Cricket is a sport played between two teams of 11 players each on a large field, with a pitch in the center. The game has two main roles: batting and bowling.
1. The Pitch and Wickets: The pitch is a 22-yard long strip in the middle of the field with wickets at each end. A wicket consists of three vertical stumps topped by two small horizontal bails.
2. The Objective:
- The batting team's goal is to score runs by hitting the ball and running between the wickets or by hitting the ball to the boundary for four or six runs.
- The bowling team’s objective is to dismiss the batsmen, either by hitting the wickets with the ball (called "bowling out"), catching the ball after it’s hit, or other methods such as run-outs or LBW (Leg Before Wicket).
3. How the Game Progresses:
- The game begins with one team batting and the other bowling/fielding.
- Two batsmen from the batting team are on the field, and the bowlers take turns bowling six deliveries (an over) from one end of the pitch.
- Once 10 batsmen are dismissed (or a set number of overs are bowled in limited-overs cricket), the teams switch roles.
- The team with the most runs after both teams have had their turn to bat wins the match.
4. Game Formats: Cricket is played in various formats, ranging from the fast-paced Twenty20 (T20) matches, which last a few hours, to One Day Internationals (ODIs) which last a day, and Test matches which can last up to five days.
The rules are governed by the "Laws of Cricket," and while it may seem complex at first, the basic goal is simple: score more runs than the other team!
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