Wicket_(sport)

Wicket (sport)

Wicket (sport)

18th-century American form of cricket


Wicket or wicket ball was an American form of cricket played up until the 1800s.[1][2][3]

George Washington played it once with his soldiers.[4]

Rules

Wicket used a wicket which was much wider and shorter than a cricket wicket, and a bat that resembled a spoon. There were up to 30 fielders and 3 innings, making the game finish in a day.[5]

The creases that batters had to run across to score runs were called "Tick Marks", scoring a run (which happened when the batters crossed each other running to the other wicket) could be called a "cross", and the cricket pitch where the ball was bowled was called an alley. Run outs were known as "ticking [out]" the batter.[6] In some forms of wicket, a batter could be out LBW if the ball hit them on the body (known as a "sham" or "shinning") thrice under certain circumstances.[7]


References

  1. ""Wicket is a vanished game that for more than a century was the dominant game of parts of New England, notably Connecticut, and the Western Reserve, extending to Ohio and what is now termed the Midwest. Not baseball and not cricket, it may be understood as a primitive form of cricket, one no longer played in England by the middle of the 18th century."". Ourgame.mlblogs.com. 24 May 2017. Retrieved 15 March 2022.
  2. "Friends of Vintage Baseball". 3.238.31.98. Retrieved 15 March 2022.

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