It is the rope and not the fence that is the boundary of the field of play. Weet-bix is a heavily-advertised and completely flavourless kind of breakfast cereal.
Or plain weet bix with butter sugar and jam. I don't expect any American to handle that. U can not eat them with no milk. Try eating 4 with no liquids.
- The batsmen can choose their own numbers as long as they're not already taken by someone on their own team - 1st ball was a wide - anything down the leg side (if the bat doen't touch it) in T20 and ODI's is a wide - People have already alluded to the boundary - it's the rope that counts as the boundary, not the fence by the spectators - Gayle relies mostly on brute force to get the ball over the boundary, sometimes he gets it out the middle too - A "Yorker" is a ball that pitches (hits the ground) pretty much at the crease line. They are very difficult to hit if you don't adjust where your feet are as you would need to make sure the ball can't get through between the bat and the ground, maning that you generally need to hit the toe of the bat into the ground taking all the power out of the shot. Generally speaking, if a batsman can't pick up the yorker early and adjust his length, it'll end up being a dot ball or a wicket. - In T20, Gayle is definitely one of the best, but in other forms of the game, there are/were much better
The boundary is the rope just inside the fence, not the fence itself. Reason is to stop fielders injuring themselves running into the fence trying to catch the ball or stop a 4.
The first ball "beat him for pace" a reminder that I can bowl!! Intimidation didn't work, oops! He is incredibly strong in the shoulders, hitting a six in Melbourne is hard! 😲
Yorker means it's bowled or pitched at the batsman's feet. Makes it hard to hit with the bat. Would u rather a waist high pitch or at your feet? Both are legal
Chris Gayle was unbelievable when he was 'on'. His style was laid back and also risky, but when it worked, HOLY COW! 😮😮 POWER and TIMING. GLORIOUS! 🥰 M 🦘🏏😎
the first ball of the match that missed behind his leg is called a wide ball, and it is like a ball in baseball but in cricket the batting team gets a free run from that.
Just watching some of your older stuff here and need to explain a 6, the fence you see is not necessarily part of the circle the game is played in. You might notice the small white or coloured ring inside the fence, this is measured from whichever wicket strip they are playing on and is the actual fence they need to hit it over for a 6 and 4 if the ball contacts the ground before it. If you look carefully at the wicket, you would notice there are others besides the one being used so the fence is always moved depending on one they are playing on. To better appreciate the game, you need to watch a full game starting with a T20 (most exciting) game lasting around 2 1/2 hrs, then watch a 50 over game lasting around 3 1/2hrs (reasonably exciting) then you can set yourself up for a Test Match lasting up to 5 days (can be exciting if your eyes are glued to watching nothing much happen) and this is the greatest testament to you if you learn to love cricket in how it should be played.
The advantage of being a left handed bowler is downs to if the batsman is right handed. Because it changes if someone is bowling wicket to wicket as opposed to across the wicket line. I
I was wondering why the Captain and Bowlers where setting the fielders, when all the balls where going into the stands, shouldn't they be warning the people in the stands instead? LOL!!!
You asked if he was doing stretching exercises. What he was doing was marking the crease. When a batter first stands in front of the stumps s/he tells the umpire which stump they want to guard - leg, middle, off, middle and leg or middle and off and places the bat edge on towards the umpire in front of the stumps. The umpire signals to move the bat left or right so that the required stump is guarded and the batter then scratches the crease with a foot to mark the spot. If the batter hits the ball and gets one or three runs, for the next over the batter is at the other end of the pitch and has to mark the guard again. This is what Gayle was doing after changing ends having already scored at the other end. There are advantages and disadvantages in taking guard on different stumps.
Ryan was the fastest bowler’s around bowl at 100 miles an hour the ball is not very big get a Mate to peg a Cricket ball at a set off wicket’s You try and hit it see how You go. Very hard sport I might say the ball is very hard it hurts like Your site.
Chris Gayle is the boss. In the Caribbean they call him the Universe Boss
The reason he wears number 333 is that was his highest test match score.
6s and 4s dont have anything to do withe fence its actually the small barrier a few metres away from the fence
Except, it’s less than 20 years since the fence WAS the boundary at the international level. The ropes now used are relatively new.
He is a monster
It is the rope and not the fence that is the boundary of the field of play.
Weet-bix is a heavily-advertised and completely flavourless kind of breakfast cereal.
I wouldn’t say “completely flavourless”. It has a distinctly cardboard taste! 😆
Yeh just add sugar and honey its one of the healthiest foods in the world. Can't go wrong with adding to it. Any fruit will work.
Or plain weet bix with butter sugar and jam. I don't expect any American to handle that. U can not eat them with no milk. Try eating 4 with no liquids.
please listen to the commentators, they will help you understand the game! ❤
Yes really is a marvellous effort that 😉
Those weird balls were attempt to get him catch out, but his every hit was out of the fence!
beast indeed!!
I was at that game!!!!!
a little more volume for us that havent seen it before please
no pressure bro! 🤣🤣
333 is his best score he made
- The batsmen can choose their own numbers as long as they're not already taken by someone on their own team
- 1st ball was a wide - anything down the leg side (if the bat doen't touch it) in T20 and ODI's is a wide
- People have already alluded to the boundary - it's the rope that counts as the boundary, not the fence by the spectators
- Gayle relies mostly on brute force to get the ball over the boundary, sometimes he gets it out the middle too
- A "Yorker" is a ball that pitches (hits the ground) pretty much at the crease line. They are very difficult to hit if you don't adjust where your feet are as you would need to make sure the ball can't get through between the bat and the ground, maning that you generally need to hit the toe of the bat into the ground taking all the power out of the shot. Generally speaking, if a batsman can't pick up the yorker early and adjust his length, it'll end up being a dot ball or a wicket.
- In T20, Gayle is definitely one of the best, but in other forms of the game, there are/were much better
Good vid btw :)
The numbers on the back are chosen by players and Gayle likes 333 for some reason
That stadium has a closing roof in Melbourne Australia
Bro, react to his 175 runs vs pwi innings. Gayle is the monster in this game
Gayle calls himself - the Universe Boss
The boundary is the rope just inside the fence, not the fence itself. Reason is to stop fielders injuring themselves running into the fence trying to catch the ball or stop a 4.
The first ball "beat him for pace" a reminder that I can bowl!! Intimidation didn't work, oops! He is incredibly strong in the shoulders, hitting a six in Melbourne is hard! 😲
If the ball lands near the toes it's called a Yorker
Yorker means it's bowled or pitched at the batsman's feet. Makes it hard to hit with the bat. Would u rather a waist high pitch or at your feet? Both are legal
Chris Gayle was unbelievable when he was 'on'. His style was laid back and also risky, but when it worked, HOLY COW! 😮😮 POWER and TIMING. GLORIOUS! 🥰
M 🦘🏏😎
the first ball of the match that missed behind his leg is called a wide ball, and it is like a ball in baseball but in cricket the batting team gets a free run from that.
Just watching some of your older stuff here and need to explain a 6, the fence you see is not necessarily part of the circle the game is played in. You might notice the small white or coloured ring inside the fence, this is measured from whichever wicket strip they are playing on and is the actual fence they need to hit it over for a 6 and 4 if the ball contacts the ground before it. If you look carefully at the wicket, you would notice there are others besides the one being used so the fence is always moved depending on one they are playing on.
To better appreciate the game, you need to watch a full game starting with a T20 (most exciting) game lasting around 2 1/2 hrs, then watch a 50 over game lasting around 3 1/2hrs (reasonably exciting) then you can set yourself up for a Test Match lasting up to 5 days (can be exciting if your eyes are glued to watching nothing much happen) and this is the greatest testament to you if you learn to love cricket in how it should be played.
Watch the rules of cricket explained, that video may provide further clarity.
The advantage of being a left handed bowler is downs to if the batsman is right handed. Because it changes if someone is bowling wicket to wicket as opposed to across the wicket line.
I
333 is his highest individual score, he is from kingston jamaica🇯🇲
I was wondering why the Captain and Bowlers where setting the fielders, when all the balls where going into the stands, shouldn't they be warning the people in the stands instead? LOL!!!
Look out for Marcus Stounis he's Australian! 👍😁👋
You asked if he was doing stretching exercises. What he was doing was marking the crease. When a batter first stands in front of the stumps s/he tells the umpire which stump they want to guard - leg, middle, off, middle and leg or middle and off and places the bat edge on towards the umpire in front of the stumps. The umpire signals to move the bat left or right so that the required stump is guarded and the batter then scratches the crease with a foot to mark the spot. If the batter hits the ball and gets one or three runs, for the next over the batter is at the other end of the pitch and has to mark the guard again. This is what Gayle was doing after changing ends having already scored at the other end. There are advantages and disadvantages in taking guard on different stumps.
He's great. Just ask him.
just to let you know Chris Gayle's 333 he chose that number in cricket the numbers don't go to the hundreds
Bro !! Plz react on " Pakistan is the land of swing and pace"
Ure correct sir really poor bowling, they were scared to death of the beast Gayle
React to yuvraj singh 6 sixes in 6 balls.
Muralitharan wears No. 800
Watch Virat Kohli best verbal movment (ESPNcricinfo)
Oh god, change your bowling angle! He's hitting the middle of the bat easily! 😵😫
His highest score
Cricket is more exciting than baseball because a batter can stay in and hit multiple home runs. The fielding team has to get him out.
The bowler is nervous, can't you tell
react on tamim iqbal 144* in BPL final.
Ryan was the fastest bowler’s around bowl at 100 miles an hour the ball is not very big get a Mate to peg a Cricket ball at a set off wicket’s You try and hit it see how You go. Very hard sport I might say the ball is very hard it hurts like Your site.
Dude..learn what you're talking about before you talk cricket