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Finding The Right Cricket Set

Many of us can still remember the thrill of receiving our first cricket set. There’s nothing quite like heading out into the garden or a local park to have a go at batting and bowling. As one of the most popular sports in the world, cricket continues to retain its popularity and plenty of people are still looking to buy new cricket sets each year.

There are lots of options available to you, as you’ll know if you’ve looked to buy such a set. It’s vital that you choose something that’s well suited to both your budget and your cricketing abilities. It’s great if you can manage to buy something that contains all that you need and that is available at a reasonable price. Let’s take a look at what you might look for in a set.

Many people buy sets for children, in which case getting equipment that is all the right size will be vital. There’s no point asking kids to play with adult kit. Firstly, they’ll find it very frustrating. Secondly, they may well injure themselves if playing with a heavy bat and ball. Far better to look for lightweight options that will allow them to get a feel for the game without harming themselves.

Most adults will obviously want a full-size set, to include a bat, ball, stumps and also bails. You may not know that cricket bats come in varying sizes. Some people prefer heavier bats, feeling that they allow for big hitting, but you should look for a bat that you’ll be happy to use. Always try holding the bat before making a purchase and ensure that it feels solid. You don’t want it to fall apart in your hands as you play.

Those who are especially serious about cricket will probably want a set that includes almost everything. The essentials will include a bat, ball, stumps and bails. It’s important that you remember pads too, particularly if you’ll be playing competitive matches. Some people forget to buy good quality cricket gloves, but you should remember that these will be critical to keeping your hands protected and to allowing your to play freely.

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Choosing Cricket Gloves

Cricket is a sport that seems to bring about mixed emotions. It’s one of the most watched sports in the world, which shows that there are plenty of people who really enjoy. If you’re someone who has ever had the excitement of putting on your cricket gloves and heading out to bat then you’ll certainly know about what the game has to offer.

It’s a sport that has many advantages, including the fact that it can be played by both men and women, young and old. No matter how much experience of the game you have, you’ll want to ensure that you have all of the right equipment. Many players tend to think initially about the importance of having the right bat, but you shouldn’t neglect other pieces of kit. In this article we examine the importance of having the right cricket gloves.

A vital decision will be whether to buy your gloves online or from a local specialist store. This decision is made a whole lot easier if no such local store exists! Luckily, you will find that many of the best cricket glove deals are to be found online.

What do you need to think about when buying your new cricket gloves? Quality, price and size will all certainly be important to you. You might be surprised by the number of people who think to buy good quality gloves and yet don’t manage to get them in the right size. You should make the effort to get the size right, otherwise you could be uncomfortable and struggle to score runs.

You should definitely test your gloves before making a purchase. Try them out to see how you find it when holding your preferred bat. It’s absolutely critical that you should feel completely comfortable when wearing them, as even the very best players struggle to play well when they’re wearing gloves that don’t fit properly.

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How Did England Win The 2009 Ashes Series ?

So on the morning of the day after exactly how did England regain the Ashes? Just look at the statistics:

Who scored most runs?
Australia

Which team had six of the seven leading run makers?
Australia

Who took most wickets?
Australia

Which team had the three leading wicket-takers?
Australia

Who won the series?
England

The bottom line is Test matches are set up in the first innings and England batted like clowns in the first knock just once. Australia did it twice and that proved to be the difference between the sides.

Sure England got away with one in Cardiff and the destiny of the famous urn could well have been academic before we reached the Oval, but in a bold attempt to smash national stereotypes, the hosts showed some stoic resistance from a couple of unlikely sources while the Aussies failed to deliver when it mattered in Wales and then the Baggy Green crumbled on a crumbled pitch in South London.

The whinging Aussie press are claiming the toss of the coin at The Oval decided the Ashes with groundsman Bill Gordon under orders to produce a pitch favourable to the hosts although their batsmen rather diluted their own conspiracy theory by scoring 348 batting last.

Four years on from the 2005 success and there is no clamour for an open top bus parade or Messer’s Cook, Swann, Broad, Anderson, Prior, Trott, Bopara, Panesar and Onions to join the rest of their team-mates with MBE’s

This series was never going to be as exciting as the 2005 series. The narrowest win in Ashes history was followed by a match that England were only one wicket away from snatching before a three wicket home victory. Of course it all culminated in an ultra tense final day at The Oval.

That was an anomaly of acute excitement which probably won’t be ever repeated.

Of course all these incredible finales were played to a backdrop of England having not beaten the old enemy in an Ashes series for 18 years.

But probably the most exciting part about that series was that England were going head-to-head and eventually beating unquestionably the best team in the world and some would argue one of the top three teams in the history of the game.

The 2009 series did have some echoes of 2005 with the pendulum of momentum going back and forth.

But when England embarked on their 2005 boozeathon it was no doubt fuelled in the fact that they had just beaten the team of Hayden-Langer-Ponting-Gilchrist-McGrath and Warne – legends of the game.

Of course Andrew Strauss and his men can only beat the team put in front of them but Australia have won just six of their past 16 Tests and have now dropped to fourth in the Test rankings.

As Strauss said before Leeds, the Australians have lost their aura and it reflected in the mood of the nation.

Unlike four yeas ago, there was not a hint of cricket on the front pages on the morning of the Oval Test, let alone the back pages dominated by Manchester Unity’s defeat to Burnley.

Of course this Ashes series was not on terrestrial television. What effect that had on the series failing to grip the nation in the same way – well you decide.

So even though most of England’s batsmen averaged less than 30 and most of England’s bowlers averaged more than 40, it was the hosts who played the better cricket when it mattered so hats off to them for avenging the 2006/7 whitewash in Australia.

The England cricket team ‘s  next test will be truly significant when they take on the number one team in the world ,South Africa, this winter and if they beat them  in their own backyard then that really would be start of something special. Watch this space.

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2009 Ashes Series – Day 4 – Final Round Up

A totally dominant England regained the Ashes with style and panache with a sweeping 197-run victory over Australia in the fifth Test at The Oval despite a superb rearguard battling century from Aussie batsmen Michael Hussey that looked like taking  the game into a fifth day.

 

Australia made a good on start on Saturday evening boosting their confidence with a steady opening partnership of 80 knowing that both the target and the prospect of batting more than six sessions to secure the draw were out of reach. Simon Katich and Shane Watson resumed on another fine, hot English summers day with a capacity crowd anticipating an England victory. However this partnership lasted only another six runs and 15 minutes before Katich (43) misjudged an arm ball from Graeme Swann. The Aussie left-hander thrust his right pad out without offering a shot and was given out lbw.

Watson succumbed for 40 in the next over, also lbw, when an off-cutter from the young in form England bowler Stuart Broad thudded into his pads. An early end to the proceedings seemed likely with Broad exploiting the variable bounce and Swann getting the odd ball to grip and turn.

The Australian cricket captain Ricky Ponting, was at his most determined, and his Partner in crime Hussey, at his most stubborn , were fighting hard against the powerful  pair who had taken nine wickets between them in the first innings. Australia went to lunch with the score at 171 for two. Both may several errors but stayed at the crease.

Ponting reached his half-century in what will probably be his final Ashes Test on English soil, before edging Swann on to Collingwood’s left boot. Collingwood turned quickly but was unable to gather the rebound. Two runouts in the space of six balls followed and accounted for Australia’s two best batsman. Hussey called for a swift single after driving Steve Harmison to Andrew Flintoff at mid-on. Ponting (66), who hesitated, was run out a magnificent flat throw from Freddie, which struck the stumps at the striker’s end.

Clarke followed to a most bizarre dismissal in the following over without scoring when he played the ball on to the foot of Alastair Cook at short-leg. Strauss, running around to leg from first slip, seized the ricochet and flicked the ball on to the stumps with Clarke scrambling in vain to make his ground.

Hussey on 55 survived a chance to the unfortunate Collingwood before Marcus North was stumped by Matt Prior off Swann for 10. Hussey and wicketkeeper Brad Haddin kept Australia’s hopes alive with a steady   and professional seventh wicket partnership of 91 off of 135 balls. Haddin used deft footwork to cancel he bounce, cutting and gliding his way to 34 before hoisting Swann to Strauss in the unaccustomed position of deep mid-wicket.

Mitchell Johnson fell for a duck caught at second slip by a grateful Collingwood off Steve Harmison. Peter Siddle was out to the same bowler for 10 and Stuart followed next ball to put Harmison on a hat-trick, but it was to Swann that perhaps rightly fell the honour of taking the final wicket as he was the most successful of the bowlers with figures of four for 120 from 40.2 overs. Only Hussey of the Australian batsmen had defied the England attack for any length of time, scoring his 10th Test century. He was the last man out, caught at short-leg by Alastair Cook for 121 in five-and-a-half hours at the crease.

A capacity Oval crowd basking in the late August evening  sun joyfully erupted into scenes mirroring those of The 2005 Ashes Test four years ago when a draw was enough to bring the Ashes back after 16 long years. “It’s a special moment for us, we had to dig deep in a very hard series. It has not sunk in yet,” said the England captain Andrew Strauss. Whilst his opponent Ricky Ponting, the Australian team magnanimous in defeat said “We have not been good enough. Full credit to England and Andrew Strauss for the way he has led the team,”

To borrow the adage from their football colleagues, at the beginning of the 2009 Ashes series, the English cricket supporters were looking for cricket to come home, well due to the magnificent effort put in by all of the 2009 England Ashes cricket squad ,cricket truly has come home and the famous Urn has been returned to home soil.

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2009 Ashes Test – Oval – Day 3 – Round Up

The England batsmen dominated the third day’s play at the Oval, setting  Australia a world record 546 if to they are to win the fifth and final Ashes Test after Jonathan Trott scored a century on his Test debut at The Oval. The West Indies previously recorded the highest fourth innings winning total six years ago when they reached 418 for seven against Australia at St John’s in Antigua.

 

Trott, who was run out for 41 in the first innings, became the first England player since Graham Thorpe in 1993 to score an Ashes century on debut. Trott and the England capatain, took the overnight total of 58 for three to 157 before the England captain was caught at slip off Marcus North for 75 shortly before lunch. It was Strauss’s second half-century of the match.Trott showed terrific  composure on a pitch which held few terrors after 15 wickets had tumbled for 243 on Friday. He drove the ball handsomely through the off-side reaching his 50 in the morning session from 89 balls.

Matt Prior having run himself out for four, saw the England  hero of the 2005 Ashes series come to the crease – Andrew Flintoff. A sporting handshake from the Australian captain Ricky Ponting and a standing ovation from the Oval crowd welcomed him on this his last Test batting appearance. On a stage taylormade for him, he struck four quick boundaries but was caught at long-off for 22 trying to hit North out of the ground. North, who took four for 98 from 30 overs.

Graeme Swann enthralled  the capacity crowd with nine boundaries in his 63 from 55 balls while Trott steadily acquired runs at the other end before he was eventually  out after cracking  12 boundaries from 193 balls.

At the close of the third day, Australia had reached 80 for no wicket with six sessions remaining leaving England still quite a lot to do but have two days to bowl the Aussies out. The drama builds and England know that the Ashes are there for the taking

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