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TECHNICAL JARGONS

Cricket Jargons

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G

Gardening

A batsman poking at the pitch with his bat amid deliveries, also to flatten a bump in the pitch, to soothe his own exhausted nerves or merely to waste time or upset the pulse of the bowler. Well thought-out teasing as there is not truly a point to it

Gazunder

An Australian idiom recounting a delivery that fails to bounce to the anticipated height after bouncing, thus beating the batsman and "goes under" the bat. Frequently outcomes in batsmen being out bowled.

Getting your eye in

When the batsman takes his time to judge the situation of the pitch, ball or weather etc before initial to challenge more potentially hazardous strokes.

Given man

Known men were players in the near the beginning olden times of cricket who did not in general play for a meticulous side but were included, for a particular game, to make stronger .in the early hours first-class matches were typically the subject of big wagers and it was for that reason enviable that the two sides should be alleged as being of roughly equal power. The view is like to that of handicapping in fresh horse racing, whereby horses hold varied weights in a shot to make equal their chance of winning, once more to support betting.

Glance

The shot played extraordinarily fine following the batsman on the leg side. A glimpse is characteristically played on a short-pitched ball.

Glove

Part of a batsman's kit worn out to shield the hands from accidental injury. When a hand is in contact with the bat it is well thought-out part of the bat and so a player can be given out wedged to a ball that came off the glove hence "gloved a catch."

Glovemanship (also Gauntlet work)

The skill of wicket keeping. eg 'A spectacular display of glovemanship from the wicketkeeper.'

Golden Duck

A discharge for nought (zero), from the first ball looked in a batsman's innings. (Platinum duck)

Golden pair (also King pair)

A notice for nought (zero) runs off the first ball faced in apiece of a batsman's two innings of a two-innings game.

Good length

The ultimate place for a stock delivery to pitch in its curve from the bowler to the batsman. It makes the batsman indecisive whether to play a front-foot or back-foot shot. A good duration differs from bowler to bowler, based on the brand and speed of the bowler. The "good length" is not essentially the best length to bowl, as a bowler may wish to bowl short or full to utilize a batsman's weaknesses.

Googly

An unreliable spinning delivery by a leg spin bowler, also identified (particularly in Australia) as the wrong 'un. For a right-hander bowler and a right-handed batsman, a googly will turn from the off side to the leg side. Urbanized by Bosanquet around 1900, and in earlier times called a bosie or bosey.

Gouging

Rooting intentional break to the pitch or ball.

Grafting

Batting defensively with well-built emphasis on not getting out, frequently under hard conditions.

Green Top

A pitch with an abnormally high total of visible grass, which might be anticipated to assist the bowlers.

Grip

The rubber covering used on the handle of the bat. The word is also used to portray how the bowler holds the ball and how the batsman holds the bat.

Ground man (or curator)

An individual responsible for retaining the cricket field and organizing the pitch.

Grubber

A delivery that hardly springs.

(Taking) Guard

The batsman supporting his bat according with a stump (or between stumps) preferred behind him. Normally, the batter scripts the point of the bat on the pitch. The marking(s) give the hit an idea as to where s/he is standing in next of kin to the stumps.

Gully

A close fielder near the slip fielders, at an angle to a line amid the two sets of stumps of about 100 to 140 degrees.

Gun Bowler

Principal offensive bowler in a team. Occasionally used in bowls and ten-pin bowling.


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