Call |
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Called Happen when an umpire "calls" no-ball against a bowler |
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Cameo | |
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A concise but quick-scoring innings .e.g. "He played a modest cameo of an innings".
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Cap | |
Granted
by countries for each exterior at Test level. At county stage, just one
is known and is rewarded not on a player's first form, but at a later
on period when it is felt he has "proved himself" as a part of the team;
a few players never receive one. Worceshtshire have now eradicated
this scheme and award "colours" to each player on his debut.
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Captain's Innings/Captain's Knock | |
A high-scoring character innings by the captain of the batting team well thought-out to have altered the track of a match.
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Carrom-Ball | |
A
style of bowling deliverance used in cricket, named for the reason that
the ball is unconfined by flicking the ball among the thumb and a bent
middle finger in order to instruct spin.
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Carry | |
If
a hit ball is caught by a fielder on the fly, it is said to have
carried. If it bounces just short of the fielder, it is said not to have
carried. The broadcast of a relief to the wicket keeper is also
distinguished as a measure of the quality of the pitch.
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Carry the bat | |
A starter who is not out at the end of an accomplished innings is said to have carried his bat.
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cart-wheeling stump | |
While a ball hits a stump with adequate force to reason it to make vertical revolutions ahead of landing.
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Castled | |
Out bowled frequently by a full extent ball or a Yorker.
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Catch | |
To
discharge a batsman by a fielder catching the ball following the
batsman has hit it with his bat but facing it hits the ground.
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Caught behind | |
Submits to a catch by the wicket-keeper.
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Century | |
An
entity score of at least 100 runs, a considerable landmark for a
batsman. At times used satirically to express a bowler conceding over
100 runs in an innings.
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Charge | |
When
the batsman utilizes his feet and comes out of his batting crease
towards the bowler, trying to hit the ball. Also recognized as giving
the bowler the charge, or stepping down the wicket.
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Cherry | |
The (red) cricket ball, predominantly the new ball. Moreover the red marks left on a cricket bat by the ball.
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Chest on (also front on) | |
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Chin music | |
The
use of a succession of bouncers from pace bowlers to daunt a batsman.
In olden times, it has been used as a method particularly alongside
sub-continental teams because of their rawness of bouncers. Term in use
from baseball.
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Chinaman | |
A
left-handed bowler bowling wrist twirl (left arm eccentric). For a
right-handed batsman, the ball will travel from the off side to the leg
side (left to right on the TV screen). Known after Ellis “Puss” Achong a
West Indian left-arm wrist-spin bowler of Chinese descent.
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Chinese cut | |
(also French cut, Harrow Drive, Staffordshire cut or Surrey cut)
An inside edge which neglects hitting the bases by a few centimeters.
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chunk | |
To
throw the ball in its place of bowling it (i.e. by unbending the elbow
in the delivery); also chucker: a bowler who chucks; and chucking: such
an unlawful bowling action. All are well thought-out offensive terms as
they imply deceitful.
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(The) Circle | |
A
decorated circle (or ellipse), centered in the center of the pitch, of
radius 30 yard (27 m) marked on the field. The circle breaks up the
infield from the outfield, used in policing the fielding rules in
assured one-day versions of the game. The accurate characters of the
boundaries vary depending on the type of game.
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Clean bowled | |
Bowled, devoid of the ball first hitting the bat or pad.
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Close infield | |
The
region together with this by a painted dotted circle of 15 yard (13.7
m) radius calculated from the wicket on every end of the pitch. Used
only in ODI matches.
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Coil | |
Substitute term for back foot contact
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Collapse | |
The failure of numerous wickets in a short space of time.
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Come to the crease | |
A
slogan used to indicate a batsman walking onto the playing ground and
arriving at the cricket pitch in the center of the ground to begin
batting.
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Cordon (or slips cordon) | |
All players fielding in the slides at any time are collectively referred to the slips cordon.
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Corrridor of uncertainity | |
A good
line. The corridor of ambiguity is a notional constricted area on and
just outside a batsman's off stump. If a relief is in the corridor, it
is complex for a batsman to choose whether to leave the ball, play
defensively or play an offensive shot. The term was popularized by ex-
England batsman, now commentator, Geoffrey Boycott
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County cricket | |
The maximum level of domestic cricket in England and Wales.
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Covers | |
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Cow corner | |
The
spot of the field (roughly) among deep mid-wicket and wide long-on. So
called because few 'legitimate' shots are intended to this branch of the
field, so fielders are infrequently placed there – leading to the
perception that cows could cheerfully graze in that area.
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cow shot | |
A
hard shot, habitually in the air, transversely the line of a
full-pitched ball, aspiring to hit the ball over the margin at cow
corner, with very little view to proper procedure. Very authoritative
and a good way of striking boundary sixes, but must be timed flawlessly
to evade being bowled, or each skying the ball or getting a principal
edge and so being caught. A type of slog.
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Crease | |
One of
numerous lines on the pitch near the stumps (the "popping crease", the
"return crease" and the "bowling crease") most repeatedly referring to
the cracking crease.
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Cricket ball | |
A hard, solid ball of cork abrasion string and polished leather with a wide raised equatorial vein.
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Cricketer | |
An individual who plays cricket
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Cross - bat shot | |
A shot played with the bat corresponding with the ground, such as a cut or a pull. Also acknowledged as a horizontal-bat shot.
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Crowd catch | |
A
fielder's stop which escorts to a call from the multitude because at
first intuition it is a dismissal, but which spin out to be not out
(since of a no ball or a bump ball).
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Cut | |
A
shot played square on the off side to a short-pitched rescued wide of
off stump. So called as the batsman makes a "cutting" activity as he
plays the shot.
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Cutter | |
A
break delivery bowled by a speedy or medium-pace bowler with parallel
action to a spin bowler, but at a faster pace. It is generally used in
an effort to astonish the batsman, even though some medium-pace bowlers
use the cutter as their store (main) deliverance.
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Tuesday, 29 October 2013
CRICKET JARGONS : "C"
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