0% found this document useful (0 votes)
69 views14 pages

©ncert Not To Be Republished: The Story of Cricket

Cricket news
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
69 views14 pages

©ncert Not To Be Republished: The Story of Cricket

Cricket news
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 14

10

Before you read

d
Sport is an integral part of a healthy life. It is one way in

e
which we amuse ourselves, compete with each other and
stay fit. Among the various sports such as hockey, football

h
and tennis, cricket appears to be the most appealing

s
national entertainment today. How much do we really

T i
know about the game called ‘cricket’?

The StoryR
b l
E
of

C
Cricket
p u
C ©
N r e I

e
ricket grew out of the many stick-and-
ball games played in England 500 years

b
ago. The word ‘bat’ is an old English word that —————–
simply means stick or club. By the seventeenth —————–

o
—————–
century, cricket had evolved enough to be

t
—————–
recognisable as a distinct game. Till the middle of —————–

t
the eighteenth century, bats were roughly the same —————–
shape as hockey sticks, curving outwards at the —————–

o
bottom. There was a simple reason for this: the ball —————–
—————–

n
was bowled underarm, along the ground and the
—————–
curve at the end of the bat gave the batsman the —————–
best chance of making contact. —————–
One of the peculiarities of cricket is that a —————–
Test match can go on for five days and still end —————–
140/HONEYCOMB

________________
________________

d
________________ The oldest cricket bat in existence

e
(Note the curved end, similar to a hockey stick.)

h
draw: result in a draw. No other modern team sport takes even
of a game in half as much time to complete. A football match

T s
which neither

i
side wins or is generally over in an hour-and-a-half. Even

l
loses baseball completes nine innings in less than half

R
baseball: the time that it takes to play a limited-overs match,

b
game (populr
the shortened version of modern cricket!

E
in the U.S.A.)

u
played with a Another curious characteristic of cricket is that

C
bat and ball
the length of the pitch is specified—22 yards—

p
by two teams
of nine but the size or shape of the ground is not. Most

N e
players each other team sports such as hockey and football

r
on a field
with four lay down the dimensions of the playing area.

© e
bases Cricket does not. Grounds can be oval like the
dimensions: Adelaide Oval or nearly circular, like Chepauk in
length,
Chennai. A six at the Melbourne Cricket Ground

b
breadth, etc.
oval: shaped
needs to clear much more ground than it does at
Feroz Shah Kotla in Delhi.

o
like an egg
There’s a historical reason behind both these

t
codified:
standardised oddities. Cricket was the earliest modern team
with rules and

t
regulations sport to be codified. The first written ‘Laws of
________________ Cricket’ were drawn up in 1744. They stated,

o
________________ “the principals shall choose from amongst the

n
________________
gentlemen present two umpires who shall
________________
absolutely decide all disputes. The stumps must
________________
________________
be 22 inches high and the bail across them six
________________ inches. The ball must be between five and six
________________ ounces, and the two sets of stumps 22 yards
THE STORY OF CRICKET/141

apart”. The world’s first cricket club was formed


in Hambledon in the1760s and the Marylebone
Cricket Club (MCC) was founded in 1787. length: the
During the 1760s and 1770s it became common distance from
the bastman
to pitch the ball through the air rather than roll at which the

d
it along the ground. This change gave bowlers ball pitches

e
the options of length, deception through the air, deception
through the
plus increased pace. It also opened new

h
air: The ball
possibilities for spin and swing. In response, is no longer

s
rolled along

T
batsmen had to master timing and shot

i
the ground
selection. One immediate result was the

l
but sent

R
replacement of the curved bat with the straight through the

b
air. Hence
one. The weight of the ball was limited to between the possible

E
5½ to 5½ ounces, and the width of the bat to variety or

u
‘deception’
four inches. In 1774, the first leg-before law was

C
in bowling.

p
published. Also around this time, a third stump shot

e
became common. By 1780, three days had

N
selection:
choice of

r
become the length of a major match, and this strokes

© e
year also saw the creation of the first six-seam
cricket ball.

b
t o
o t
n The pavilion of the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) in 1874
142/HONEYCOMB

If you look at the game’s equipment, you can


see how cricket both changed with changing
times and yet fundamentally remained true to
________________ its origins in rural England. Cricket’s most
________________ important tools are all made of natural, pre-

d
________________ industrial materials. The bat is made with

e
________________ leather, twine and cork. Even today both bat
________________ and ball are handmade, not industrially

h
________________
manufactured. The material of the bat changed

s
________________

T
slightly over time. Once it was cut out of a single

i
________________
piece of wood. Now it consists of two pieces, the

l
________________

R
________________ blade which is made out of the wood of the willow

b
________________ tree and the handle which is made out of cane

E
that became available as European colonialists

u
________________
________________ and trading companies established themselves

C p
________________ in Asia. Unlike golf and tennis, cricket has

N r e
© e
b
t o
o t
nA rough-and-ready cricket game being played in a village in the Himalayas (1894)
(Notice the home-made wickets and bat, carved out of rough bits of wood.)
THE STORY OF CRICKET/143

refused to remake its tools with industrial or


man-made materials: plastic, fibreglass and
________________
metal have been firmly rejected.
________________
But in the matter of protective equipment,
________________
cricket has been influenced by technological

d
________________
change. The invention of vulcanised rubber led ________________

e
to the introduction of pads in 1848 and ________________
protective gloves soon afterwards, and the ________________

h
modern game would be unimaginable without ________________

T s
helmets made out of metal and synthetic ________________

i
________________
lightweight materials.

R l
________________

b
________________

E
________________
Comprehension Check

u
________________

C
________________

p
________________
1. Cricket is originally a/an

N e
________________
(i) Indian game.
________________

r
(ii) British game.

© e
________________
(iii) international game.
Mark the right answer. ________________
2. “There is a historical reason behind both these ________________
________________

b
oddities.” In the preceding two paragraphs, find two
words/phrases that mean the same as ‘oddities’. ________________
3. How is a cricket bat different from a hockey stick? ________________

o
________________

t
________________
II ________________

t
________________
The origins of Indian cricket are to be found in

o
________________
Bombay and the first Indian community to start ________________

n
playing the game was the small community of ________________
________________
Zoroastrians, the Parsis. Brought into close contact
________________
with the British because of their interest in trade
________________
and the first Indian community to westernise, the ________________
Parsis founded the first Indian cricket club, the
144/HONEYCOMB

Oriental Cricket Club, in Bombay in 1848. Parsi


clubs were funded and sponsored by Parsi
businessmen like the Tatas and the Wadias. The
________________
white cricket elite in India offered no help to the
________________ enthusiastic Parsis. In fact, there was a quarrel

d
________________ between the Bombay Gymkhana, a whites-only

e
________________ club, and Parsi cricketers over the use of a public
________________ park. The Parsis complained that the park was

h
________________ left unfit for cricket because the polo ponies of the

s
________________

T
Bombay Gymkhana dug up the surface. When it

i
________________
became clear that the colonial authorities were
compatriots:
fellow

R b l
prejudiced in favour of their white compatriots, the
Parsis built their own gymkhana to play cricket in.

E
countrymen
The rivalry between the Parsis and the Bombay

u
________________
________________ Gymkhana had a happy ending for these pioneers

C p
________________ of Indian cricket. A Parsi team beat the Bombay

e
________________
Gymkhana at cricket in 1889, just four years after

© eN r
b
t o
o t
n The Parsi team, the first Indian cricket team to tour England in 1886
(Note that along with the traditional cricket flannels, they wear Parsi caps.)
THE STORY OF CRICKET/145

the foundation of the


Indian National Congress
in 1885, an organisation ________________
________________
that was lucky to have
________________
amongst its early leaders

d
________________
the great Parsi statesman ________________

e
and intellectual Dadabhai ________________
Naoroji. ________________

h
Modern cricket is ________________

T s
dominated by Tests and ________________

i
________________
one-day internationals,

R l
________________
played between national

b
________________
teams. The players who

E
________________
Palwankar Baloo (born become famous, who live

u
________________
1875). At a time when
on in the memories of

C
Indians were not allowed ________________

p
to play Test cricket, he cricket’s public, are those ________________

e
who have played for their

N
was the greatest Indian ________________
slow bowler of his time.

r
country. The players ________________

© e
________________
Indian fans remember
________________
even now are those who were fortunate enough to ________________
play Test cricket. C.K. Nayudu, an outstanding

b
________________
Indian batsman of his time, lives on in the popular ________________
imagination when some of his great ________________

o
contemporaries like Palwankar Vithal and ________________

t
Palwankar Baloo have been forgotten. Even ________________

though Nayudu was past his cricketing prime ________________

t
________________
when he played for India in its first Test matches

o
________________
against England starting in 1932, his place in ________________
India’s cricket history is assured because he was

n
________________
the country’s first Test captain. ________________
India entered the world of Test cricket in 1932, ________________
a decade and a half before it became an ________________
independent nation. This was possible because ________________
146/HONEYCOMB

Test cricket from its origins in 1877 was


organised as a contest between different parts of
the British empire, not sovereign nations. The first
________________ Test was played between England and Australia
________________ when Australia was still a white-settler colony.

d
________________ Similarly, the small countries of the Caribbean

e
________________ that together make up the West Indies team
________________ were British colonies till well after the Second

h
________________
World War.

s
________________

T i
________________

l
________________

R
________________ Comprehension Check

b
________________

E u
________________
Write True or False against each of the following sentences.
________________

C
(i) India joined the world of Test

p
________________
________________
cricket before Independence.

N e
________________ (ii) The colonisers did nothing to encourage

r
________________ the Parsis in playing cricket.

© e
________________ (iii) Palwankar Baloo was India’s
________________ first Test captain.
________________ (iv) Australia played its first Test against

b
________________ England as a sovereign nation.
________________

o
________________
III

t
________________
________________
Television coverage changed cricket. It expanded

t
________________
________________
the audience for the game by beaming cricket into

o
________________ small towns and villages. It also broadened
cricket’s social base. Children who had never

n
________________
________________ previously had the chance to watch international
________________ cricket because they lived outside the big
________________ cities, could now watch and learn by imitating
________________
their heroes.
________________
THE STORY OF CRICKET/147

The technology of satellite television and the


world-wide reach of multi-national television
companies created a global market for cricket. ________________
________________
Matches in Sydney could now be watched live in
________________
Surat. Since India had the largest viewership

d
________________
for the game amongst the cricket-playing ________________

e
nations and the largest market in the cricketing ________________
world, the game’s centre of gravity shifted to ________________

h
South Asia. This shift was symbolised by the ________________

T s
shifting of the ICC headquarters from London to ________________

i
________________
tax-free Dubai.

R l
________________
One hundred and fifty years ago the first Indian

b
________________
cricketers, the Parsis, had to struggle to find an

E
________________
open space to play in. Today, the global

u
________________
marketplace has made Indian players the

C
________________

p
best-paid, most famous cricketers in the game, men ________________

e
for whom the world is a stage. This transformation

N
________________

r
was made up of many smaller changes: the ________________

© e
________________
replacement of the gentlemanly amateur by the
________________
paid professional, the triumph of the one-day game ________________
as it overshadowed Test cricket in terms of

b
________________
popularity, and the remarkable changes in global ________________
commerce and technology. ________________

o
________________

t
RAMACHANDRA GUHA ________________
[adapted from Chapter 7 of ________________

t
India and the Contemporary World – I, ________________

o
________________
Textbook in History for Class IX, NCERT ]
________________

n
________________
________________
________________
________________
________________
148/HONEYCOMB

Comprehension Check
1. A ‘professional’ cricket player is one who makes a living by
playing cricket. Find the opposite of ‘professional’ in the last
paragraph.

d
2. In “the triumph of the one-day game”, ‘triumph’ means the

e
one-day game’s
(i) superiority to Test cricket.

h
(ii) inferiority to Test cricket.

s
(iii) achievement and success over Test cricket.

T i
(iv) popularity among viewers.

R l
Mark the right answer.

b
3. “...the men for whom the world is a stage”.

E
(i) It refers to the famous cricket fields in the world.

u
(ii) It means that there are many cricket playing countries

C p
in the world.
(iii) It implies that cricketers are like actors and every cricket

N e
ground is like a stage on which the drama of cricket is

r
enacted the world over.

© e
Mark the right answer.

Working with the Text

b
1. Name some stick-and-ball games that you have witnessed
or heard of.

t o
2. The Parsis were the first Indian community to take to
cricket. Why?

t
3. The rivalry between the Parsis and the Bombay
Gymkhana had a happy ending for the former. What

o
does ‘a happy ending’ refer to?
4. Do you think cricket owes its present popularity to

n
television? Justify your answer.
5. Why has cricket a large viewership in India, not in China
or Russia?
6. What do you understand by the game’s (cricket)
‘equipment’?
THE STORY OF CRICKET/149

7. How is Test cricket a unique game in many ways?


8. How is cricket different from other team games?
9. How have advances in technology affected the game of cricket?
10. Explain how cricket changed with changing times and
yet remained unchanged in some ways.

Working with Language


1. Wordsearch
e d
h
• Twelve words associated with cricket are hidden in

T s
this grid.

i
• Six can be found horizontally and the remaining six

R l
vertically.

b
• Two words have been found for you.

E
Clues to the hidden words are given below.

u
Horizontal : six deliveries, four runs, attacked while out

C
of arena, no result, stumps, fielder to the off

p
side of the wicketkeeper

N e
Vertical : stumps flying, back to the pavilion, a lofty

r
one, mid-air mishap, not even one out of six,

© e
goes with bat

A O V E R D C Q A M

Z B
b S M F C X E P A

B O

t o U N D A R Y N I

t
A W O S T U M P E D

o
L L U I P G L J R E

n
L E T X L H K A Z N

X D R A W T Y P F D

W I C K E T S L I P
150/HONEYCOMB

2. Add -ly to the italicised word in each sentence. Rewrite


the sentence using the new word. See the examples first.

• He runs between wickets as if his legs were stiff.


He runs between wickets stiffly.
• Why did the batsman swing the bat in such a violent
manner?

e d
h
Why did the batsman swing the bat so violently?

T li
(i) It is obvious that the work has not been done in a
s
R
proper way.

b
(ii) He made the statement in a firm manner.

E u
(iii) The job can be completed within a week in an easy way.

C p
(iv) You did not play in a serious manner, or else you would
have won the match.

N e
(v) She recited the poem in a cheerful manner.

r
© e
3. Use the following phrases appropriately in place of the
italicised words in the sentences given below.

b
as a matter of fact we had better
see to it by accident as well

o
(i) Actually, I didn’t intend to come to your place. I reached

t
here without planning.

t
(ii) Sunil, there’s a letter for you in today’s post. There’s
one for me also.

n o (iii) Everybody thought I had composed the poem. The truth


is my younger sister did it.
(iv) The doctor told the patient to make sure that he took
his pills on time.
(v) It will be better for us to plan our trip before setting out.
THE STORY OF CRICKET/151

Speaking and Writing


1. Complete each of the following words using gh, ff or f.
Then say each word clearly after your teacher.
(i) e ort (vii) scru
(ii)
(iii) con
act
ess
(viii) rou
(ix) sti ly

e d
h
(iv) lau ing (x) di erence

T s
(v) enou (xi) sa ety
(vi) hal

R li (xii) lush

b
2. Write two paragraphs describing a bus ride to watch a

E
cricket match in a village. Use the following points. Add

u
some of your own.

C p
• two-hour journey by bus
• an old and crowded bus

N e
• friendly passengers

© e r
• visit to a village fair where the match is to be played
• the match between two village teams
• makeshift stumps, rough pitch and a rubber ball

b
• the match was enjoyable, but the trip was tiring

o
Do you know...

t
Answer
According to some botanists, plants are able

t
to sense the vibrations of music through their

o
stomata. How this occurs is not yet known.
Yields of some crops are reported to have

n
increased substantially when the plants
were exposed to music. Many plant lovers,
including Prince Charles of Britain, believe that
talking to plants makes them grow better.
Notes

e d
T s h
R li
E u b
N C ep
© e r
b
t o
ot
n

You might also like