t make the baseball leagues go?

−201

Jimjams101 t1_itw1vc9 wrote

I love watching England cricket lose.

58

redandblue4lyfe t1_itw22nm wrote

Uhh, the Indian premier league makes 3x the revenue per game compared to the mlb https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_professional_sports_leagues_by_revenue.

Cricket is way more popular in Commonwealth countries than baseball (England, West Indies, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand, Pakistan, India etc) while baseball is more popular in countries strongly influenced by the USA (Japan, S. Korea, Dominican republic, Puerto Rico etc)

84

mencival t1_itw3rx6 wrote

I thought that was Van Persie at first

2

CursedNobleman t1_itw7ie3 wrote

Brexit... Boris Johnson... Queen Elizabeth... Liz Truss... The Flattening of the Pound... and now this?!

UK is just taking loss after loss.

571

Careless_Oil_2103 t1_itw7w62 wrote

Bro as a fellow American please stop. Any person with common sense knows that our sports practically apply to only Americans. Other sports such as this, is viewed and played by many many countries….

51

Micome t1_itw8b91 wrote

Terf Island in shambles

−27

Johnnnnb t1_itw94bx wrote

Lmao. Did you look at the source? The MLB is 2nd to the NFL. The cricket league is 10th or something, has 74 games and 10 teams compared to 2500 games and 30 teams so going by “per game revenue” and player contracts is dumb af. Not to mention the minor league and beyond

“A lot more”

−26

TerritoryTracks t1_itw9qre wrote

Apparently reading isn't your strong suit. He specifically said revenge per game... Sure, the mlb, which plays several thousand games per season has more revenue over all... Typical American, can't read at 5th grade level but "America number 1!", lol...

48

Johnnnnb t1_itwah6a wrote

Per game revenue is a pointless statement. When you have so few games of course you’ll have that stat in your favor. They don’t have a regular season, they’re “season” skips right to the playoffs. What do you think the revenue per game for playoff games is the MLB?

−7

TerritoryTracks t1_itwbbn9 wrote

The fuck are you smoking dude? Don't have a regular season? Of course there is a regular season, and only the top teams go into the playoffs. You have no idea what you are babbling about. The reason there are so few games is because it has to slot in between a very busy international calender, both with other leagues around the world and international games in 3 formats to compete for play time.

Stay with your MLB, and stop commenting ill informed crap when you don't know the first thing you are talking about...

42

cornish_hamster t1_itwc3mn wrote

Honestly, I was mostly just aiming for two jokes in one comment. I get that cricket has some absolute corkers when it comes to goofy naming: silly point, googley, sticky wicket to name but a few.

But, I feel like a need to point out "Fionn Hand" is a chap's name.

9

JagsFraz71 t1_itwch9j wrote

Its not a league? We’re talking about the world cup.

I would never assume you’re stupid but it does seem like you have some issues with reading.

Keep your chin up, champ.

47

SantiagoRamon t1_itwk05l wrote

The real issue is everyone knows the words "Ball strike single double triple" for general meaning but if you don't know the sport it makes it almost more confusing. We all know what a century is but why is it a big deal in cricket?

5

severaltons t1_itwo1tp wrote

Actual exchange between myself and an Austrian tourist at a Dodger game years ago:

Tourist: "What is a 'strike'?"
Me: "That's when the batter doesn't hit the ball."
Tourist: "...but doesn't 'strike' mean 'to hit something'?"
Me: "Yes, but... no."

55

bigdaddi_renjit t1_itwqu83 wrote

Now maybe England will get around to touring Ireland more.

It seems like such a sensible rivalry series to begin with, just right next door

51

NoQuestion4045 t1_itx70mz wrote

US was not the best at it when they did give a fuck about it during Late 19th century to early 20th.

>If we have a fuck about cricket we’d be the best at it

Top 5 maybe. Never the undisputable best like Australia in the 2000s or the West Indies in 1970s

14

Another_Road t1_itx7q8z wrote

Wow, they scored 157 home runs? That’s amazing!

(I have no idea how cricket works)

−20

Jesuswasstapled t1_itx81f9 wrote

I've recently learned about cricket by watching YouTube videos explaining cricket in baseball terms. Once I learned to read the box score on the screen, the game came into focus. There are still things I forget, but t20 is a game I can watch and enjoy. I have no idea how you can watch or enjoy the longer versions.

12

SubconsciousAlien t1_itx93ae wrote

Not sure what you’re so proud of brother/sister. Other nations have overcome in a match in much worse situations. Especially when you consider the fact that England have lost majority of the cups in a game THEY invented. Lol.

Edit: please don’t respond to this with a smart come back. I don’t care.

−33

DudeButtMunch t1_itxelqc wrote

Oh baby, he has just done him with the googly

3

TheStorMan t1_itxj4db wrote

You merely adopted the rain. We were born in it.

Cool to see Ireland do so well at cricket though, I've never met anyone who plays it in my life there so far.

35

lachjeff t1_itxmnq8 wrote

This one brings joy

25

Sauce4243 t1_itxp83v wrote

Give me back the old WACA where day 1 it’s a bit spicy pace and bounce and a bit of movement then late day 1- early day 3 good bounce but great batting conditions then lunch day 4 those cracks appear and the ball starts to turn, day 5 the pitch opens up and the ball starts to rip out of the rough

16

Popheal t1_itxsxf5 wrote

Haha I'm from perth so I completely agree. I heard they had a secret spot to get their clay from for the wickets. They No longer use that clay due to Optus having to use drop in pitches. I remember watching big Jo Angel as a youngster.

8

JasonGD1982 t1_itxwahr wrote

Perfect lol. No idea. I think maybe he’s the end of the offensive line. And makes it tight. Like why are they called quarterbacks??? Guy had a point about names. He just literally picked an obvious one😂😂😂 Fullback Offensive tackle how can an offense player be called a tackle when the offense doesn’t tackle

2

Emcee_N t1_itxxucy wrote

"Quarterback" I kinda understand, - presumably a quarterback was originally named for standing further forward than a halfback or a fullback. Like, literally the fraction of how far back you are. "Tight end" always makes me snicker in an adolescent fashion though.

Lots of cricket terms seem ostensibly silly but make sense in similar context. Like "square leg" which sounds funny because lol aharr matey cap'n pegleg and so forth. But really, it's a guy standing square to the wicket (base) on the leg side of the field (the side where the batsman is standing)

1

Emcee_N t1_itxyw4l wrote

This was popcorn-worthy in 2011 and it is again this year. Congrats Ireland!

10

B789GEnx t1_ity3i47 wrote

Like the commenter above said, it’s 157 total runs. Think of a single as one run, a ground rule double as four runs, and a home run as six runs. Also, there are no foul balls, the field is an oval, and the entire area (including behind the batsman) is fair.

12

Impressive-Squash-24 t1_itybly2 wrote

Because that isn’t annual pay. IPL players are getting paid that for just 2 months of their time per year. Cricketers in general are contracted to multiple leagues over the period of an year, aside from their own international contracts.

14

Jesuswasstapled t1_ityefae wrote

I was referring to the 2pt score when you tackle the man in his own end zone. Not the position. I then went onto positions.

What makes a reciever wide. Is their another reciever? Why is the rhe quarter back a quarter? What js a half back? Full back? Why the word back? It's very odd

2

tezza55 t1_ityj6kc wrote

Plenty more than that. To be on the back foot or to Catch someone out, i think is most commonly used in english that most people would not realise originates from Cricket

13

Aidrox t1_ityjhul wrote

I visited trinity college and watched a team practicing cricket. I had no idea how the game worked, but it looked enjoyable and I saw some athletic catches. Also, I could tell one pitcher? (ball thrower guy?) had a much smoother form.

I like watching sports I don’t know about and trying to figure out the rules and scoring system. I also rarely look it up after the fact.

Cricket was tough. Still have no idea how many of the rules work or how you score…or what those sticks are.

I was even more confused by hurling. Insanely fast paced game. But the way they advanced the ball up field was something I couldn’t really figure out and the scoring options. Those guys may be the best conditioned non-track athletes in the world.

7

Aodaliyan t1_itykybc wrote

As someone who doesn't know much about American football if you asked me what the last line of defence was called I'm not sure I would say safety. Maybe if you gave me a list of terms I would work it out, but it would probably be by excluding others.

2

warox13 t1_ityn1ie wrote

One of my friends had a theory that the safe and out signs got switched around way back in baseball history.

He believes that the out sign should be for safe because it’s more affirmative than the current safe sign, which is more of a washing away sign. Similar to how in American football an incomplete pass is signaled with the wipe similar to the current safe sign.

Crazy. But I believe it.

1

jachiche OP t1_itysj1x wrote

Two of the Ireland team that beat England yesterday played for Trinity at some point, so depending on when you were there you may have seen some international players in action.

It's a wonderful sport when you wrap your head around it. This video is a good guide for people familiar with baseball:

https://youtu.be/EfhTPGSy1aM

6

severaltons t1_iu1m2tz wrote

This language survived into American football. The official name for a point after touchdown attempt is a "try". It's in the NFL rulebook, and occasionally you'll hear referees use it when they have to address the stadium ("The try is good" / "Repeat the try").

1

SardonicSorcerer t1_iu1t651 wrote

ISomeone said all of the British Isles are in shambles or something like that. That is why I said the Scots wouldn't shed a tear. The Irish Scottish game was awesome. Not quite Pakistan India but pretty satisfying.

2

Nicholarse_Angle t1_iu27x3j wrote

Cricket Related: don't forget because of Brexit the Kolpak rules (overseas players count as local players) don't apply any more, so they lost a bunch SA players. So thanks Brexit for giving us Rilee Rossouw and Wayne Parnell back. They have been great since their comeback.

2