Sunday 1 December 2013

CRICKET JARGONS : "T"

Tail

Also described the lower order refers to the end batsmen in a team’s innings that are frequently made up of high-quality bowlers and usually contains one rabbit or more. A long tail means that a squad contains many expert bowlers while shorter tails indicates there are more batsmen/all-rounders in the squad. If the tail executes well it is said that the tail wiggled.

Tail-ender

A batsman who bats towards the finish of the batting order, regularly a specialist bowler or wicket-keeper with fairly poor batting skills. The preceding of the tail-enders is colloquially known as "bunnies".

Target

The score that the side batting second has to achieve to beat their challengers. This is one run more than what the side batting first directed.

Tea

The instant of the two intervals throughout a full day's play is identified as the tea interval, owing to its timing at about tea-time. In games lasting only an afternoon, the tea break is usually taken amid innings.

Tea towel explanation

A well-liked comic clarification of the laws of cricket.

Teesra

A distinction delivery for an off spin bowler, Saqlain Mushtaq has been qualified with creating it. Teesra comes from the Urdu meaning the third one.

 

  1. A doosra with additional bounce.

 

  1. A ball that floats in from broad of off stump and turns left from the right hander piercingly with more bounce.

The genuine definition of this ball has yet to have been definitively proclaimed.

Test match

A cricket contest with play stretch over five days with boundless overs played among two senior international teams. Well thought-out the highest level of the match.

Textbook shot

A shot played by the batsmen with ideal technique, also recognized as a cricket shot.

Third umpire

An off-field umpire, outfitted with a television monitor, whose assist the two on-field umpires can ask for when in suspicion.

Through the gate

"Bowled through the gate": sacked with a ball that exceeds between the bat and the pads before striking the wicket.

Throwing

Of a bowler, a banned bowling action in which the arm is smooth down during the delivery.

Tice

An older name for a Yorker.

Tickle

An edge to the wicket-keeper or slides. Instead a fragile shot typically played to third man or fine leg.

Tie

The (very infrequent) outcome in which the two squad’s scores are equal and the side batting last is all out (or, in a partial overs match, the allotted overs have been played). Not to be perplexed with a draw, in which the scores are not identical.

Tied down

A batsmen or batting squad having their run-making limited by the bowling side.

Timed match

A match whose period is based on a set amount of time relatively than a set number of overs. Timed matches typically have a draw as a possible result, in accumulation to the win/loss or tie that can be realized in restricted overs cricket. First-class cricket consists of timed games.

Timing

The skill of striking the ball so that it smacks the bat's sweet spot. A "well-timed" shot conveys great rate to the ball but appears graceful.

Ton (also century)

100 runs attained by a single batsman in an innings.

Top order

The batsmen batting at figure 3 and 4 (and occasionally at 5 as well) in the batting order

Top spin

Forward rotation on the ball, causing it to boost tempo instantly after pitching.

Tour

A well thought-out schedule of matches requiring journey away from the side’s normal base. Used especially in international cricket to explain the delegate team of one nation playing a sequence of matches in another nation.

Tourist

An associate of a cricket side undertaking a tour.

Track

One more phrase for the pitch.

Trundler

A consistent, steady medium-pace bowler who is not particularly good, but is not above all bad either.

Twelfth man

Customarily, the first alternate player who fields when a member of the fielding side is hurt. In Test games, twelve players are termed to a side prior to the game, with the final decline to eleven occurring directly prior to play beginning on the first day. This gives the skipper some litheness in team selection; reliant on the conditions (e.g. a twirl bowler may be named to the side, but omitted if the skipper feels that the ground is not appropriate for spin bowling).

Twenty20 (or T20)

An innovative, fast paced, type of cricket restricted to twenty overs per innings, in addition some other rules changes, purposely designed to broaden the request of the game.

 

 

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