Members were asked to vote for a suitable topic and then submit articles to be voted on anonymously.
This thread will contain the articles and a poll; any discussion of the articles, which one you voted for etc should be in the original thread.
The second topic to be written about was "Cricket: A batsmans' game?". The articles follow:
Article number 1 - IloveGilly
"Cricket, a game consisted of three important aspects to create one of the most popular sports around the globe. Bowling, fielding and lastly batting. Can this game really be a batsman?s game?
To start off, the average game of cricket in known for the two main aspects of the game which portrays cricket? Bowling and batting. But is there an unbalanced favor towards batting somewhere down the road? Or could there possibly be a reason too why the game of cricket is being described as a batsman?s game.
Batting is considered important in every class of cricket. Whether it is test cricket or our newly created Twenty20 cricket. Then again, what is cricket without runs?
The first issue that could be one-sided is ?why do most captain?s bat first most of the time?? Could it be because there is some kind of an advantage batting first or could it just be better to bat first? Nowadays it seems that the world?s cricket pitches are of high quality and of high expectation, this has no doubt set a standard for world cricket. What does this do? This creates the perfect setting for the batting team. This can tell us a lot of things. It can justify that batting is usually more important when it comes to winning the toss or this can just tell us that batting is simple the better option.
If batsman have a larger affect on the game that would conclude to the point that scoring would be quite high. For the past year this has been proven on countless occasions in the ODIs. The first was Australia?s emphatic lost against South Africa after Australia set the record of the highest score of 434 but soon after SA set the new highest ODI score of 438. This set a tone for some horrible bowling figures, but this wasn?t the end of the 400 reign as Sri Lanka?s infamous high score of 443 set an even newer tone to ODI batting. Not that long ago SA created another score of 418. In all these games the bowlers just couldn?t do anything.
Not all of the last year has been high scores; it has resulted in some class bowling in the champion?s trophy and showed that high scores aren?t everything with the compiled amounts of low scores and proving that wickets being even more vital than runs. Another thing that has changed during the last year is use of the ?Power play? feature. Was this an attempt to raise the run-raise even more or was it designed as a tactical move for the bowlers especially to help support them in faster wicket taking?
Another part of the game that makes up cricket is the audience. What do they come to see? Entertainment. How is entertainment created? Runs, runs and even more runs. This creates a setting of under-rating and under-appreciating the class of bowlers. A five wicket haul isn?t as appealing as a century to the viewing audience and there expectations are mainly relied on the scoreboard continuing to tick up, sixes and batting milestones. The likes of seeing fast balls, bouncers, chances and some friendly banter aren?t as exhilarating to the audience as what the batsman can do.
In high scoring encounters the bowlers are always under pressure to maintain the scoreboard. In low scoring encounters the bowlers are under pressure to take quick wickets and maintain the scoreboard, which shows that not only does the batsman play the important role but the bowler does too. You could even say they play an even more important role depending on the look of the game.
The bowler plays a vital role in maintaining the line, length and at the same time trying to get a wicket, the bowling requirements in international cricket nowadays are now of high standards. Underperforming in the game of cricket is treated with the same consequences as batsman. A dropping. So why are they determined so differently when it is clear that it?s not a batsman?s game?
The only conclusion we can come to is that Cricket cannot be described as batsman?s game. Coming to the point that the bowler?s role should not go under rated. We cannot mistake the game of cricket as a batsman?s game because of the runs they make or even the higher amount of entertainment they create. We wait for the era that the men holding the ball are considered a part of cricket equally among the men holding the bats."
This thread will contain the articles and a poll; any discussion of the articles, which one you voted for etc should be in the original thread.
The second topic to be written about was "Cricket: A batsmans' game?". The articles follow:
Article number 1 - IloveGilly
"Cricket, a game consisted of three important aspects to create one of the most popular sports around the globe. Bowling, fielding and lastly batting. Can this game really be a batsman?s game?
To start off, the average game of cricket in known for the two main aspects of the game which portrays cricket? Bowling and batting. But is there an unbalanced favor towards batting somewhere down the road? Or could there possibly be a reason too why the game of cricket is being described as a batsman?s game.
Batting is considered important in every class of cricket. Whether it is test cricket or our newly created Twenty20 cricket. Then again, what is cricket without runs?
The first issue that could be one-sided is ?why do most captain?s bat first most of the time?? Could it be because there is some kind of an advantage batting first or could it just be better to bat first? Nowadays it seems that the world?s cricket pitches are of high quality and of high expectation, this has no doubt set a standard for world cricket. What does this do? This creates the perfect setting for the batting team. This can tell us a lot of things. It can justify that batting is usually more important when it comes to winning the toss or this can just tell us that batting is simple the better option.
If batsman have a larger affect on the game that would conclude to the point that scoring would be quite high. For the past year this has been proven on countless occasions in the ODIs. The first was Australia?s emphatic lost against South Africa after Australia set the record of the highest score of 434 but soon after SA set the new highest ODI score of 438. This set a tone for some horrible bowling figures, but this wasn?t the end of the 400 reign as Sri Lanka?s infamous high score of 443 set an even newer tone to ODI batting. Not that long ago SA created another score of 418. In all these games the bowlers just couldn?t do anything.
Not all of the last year has been high scores; it has resulted in some class bowling in the champion?s trophy and showed that high scores aren?t everything with the compiled amounts of low scores and proving that wickets being even more vital than runs. Another thing that has changed during the last year is use of the ?Power play? feature. Was this an attempt to raise the run-raise even more or was it designed as a tactical move for the bowlers especially to help support them in faster wicket taking?
Another part of the game that makes up cricket is the audience. What do they come to see? Entertainment. How is entertainment created? Runs, runs and even more runs. This creates a setting of under-rating and under-appreciating the class of bowlers. A five wicket haul isn?t as appealing as a century to the viewing audience and there expectations are mainly relied on the scoreboard continuing to tick up, sixes and batting milestones. The likes of seeing fast balls, bouncers, chances and some friendly banter aren?t as exhilarating to the audience as what the batsman can do.
In high scoring encounters the bowlers are always under pressure to maintain the scoreboard. In low scoring encounters the bowlers are under pressure to take quick wickets and maintain the scoreboard, which shows that not only does the batsman play the important role but the bowler does too. You could even say they play an even more important role depending on the look of the game.
The bowler plays a vital role in maintaining the line, length and at the same time trying to get a wicket, the bowling requirements in international cricket nowadays are now of high standards. Underperforming in the game of cricket is treated with the same consequences as batsman. A dropping. So why are they determined so differently when it is clear that it?s not a batsman?s game?
The only conclusion we can come to is that Cricket cannot be described as batsman?s game. Coming to the point that the bowler?s role should not go under rated. We cannot mistake the game of cricket as a batsman?s game because of the runs they make or even the higher amount of entertainment they create. We wait for the era that the men holding the ball are considered a part of cricket equally among the men holding the bats."