jay gandhi → cricket: If you thought Twenty20 was the ultimate form of 'cricket condensed',
think again. A new, even more truncated version called Last Man Stands
is rapidly expanding from its London base to a national and
international playing pool.... moreIf you thought Twenty20 was the ultimate form of 'cricket condensed',
think again. A new, even more truncated version called Last Man Stands
is rapidly expanding from its London base to a national and
international playing pool.
Anybody walking the dog in Battersea or Hyde Park would notice some differences between LMS and a traditional game of cricket.
It is eight a side. There are five balls in an over (and it’s a
maximum of four overs per bowler). Run-ups are limited to 10 yards.
To speed the two-hour games up, 10 overs in a row are bowled from one end, and then the final 10 from the other.
It’s possible to take a catch and then run the other batsman out less
If you thought Twenty20 was the ultimate form of 'cricket condensed', think again. A new, even more truncated version called Last Man Stands is rapidly expanding from its London base to a national and international playing pool.
Anybody walking the dog... moreIf you thought Twenty20 was the ultimate form of 'cricket condensed', think again. A new, even more truncated version called Last Man Stands is rapidly expanding from its London base to a national and international playing pool.
Anybody walking the dog in Battersea or Hyde Park would notice some differences between LMS and a traditional game of cricket.
It is eight a side. There are five balls in an over (and it’s a maximum of four overs per bowler). Run-ups are limited to 10 yards.
To speed the two-hour games up, 10 overs in a row are bowled from one end, and then the final 10 from the other.
It’s possible to take a catch and then run the other batsman out less
If you thought Twenty20 was the ultimate form of 'cricket condensed', think again. A new, even more truncated version called Last Man Stands is rapidly expanding from its London base to a national and international playing pool.
Anybody walking the dog in Battersea or Hyde Park would notice some differences between LMS and a traditional game of cricket.
It is eight a side. There are five balls in an over (and it’s a maximum of four overs per bowler). Run-ups are limited to 10 yards.
To speed the two-hour games up, 10 overs in a row are bowled from one end, and then the final 10 from the other.
It’s possible to take a catch and then run the other batsman out