Windball cricket
Windball cricket is a bat-and-ball game, a version of cricket, played between two teams. It is an 8-overs-a-side contest and played mostly on concrete surface.[1] The ball used in this type of cricket is made out of soft plastic material and gives a more consistent bounce on concrete surfaces with less wear and tear than regular or tape balls.
It is very popular in West Indian cricket-playing countries,[1] especially in Trinidad where it is the usual form of backyard cricket.[2]
References
- ^ a b Prasad, Bagawati. "'Windball cricket' key to Narine's batting success". Cricbuzz. Retrieved 2017-04-26.
- ^ Wigmore, Tim; Wilde, Freddie (2019). Cricket 2.0: Inside the T20 Revolution. Birlinn. p. 215. ISBN 9781788851886.
External links
- T&T Wind Ball Cricket Association
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Forms of cricket
- Test cricket
- One Day International
- Twenty20 International
- Women's Test cricket
- Women's One Day International
- Women's Twenty20 International
- First-class cricket
- Limited overs cricket
- List A cricket
- Twenty20
- Women's Twenty20
- Club cricket
- T10 cricket
- 100-ball cricket
- Indoor cricket
- Indoor cricket (UK variant)
- Single Wicket
- Double Wicket
- French cricket
- Backyard or street cricket
- Bete-ombro
- Kwik cricket
- Blind cricket
- Deaf cricket
- One-armed versus one-legged
- Kilikiti
- Trobriand cricket
- Short form cricket
- Tape ball cricket
- Tennis ball cricket
- Beach cricket
- Ice cricket
- Windball cricket
- Last man stands cricket
- Softball cricket
- Leg cricket
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