Some people say that life’s a game,
well if this is so I’d like to know
the rules on which this game of life is based.
I know of no game more fitting than the age old game of
cricket;
It has honour, it has character and it’s
British. — Cricket, The
Kinks
We live in a United States dominated by the English. Doubters
should look up who inherited the Larry King Live show, who MC’d the
Golden Globes, how many of our top 100 pop songs come from Britain
on any given day, and the nationality of the actor who plays Dr.
House (perhaps the most authentic American ever seen on
televison).
Since the English are everywhere—ostensibly to entertain us,
though there are reasons to suspect other motivations—it is
important for the vigilant American to come armed, at the very
least, with knowledge about these clever invaders. This is
especially true at a time when they are considering a divorce (or
at least separation) with their long-term partner, the
EU.
Anyone trying to get to know the English are spoiled for
options—its history is long, its authors and poets deep in rank.
But since professors and teachers bore into these sources of
knowledge already, it is left to this beleagured scribe to touch
upon a subject near and dear to many true Englishmen’s hearts—the
game of Cricket.
Robin Williams once called cricket “baseball on valium”—but it
is very unlikely that Robin Williams ever faced a Yorker (cricket’s
fast ball). It is much closer to the truth to say that Baseball is
only 90 degrees of Cricket—that is to say, the angle of play from
foul line to foul line. Stepping out onto a cricket pitch is to
step out onto a circular universe. The ball can go off the bat in
any direction to be in play, the aim being to knock it beyond the
white-roped boundary. A bouncing ball out counts as four runs, a
flying ball out counts as six.
The other shift in mind necessary to understand Cricket is the
relationship between the batter and the bowler (pitcher). In
Baseball, the batters challenge the pitcher, who attempts to strike
them out. In Cricket, the bowlers challenge the batter, and are
given six tries (called an over) to do so. The varying lengths of a
Cricket match are determined by the number of overs played,
generally 20, 50, or a test (unlimited).
What this change in perspective does psychologically should be
well understood. Every player will eventually bat once. Battles
between bowler and batter often become long and nuanced. Since a
vanquished batter has no hope of returning to bat again, his every
action has weight and import; his figurative death is on the line.
Surrounded by eleven players quietly intent on this outcome is
enough to make every good cricketer (and by extension every good
Englishman) adept, patient, and devious. Americans, who in their
sporting endeavors always seem to get another chance, should
beware.
Here endeth the first lesson.