Sounds typical of this country really - I'd imagine that sort of thing would be very rare in somewhere like Australia...aussie said:i heard in school for the under-15 competiton that the ECB have introduced a new rule batsmen reaching 50 runs must retire with no return to the crease if the side is all out.
I may be wrong, but didn't Australia outlaw club cricketers form hitting 6s because they broke too many car windows?Scaly piscine said:Sounds typical of this country really - I'd imagine that sort of thing would be very rare in somewhere like Australia...
Sounds like Sunday Sport crap!open365 said:I may be wrong, but didn't Australia outlaw club cricketers form hitting 6s because they broke too many car windows?
Or is that just daily mail crap?
Cricket in the Sunday Sport, well I never, might have to consider buying it. Heard you get a free DVD with it every Sunday as well, wonder what that's all about...barmyarmy said:Sounds like Sunday Sport crap!
You are allowed to return to the crease. The cutoff is 30 at U13 level.aussie said:i heard in school for the under-15 competiton that the ECB have introduced a new rule batsmen reaching 50 runs must retire with no return to the crease if the side is all out.
As a former member of a one-wonderboy outfit, I resent that. Every time I look at my East Devon U17 Knockout Cup Runners Up medal I thank fate Dom Shillabeer happened to go to the same college as our captain. Thanks to him we went overnight from being wooden spooners who didn't win a game all 2003season into a side capable of challenging Kentisbeare and Exmouth. We missed out on second place in the league in 2004 by .06 of a point. Shillabeer averaged 6 with the ball. His worst figures were 4-15, and he scored two fifties.Neil Pickup said:You are allowed to return to the crease. The cutoff is 30 at U13 level.
And I don't see what's wrong with it - it's a team competition; I don't want our hopes being ended by a one-wonderboy outfit when we have 8 or 9 strong players.
I think my point standsChubb said:As a former member of a one-wonderboy outfit, I resent that. Every time I look at my East Devon U17 Knockout Cup Runners Up medal I thank fate Dom Shillabeer happened to go to the same college as our captain. Thanks to him we went overnight from being wooden spooners who didn't win a game all 2003season into a side capable of challenging Kentisbeare and Exmouth. We missed out on second place in the league in 2004 by .06 of a point. Shillabeer averaged 6 with the ball. His worst figures were 4-15, and he scored two fifties.
I've seen it too many times - one decent player smashes the bowling around, and scores 70% of a huge score. Big problems. I think too many people are put off junior cricket by the fact that often, in your average club, the better batsmen are the better bowlers, and as many as half the team are there to make up the numbers.Neil Pickup said:I wasn't specifically talking about Exeter - I don't see why a kids competiton should be winnable through a one-boy outfit. A team able to play throughout the order deserves it much more.
I'm sorry you had to sit in my shadow at school Neil, I feel bad about it all the time.Neil Pickup said:I wasn't specifically talking about Exeter - I don't see why a kids competiton should be winnable through a one-boy outfit. A team able to play throughout the order deserves it much more.
PY said:I'm sorry you had to sit in my shadow at school Neil, I feel bad about it all the time.
You could pitch it on the square then?PY said:I'm sorry you had to sit in my shadow at school Neil, I feel bad about it all the time.
You blokes started it...open365 said:I may be wrong, but didn't Australia outlaw club cricketers form hitting 6s because they broke too many car windows?
Or is that just daily mail crap?
Is anyone else concerned by BR's Flintstone Fetish?Barney Rubble said:OK, there's no easy way to say this, but, umm.....it appears Fred Jr is actually me.
I remembered logging on and posting in a cricket forum a few years ago, before I started posting regularly on CW - looks like I didn't realise that the forum I'd been posting on was actually CW itself! I logged on as Barney Rubble having not known I already had a username - hopefully James will find it in his heart to delete the old account and not ban me for having multiple accounts. Sorry.
That was my club ground - I live next door to it. It's ridiculously small - I'm talking like a 35m straight boundary to both ends, and at one end of the ground there is a massive drop. So houses just get peppered by cricket balls. They made a complaint, so there was a season where sixes resulted in a dead ball, and (in the 3rds and 4ths teams) if it was repeated, then there was a 5 run penalty! This was only to one end of the ground.open365 said:I may be wrong, but didn't Australia outlaw club cricketers form hitting 6s because they broke too many car windows?
Or is that just daily mail crap?
They're both Flintoff-inspired, actually. And you're the one who remembered the names of all the other characters.Voltman said:Is anyone else concerned by BR's Flintstone Fetish?
James, check the database for any usernames like Bambam, Wilma or Pebbles.
I think the whole retire thing stops at like u14's or u15.s I remember in a rep game some guy scored 200* against us..How embarrassingvic_orthdox said:That was my club ground - I live next door to it. It's ridiculously small - I'm talking like a 35m straight boundary to both ends, and at one end of the ground there is a massive drop. So houses just get peppered by cricket balls. They made a complaint, so there was a season where sixes resulted in a dead ball, and (in the 3rds and 4ths teams) if it was repeated, then there was a 5 run penalty! This was only to one end of the ground.
In most local underage competitions in Australia, there is a retiring point for batsmen. However, for state championships and above that, there is no retiring points.