Haven't watched it have you? It's a bad pitchOh ok, are T20s now officially not allowed to be on good pitches? Good to know.
No, I haven't, but I was looking forward to watching it. That means it's a good pitch.Haven't watched it have you? It's a bad pitch
still should have kept playing though
This is the sport that refused to move the lunch break for any reason for over 100 yearsFFS, if everyone can agree that it's one end that is so bad just bowl all the overs from the other one.
Still good to watch tbh. But it's pretty bad. Not just a bit of sideways movement/up and down. The wicket is clearly too wet, balls are stopping and ballooning. Big risk of someone breaking a finger maybe but that's always a chance in a game of cricket.No, I haven't, but I was looking forward to watching it. That means it's a good pitch.
*no rssultStill good to watch tbh. But it's pretty bad. Not just a bit of sideways movement/up and down. The wicket is clearly too wet, balls are stopping and ballooning. Big risk of someone breaking a finger maybe but that's always a chance in a game of cricket.
Disappointing result*.
Umpires are the ones who started the gameThat's got to be somewhat embarrassing for someone or some party.
I suppose the defence is that club bowlers are not as fast, though no one actually seems to have made that.These pitches show up in club cricket around the country all the time. A lot of the time you don't even start on them unless the pitch and run ups dry out later in the day. But if you start you generally play out the game. Only time you might abandon a game in my experience is if the run ups are deemed dangerous and a fast bowler has enough of a whinge
the punters are left geeshortHunky ****ing-dory no way, where's our refund.