None of the religious gestures work for me anyways. The kneeling down, crossing, thanking the sun etc.. these people fail to understand that this makes them look a little silly on a sporting field - linking an imaginary grand divine plan to their minuscule achievement on a playground that means nothing to mankind at large.The Islamic prayer celebration does not go down too well among the old blokes at county grounds these days. Tahir did it for Derbyshire last season after a five-for and it produced a few more than audible quibbles from the crowd.
All part of a divine plan to play for Derbyshire County.None of the religious gestures work for me anyways. The kneeling down, crossing, thanking the sun etc.. these people fail to understand that this makes them look a little silly on a sporting field - linking an imaginary grand divine plan to their minuscule achievement on a playground that means nothing to mankind at large.
I'd much rather they go for an over the top celebration than giving the batsman a send-off. I'm definitely not a fan of those.Am a fan of ostentatious wicket celebrations tbh. Bowlers only get a couple a game on average and should make most of it imo.