Exciting Cricket Match Essay

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Boleslao Drinker

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Aug 3, 2024, 3:31:29 PM8/3/24
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Cricket is a game loved by people worldwide, and I had the pleasure of witnessing an exciting cricket match recently. It was a match between two local teams, and the atmosphere was electrifying, with fans cheering for their respective teams.

Ultimately, the match went down to the last ball, and the batting team needed just one run to win. The bowler was under immense pressure but kept his cool and bowled excellently, and the batsman missed it. The wicketkeeper grabbed the ball and ran towards the stumps, and he dislodged the bails just as the batsman was diving into making his crease. The umpire raised his finger, and the bowling team won the match.

The entire stadium erupted with joy, and the winning team enthusiastically celebrated their victory. It was a thrilling match, and I was glad to have witnessed it. It reminded me of the beauty of sports and how they can unite people.

Cricket is a sport that is enjoyed and loved by millions of people all over the world. The excitement and thrill of a cricket match cannot be compared to any other sport. I recently had the opportunity to witness an exciting cricket match between two of the best teams in the world, and it was a memorable experience.

The match was between India and Australia, played at the Melbourne Cricket Ground. The stadium was packed with over 80,000 fans who had come to watch their favorite teams battle it out on the field. The atmosphere was electric, and the excitement could be felt all around.

India won the toss and decided to bat first. They got off to a good start with their opening batsmen, Rohit Sharma, and Shikhar Dhawan, scoring quick runs. However, the Australian bowlers were not to be underestimated, and they soon took some crucial wickets, putting India on the back foot.

With just two wickets in hand and 20 runs to win off the last over, the match seemed to be slipping away from Australia. However, their all-rounder, Glenn Maxwell, had other plans. He hit two sixes and a four in the last over, and suddenly the equation had come down to just three runs off the last ball.

It was a match that will be remembered for a long time. Both teams played their hearts out, which was a testament to the quality of cricket played by both sides. The match had everything, from brilliant batting to exceptional bowling, and it was a fitting tribute to the sport of cricket.

In conclusion, the excitement and thrill of a cricket match are unparalleled. The match between India and Australia was a prime example of this, and it was a memorable experience that will be cherished by everyone who witnessed it. Cricket truly is a sport that brings people together and creates unforgettable memories.

Sana Mursleen is a student studying English Literature at Lahore Garrison University (LGU). With her love for writing and humor, she writes essays for Top Study World. Sana is an avid reader and has a passion for history, politics, and social issues.

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My father called me up late one Saturday morning to ask if I was watching the IPL match that was coming live from India. It was not on my radar. I was running errands, and I had taken to catching the repeats at night on account of my day job. He was disappointed because the game had been so exciting, he just wanted to share his experience with someone.

Daddy has been tuning in to T20 cricket since the Caribbean Premier League started three years ago. After he had turned away in disgust from West Indies Test cricket, he'd never really paid attention to the shorter forms of the game, not even in his retirement; but then he was never as much a cricket fan as my brothers and I were.

When the CPL came along in 2013 it drew me in, and as my surviving brother was not within reach, when a match excited me, I would phone my father just to share the experience. He would not have been watching, so I would tell him what station he could find it on, and eventually it collared him too. He now loves T20 cricket - more than Tests - and when the West Indies teams won the 2016 World T20 in April, he was the first person I called. To be honest, I never thought I would describe my father as a cricket fan. My mother for sure, but he had always seemed a take-it-or leave-it kind of spectator. T20 cricket changed that.

For about 12 years I worked as a freelancer, setting my own time and pace. Instinctively I avoided scheduling meetings or presentations when cricket was on. My work rhythm moved to a West Indian cricket beat, as I later realised.

"I write on cricket, I have to watch it," I'd say with a kind of smug pleasure. As we entered the 21st century and the slide of West Indies Test cricket seemed unstoppable, it became painful to watch. One by one, then two by more, people averted their eyes. Diehard supporters ignored it; cricket lovers switched sides; the fashionable followers pulled out football jerseys. I couldn't bear to watch it, but I did.

The West Indies men's team was being beaten in every possible humiliating permutation: by nine wickets; by an innings; within two or three days; by rain. The disputes between the West Indies Cricket Board and the West Indies Players' Association fronted more headlines than match results did. West Indies were no longer a drawcard; touring teams trickled through.

A tale of two formats: hardly an empty seat at the Kensington Oval (top) for a CPL game; hardly any takers for seats during a Test match at the Sir Vivian Richards Stadium in Antigua Getty Images, AFP

The stands began to feel ashamed, trying to hide their nakedness as spectators dribbled through the turnstiles - a far cry from the jostling throngs they were accustomed to. Once, a man had taken a stepladder into the Queen's Park Oval and sold its rungs as seats for a few cents (it was a very long time ago) because of the huge crowds. Now, food vendors don't think it's worth their time to cook just to feed a family of four. The last time I went to a Test match, against New Zealand at the Queen's Park Oval in 2014, it was a public holiday. West Indies had a convincing lead. Yet no more than 200 people were there, including security - and entry was free.

All through the West Indian chain, cricket grounds remained empty during Tests - not even mad dogs and Englishmen turned up. The performance of the team was criticised for many reasons: poor fielding, batting and bowling as a result of inadequate training and fitness levels; indifference to outcomes; lack of team spirit; focus on bling or monetary rewards over performance levels; dysfunctional relationships within the management structure, dysfunctional relationships between players, dysfunctional relationships between management and players. It was all dysfunctional and the disappointments festered into bitterness.

Mash up the West Indies and let each territory go it alone as an individual team became the talk up and down the chain. Nearly 30 years ago, when David Rudder sang "Rally Round the West Indies", it had so embraced the spirit of West Indian community that it was officially adopted as the anthem for this band of nations. Instead of banding together in rough times, people were walking off into their separate sunsets.

Some years before the CPL, Allen Stanford, the loud, brash Texan now serving a 110-year prison sentence in the US, opened up the T20 frontier for the Caribbean from his base in Antigua. In October 2005, he announced his plan for a T20 tournament and drew the entire region into his pocket. He spent money lavishly, on cricketing infrastructure, player development, team preparation, and US$2.75 million for a promotional and marketing campaign. The CPL's organisers may have modelled their strategies after Stanford's, given the similarities in their approach. Cricket Played Louder is one of the CPL billboard slogans in Trinidad.

Stanford touched a soft spot when he took on 14 cricket legends as his ambassadors, especially because they had never been particularly venerated by the WICB. In drawing on the experience of former West Indies players as mentors and coaches the CPL too showed respect and appreciation for them; at every match, no matter how deep the party mood, their presence was a visible reminder of the magnificent heritage of West Indies cricket.

There were other similarities. Territorial rivalries were mostly good-natured, tempered by high spirits, pleasant weather and parties galore, so that by the time the finals came around, groups of spectators from all over the region had already made at least one appearance at the Stanford Cricket Ground - just as would happen with the CPL and inter-territorial travel.

Stanford's tournament was as significant to West Indies cricket as Kerry Packer's World Series Cricket had been at the end of the '70s. Stanford offered cash incentives, but insisted on fitness and training, penalising players financially for tardiness at sessions, as Packer had done.

The T20 culture has injected a higher standard of fitness and training globally, so that modern players are visibly stronger and fitter than players of the past, with a lot more than a heavy bat or a mystery ball in their arsenal. Sloppy, lethargic fielding had become the bane of West Indian cricket, and now the players are right up there with the best. In 2012, West Indies won the World T20. The players felt the financial benefits across the world. They had made theirs the team to watch in T20 cricket.

I have followed the tournament with great curiosity since its inception, and it struck me that only something that has managed to penetrate right to the core could have caused so many changes in such a short time. It has only been four years, and the CPL has come to be acclaimed internationally as the biggest party in the sport. Its blend of fabulous locations and exciting cricket combine to provide the perfect tourist package. (Those two elements had been an integral part of West Indies cricket once upon a time.)

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