It's not just the momentum but the attitude. There's no option not to run after a fair ball, so hitters aren't defensive in most situations and hit as hard as they can. Also, in terms of glove, there are going to be lots of 90mph + throws by players other than the pitcher often followed tag plays (similar to run outs) involving runners sliding into your hands with their bodies or spikes during routine defense if you are an infielder, whereas in cricket it is definitely unusual to touch an opposing player for any reason.In all fairness, the cricket ball weighs a good 1/4 oz more than the baseball.
I know in Baseball there is Exit velocity, a new addition to the stats. I think Judge and Stanton hits the hardest (117 mph exit velocity).
I think that is higher that the speed off the cricket bat.
Momentum is higher in baseball, so there is your danger to life.
It's not just the momentum but the attitude. There's no option not to run after a fair ball, so hitters aren't defensive in most situations and hit as hard as they can. Also, in terms of glove, there are going to be lots of 90mph + throws by players other than the pitcher often followed tag plays (similar to run outs) involving runners sliding into your hands with their bodies or spikes during routine defense if you are an infielder, whereas in cricket it is definitely unusual to touch an opposing player for any reason.
Also there's not a lot you can do in the time allotted as pitchers have no obligation to tell you how fast the deliveries will be or whether they will be ridiculous drops or hooks at 80 mphunsophisticated swinging with more momentum generally.
Here's the thing: I'm trying to figure out what I am missing. Announcers in any sport tend to lean on jargon, and there's a lot of that in the Willow telecasts. I can see the dynamic between the bowling team and the batsmen though it is complicated by what seems like a lot of weak execution by the bowlers who don't seem to have much or any idea where the ball lands or what happens after that. But I am not seeing anything in terms of individual fielding, team defense, or situational play by either team as one might if the NFL football is on the 10 yard line as opposed to the fifty and it is first down rather than fourth down, where even newbs can see different approaches to what is going on.Yeah, you ought to stop drawing parallels to baseball and cricket in its own right. Just watch the game as Andmark said and go from there.
Other side of same coin is "how do I get someone out?" I had been under the impression that tests were a batsman's game as he had the option of nubbing bowls all day until he got one he liked while wearing out his opponent whereas t20 was a bowler's game because he didn't have to worry about outs, just being deceptive enough and close enough to the wicket to prevent big hits, but maybe it is the other way round, with the t20 being the batsman's game because he is freed from the duty of defending the wicket all the time and able to swing away, as did Gayle when he scored 50 runs single handedly in about two overs by smushing sixes into the second deck and tests being the bowler's game if he can avoid mistakes and occasionally take advantage of impatient batsmen.There's an extent to which analogies will be helpful though. The similarities between the 2 sports probably end at "hit ball with bat". Just watch it and go with the flow.
Maybe, but he is going through a lot of effort even tracking down a 2 year old thread he created...The guy does not actually want to learn about cricket you oafs.
Lokomotive multi?The guy does not actually want to learn about cricket you oafs.