You can add another one to that list of greatest innings ever - Glenn Maxwell produced one of the greatest innings ever just a few days back, scoring 201 not out, out of Australia's total of 293 in a match where they looked like they had no chance of winning. And if that's not enough, he was injured for much of it and couldn't really run properly. His runs included ten sixes and 21 boundary fours and came off just 128 balls.
@@devaanshduggal824that's not correct I guess, in tests there has been 46 hat tricks ever in over 2000 games while each game has uto 4 innings played and in ODIs 50 hat tricks in more than 4500 games. It's quite rare.
Do the statistics matter in this? I mean hattrick is very difficult for bowlers but still they take it, which is great and we should not see it as just a statistic
I am 15 years old and I’ve been playing cricket since I was 6 years old and at first I thought the game was extremely confusing but now after playing it for almost 10 years I absolutely love it. The best thing I’ve ever done in the game is get a 6 wicket haul while also getting 32 runs in the same game . I absolutely love it. My idol in the game is definitely MS Dhoni and Virat Kohli and it is just such a fun game that gets a lot of hate for no reason but I absolutely love it
The Word "Hat-Trick" originated from Cricket. Earlier days, English Clubs used to give the bowler a new hat if he take three wickets consecutively. The word then spread across the word and now used by everyone to point out three consecutive events.
A hat trick is more of a lifetime achievement at the pro level. I got one at school and it felt amazing. It is definitely a lot more rare than a grand slam.
It was his last game at a professional level, and if that run out had been effected, it would have been a team hat-trick (bowler doesn't get credit for run-outs) and his team would have won the competition for that season. The Perth team (in orange), or WA teams in general, are very successful in all competitions.
A guy in Brisbane a couple of weeks ago was playing against a team that needed 5 runs to win. He proceeded to take six wickets in six balls, ending up with a quadruple hat trick (balls 1-3, 2-4, 3-5, 4-6) and winning the game.
@@andrewharvey1289, never heard of a king hat trick before but have definitely seen the term quadruple hat trick previously. If 6 in 6 is a king hat trick, what is 5 in 5 and 4 in 4?
@@markwestaway7207 4 wickets in 4 consecutive balls used to be called a Double Hattrick......but everything is now changed or still changing. The Socialist Gestapo are changing history, language meaning, law etc etc, forcing the changes onto society and claiming to be DEMOCRATIC !!!
As an Australian who plays baseball as a starting pitcher, I know my cricket as well. A hat trick is very similar to three up three down with just 3 pitches. Another thing, the reaction time is a bit different in both as well. On average it’s around 0.3 of a second to react to a four seam and around 0.8 to a 140km fast bowler. In baseball though you have a pretty good idea where the pitch will be, around the strike zone. In cricket the ball can be almost anywhere. It could be a Yorker that’s lands at your feet, a bouncer that bounces up at your head and body. Cricket is a bit more dangerous too. People have died
The heartbreak clip was of Australian Player Brett Lee, he is one of the greatest fast bowlers of all time. And that clip is from Final of a league and that was his last game of career
LOL he is/was the most consistently fast bowler ever. Yes maybe Shoaib and Thompson may have a slightlty faster 'fastest' ball - but if you looked at avg speeds, Brett Lee is one of a kind. Consistently 145-155 througout his careet, maybe 140-150 in the final years. Now we get excited if a Mark Wood or Lockie Ferguson gets one occasional 147k delivery. 147 was Brett Lee's avg.@@ramshrivastava6333
@@ramshrivastava6333 ONCE ?...Look it up again...He once bowled AN over in New Zealand where he hit 160kph twice in that one over and AVERAGED >155kph.
@@AT-ti8xe 100mph for the Americans. He wasn't the first to do it and he didn't do it consistently, but as far as I can tell nobody enjoyed it when he did.
Btw, I was at Singleton Park in Abertawe in 1968 when Garry Sobers (Nottinghamshire & West Indies) became the first man to score six consecutive sixes in first class cricket. It was one of very few occasions when, as a teenager, I was speechless. I was supporting the other team, Morgannwg.
Cricket is as much a mind game as it is a physical sport. Planning and on the moment decisions play a massive role in the result. The captain is not just a figure head like in some other sports but his moment to moment decision in the field, for which he has to bear sole responsibility, make or break the game. Ability to stay calm under pressure is an immensely valued skill in cricket.
There was a boundary catch, women's international in the last couple of seasons, where the catcher saved it, throwing it up and back over the boundary, then recovered herself and caught the ball for a dismissal. One of the best I ever saw, must try to find it.
Cricket Explained to a Foreigner You have two sides, one out in the field and one in. Each man that’s in the side that’s in the field goes out and when he’s out comes in and the next man goes in until he’s out. When a man goes out to go in, the men who are out try to get him out, and when he is out he goes in and the next man in goes out and goes in. When they are all out, the side that’s out comes in and the side that’s been in goes out and tries to get those coming in out. Sometimes there are men still in and not out. There are men called umpires who stay out all the time, and they decide when the men who are in are out. Depending on the weather and the light, the umpires can also send everybody in, no matter whether they’re in or out. When both sides have been in and all the men are out (including those who are not out), then the game is finished. - Attributed (tenuously) to the Marylebone Cricket Club. See Amputee Cricket.
The incredible highs and lows of cricket, the ducks and endurance, the speed and slow spin of balls the dropped balls, magnificent catches and stumpings are what we all love about the game, but the strategy of a Captain positioning players on the field depending on the bowler and the type of ball he will bowl a particular batsman is next level Mastermind. I have loved cricket all my life and like American kids shooting hoops in their front driveway or practicing their baseball catching and swinging, I grew up in the 50’s and 60’s with every boy and girl on the street playing cricket with the stumps painted on a power pole and different front gardens being nominated fours or sixes until our parents called us in for dinner. Then running my boy to after school training and matches on weekends. He is in his 50’s now and retired as President of his local Club where he was successful in providing a new club house with the inclusion of separate shower and change rooms to encourage female players to join the club, one being his youngest daughter. His fast bowling days are over with both knees having been blown out, but he is still playing as a senior. Welcome to the 2 billion + club of cricket lovers.
Brett Lee was a legendary bowler, second fastest bowler after Shoaib Akhtar in that generation, they're both very good friends now but they used to go toe to toe with each other
Hat tricks are rare because of the variables involved with bowling. The ground, bowling technique, wind,ground moisture, as well as calibur of batsman. Love that Americans watch Cricket, I know its a million miles away from watching baseball.
The five of my grandsons who live and go to school in Canada play both baseball and cricket, and both soccer and CFL, according to the season. Winter is hockey, of course!! The 12-yr old, Adam jnr compares the sports as checkers (CFL & Baseball) and chess (Soccer & cricket). 😂
@@heathens2867 Rightly or wrongly, logic has little to do with team sports. After all, there are over 100 leagues in rugby union in the UK, but it's not rugby league. The name "soccer" derives from asSOCCiation football.
@@heathens2867 Using that point one could argue that the football game played by the Australian Indigenous peoples for millenia before anything else happened would be the one all codes are derived from.
Hatricks are a little bit more rare than 4 points at one time in baseball, and often do not occur in any separate tournament in cricket. It is considered a miracle to get one, and it completely changed the game no matter when or where it occurs HOPE THIS HELPS!!😊
For an American just discovering Cricket after watching only a couple of videos. i'm very impressed at your video how it points out particular things like rare dismissals and hat tricks, etc. I feel that you will get on top of the rules in no time.
Unbelievable innibg: Glenn maxwell 301 cricket world cup 2023 Dasun shanaka 59 runs in 18 balls against Australia. Ben stokes headingley ashes Asela gunaratne 80 runs in 30 balls Kusal Perera test knock against south africa Melbourne miracle Virat kohli against pak t20 wc 2022
I'm from England , Baseball vs Cricket Both are great sports , both are very old sports with incredible histories , incredible players past and present !
Indeed, both sports ARE extremely good tactical and strategic games. As an Englishman you will be very happy to read up on the winner of the first ever Baseball World Cup held in 1938...Mr Google can assist.
I'm 58 now , and don't watch much cricket , the boundaries have been pulled in and it's too easy to score runs ! When I started watching it the grounds and boundaries were much bigger and you had to hit the ball a long way to score a six ! Now batsmen score sixes with just little flicks !
React to the Afghanistan vs Australia game from this years World Cup! It was one of the most exciting games of all time, and Glenn Maxwell’s score of 201 is now being considered the greatest ODI innings ever played
@@jerrellholder8382 Showing your ignorance there. Afghanistan defeated titleholders England, former WC winners Pakistan and former WC winners Sri Lanka during the recent tournament.
I would say a cricket hat trick is equivalent to a baseball pitcher's perfect or 3-pitch inning. Perfect inning is probably a little more rare than a hat trick, but with the shorter forms of the game, hat tricks are becoming more common.
Internationally, there have been just 151 in all forms of the game for men. It might sound a lot but consider there have probably been 10000 games played, that's just 1.5%.
I remember Steve Avery of Atlanta throwing a 4-pitch inning in maybe the 1991 World Series...don't remember any perfect innings. Immaculate innings - 9 pitches, 9 strikes, 3 outs - are very rare, and far rarer than hat-tricks. In baseball, I'd say unassisted triple plays, immaculate innings, perfect innings, 2 grand slams from the same player in a single inning - are far rarer than hat-tricks. 10 wickets by a bowler in an innings are rarer than hat-tricks. And hat-tricks at the end of a limited over innings aren't all that rare. Batter comes in towards the end of an innings, has to swing for the fences, and then tailend batters often aren't all that competent.
The player wearing pink jersey on screen at 3:31 timestamp is Brett Lee, one of the all time great fast bowlers and one of two of the fastest bowlers ever bowling at 100mph. This was his last professional match playing for a club team, as had already retired from National Team which is the most prestigious level of teams in Cricket. Those 3 balls were the last 3 balls of his professional career and he almost pulled off an unbelievable tie. Scores of both team were tied and the orange team needed to score 1 run of 3 balls which isn’t tough, but Binga(aka Brett Lee) just made it too tough for them by claiming two outs and then an almost run out on the last ball. Had the run out happened then the match with have been tied and the teams would go in the super-over where both team play for 6 balls again. This could have been the best farewell to any cricket great, specially to a fast baller who has had a 20 year career. Fast ballers usually don’t last that long, and most definitely are not that fast at that point of their career.
As an Aussie kid in Sydney I played cricket of course but I also loved American sports like baseball and football. Playing cricket, trust me you wish you had a glove on, the ball is like trying to catch a house brick. If your technique is just off it hurts like hell. I had to play wicket keeper one day as the CK was sick. Even with gloves, my hands hurt for days afterwards. Fielding one time the ball bounced awkwardly and hit me in the thigh, I was limping for days. Having said that, playing baseball at high levels is really hard, even hitting the ball from a good pitcher is super tough. I played at state level and luckily we had an American batting coach that taught me good technique. I fielded at Short Stop and the balls come back at an incredible speed.
As an Indian kid playing in my schoolground, I got hit by a cricket ball in the knees while wicket keeping without pads and it was like getting hit by a bullet. I was knocked out for a few seconds and I wake up a few metres away with my teammates carrying me. It's pretty hard to play with a cricket ball without pads or gloves, normally we use a tennis or rubber ball or tape ball (a tennis ball that's wrapped with tape to help it stay hard and swing more).
There is nothing in the world like watching Ricky Ponting catch a ball side on to the stumps, and peg it directly on target to run somebody out while he is still flying through the air. That dude was insane.
Totally agree. I sat there dumbfounded watching Maxwell. How can you bat like that after nearly full body cramps! Another is Mitch Marsh's Ashes Century in England 5 months ago.
@@flamingfrancis sometimes in Phys Ed we'd play a bit of baseball not much though . We all played Aussie Rules in winter and Cricket in summer . Catching with a glove took a little getting used to . Stretching out and going for a one hander is the same either way without gloves , while with gloves we were always trying to feed it into the Left hand . After growing up catching bare handed we didn't drop many .
Especially in test cricket, getting a hat trick is so incredibly rare. Most of the best bowlers have one hat trick is very rare. It requires exceptional skill or tremendous luck
I’d say a hat-trick is very rare as most batsmen facing the hat-trick ball (3rd wicket) will use a defensive shot as it’s very embarrassing to: A. Be the one who gave the bowler the hat-trick; and B. Go out with a duck (0 runs). It’s only with very rare game circumstances that the batsmen is forced to play the ball and can result in a hat-trick. This is why most hat-tricks are the result of LBW (leg before wicket) when the batsmen is trying to block the ball. Hope this was helpful 😅
Just found your channel and watches this video you are doing a great job and learning fast T20 world cup in the US and carribean right now and the uSA playing very well I see it has to take off some day
But more frequent than an unassisted double play...that would be like a double hat-trick...4 wickets in four balls. Hat-tricks are more common in limited over cricket, towards the end of an innings, when quick runs (and more reckless shots) are needed. I don't recall any in the recent world cup, which only finished on Sunday.
@@pauldobson2529 That's not close to being true. I have seen multiple clips of professional baseballers making unassisted TRIPLE plays. Your idea that hattricks are common largely stems from every hattrick in professional cricket ending up on youtube. There have apparently been 15 unassisted triple plays in MLB. In all of professional cricket (not just international but down to county) 4 wickets in 4 balls appears to have happened 6 times though I wouldn't be surprised if some have been missed by the site I'm reading this off. Similarly I suspect unassisted double plays are significantly more common than hattricks although it's hard to get accurate statistics on this.
@@timbrom For the record, a read of Wisdens (the official written record of World cricket and like Baseball's Almanac) will show that there have been ELEVEN hat tricks by Aussies in all Tests (since 1877) and also 14 hat tricks by the English in all of their Tests. Aussies and England have played 361 Tests.
@@ribbonsofnight Since 1990, there have been 7 unassisted triple plays, but 27 hattricks in Test cricket. I chose 1990 because there was a 63-year gap before then for unassisted triple plays. And there'd be a much larger number in ODI's of 20-over or 50-over limits, because of the nature of the game. By comparison, there were 121 grand slams in 2023 MLB and 10 immaculate innings over the last 2 seasons.
6:48 this is an interesting one. He was out LBW (LEG before wicket). However that name is a bit misleading. Whilst it most commonly is the leg it strikes in a LBW it doesn't have to be the leg. It only has to be anything other than the bat (or by extension the hand holding the bat).
That hattrick(3 wickets in a row) was missed by Brett lee(Legendary Australian bowler) You just showed the widest bowl, the topest no-ball & two of the best sixes saved by fielders Apart from very few one-sided(Where winning team can be predicted)matches, it's very unpredictable Cricket is the roller-coaster of sports
It is nice to see you enjoy cricket. Actually a Hattrick is very rare. It doesn‘t even happen every season of HBL PSL(The Pakistani super league) . And I think only the world class bowlers who kept their form for more than 10 years have over 5 Hattricks in their career. Correct if I‘m wrong but I think this is it. And to get a Hattrick in international cricket is just world class and then in a World Cup this is one of the rarest things in cricket
If you can I would suggest you catch the Cricket World Cup final this Sunday. It’s available on ESPN+ here in the US. It’s two of the best teams in the world in India and Australia and the atmosphere should be cracking.
Yes, at 3:35, that was Bret Lee and he was a very famous player. He's retired now. That clip was from the Australian domestic T20 competition. The T20 format is the shortest form of cricket. Hope this helps.
The Hatrick is actually from game of Cricket, a bowler in the past got three wickets and the empire and all the players on both teams felt like it was such an amazing trick, the empire past a hat around
7:19 in cricket we don't say announcer but rather commentator and the live coverage of the match is called commentary. The feeling is well enjoyed while hearing on a radio like yester years even before the advent of television
You asked who it was 3:40, this is Australian legend Brett Lee bowling the final over of the game in the grand final of the Australian T20 competition near the end of his career. The other team needed 1 run off the final 3 balls, he got two wickets in a row & then his teammate made a mistake on the last ball. I was at this game in my home town & its still my all time favorite moment I've seen live, even if the Sixers (Brett Lee's tean) lost. He was my favourite player growing up and was also one of the fastest & most vicious bowlers in the world for a long time regularly bowling 145/150 km/h and on occasion bowling 160km/h (100mp/h!!)
Fantastic video. I'm from Perth, Western Australia. The Perth Scorchers our home team. That final was a little controversial, given they refused to play it in Perth, despite us finishing top of the ladder. They insisted it was played at a weird neutral ground in the middle of nowhere. Things were stacked against us, it looked like a tough task. Then our two bowlers as you saw ran anyway, the sixers fumbled the ball and we made it across the line to win the champions trophy. It was freaking epic! Brett Lee the fast bowler on the hat trick, was previously a top class player who played for Australia, absolutely superb bowler over the years in big competitions such as the ASHES and world cups. I'm sure there are some Sixer's fans on here who can tell more. Hat tricks are extremely rare. Alot of factors to be able to get one. Being Australian I can only think of two off the top of my head, there is more. Shane Warne and Glen McGrath. Also check out Shane Warne's debut bowling in the ASHES, man was a freak!
And from memory "They" did not have a choice given Western Australia was closed off from other States as a result of the COVID situation. The West closed its' gates to the other States and hence the decision was made to play in the ACT our National Capital on a ground frequently used for the BBL There have been at least ELEVEN (11) hat tricks by Australian bowlers in the history of Test cricket alone,(and 14 by the Poms), all listed in Wisdens. Who can forget the memorable call by Tubby Taylor "Peter Siddle has taken a hat trick on his birthday" at the Brisbane Ashes Test in November 2010. Having followed Brett's career from when he played Under 19's, he still holds the equal second best ever (measured) speed for a bowled ball together with Shaun Tait and behind Akhtar. I believe he holds the fastest AVERAGE over ever bowledd
Getting a hatrick is a very special feat for any bowler, as in cricket hatrick is achieved when a bowler dismisses 3 batsmen in 3 consecutive balls. A pretty difficult task to do achieve. Many good bowlers never achieve that in their international career, however most best bowlers of the game did. It is just a wonderful sporting experience for the individual player, their team and the supporters. Cricket is called a gentleman’s game, where opposition supporters also clap on a players scoring boundaries, centuries, getting hatrick, doing exceptional fielding.
That play at 3:31 was between Perth scorchers and Sydney 6ers in the t20 league. Those two teams had some epic battles. Brett lee had a great career playing for the Australian teams.
A hat trick is like pitching a perfect game. It is taking 3 wickets in a row. So three deliveries and three people go back to the pavilion. Getting one is like a once in a lifetime thing for a bowler at the professional level.
A hat-trick is, in baseball terms, is similar to a triple play - second, first and then home. The most weird hat-trick was made by Merv Hughes, an Australian fast bowler, against the West Indies. His first wicket was with the last ball of his over. Another bowler bowled his over, then Hughes took the 10th and final wicket of the innings with the first ball of his next over. Then with the first ball of his first over in the West Indies second innings, he took his hat-trick. You can actually watch it here in RU-vid.
The line inside the pitch border is a fairly new thing. So that is what allows the spectacular catches that get thrown back to a team mate. Cricket players generally don't have any problems with their hands catching balls - no soreness or anything. Your hand basically goes with the direction of the ball. A "hat trick" is extremely rare. It means to get a 3 batsmen out in 3 balls.
I've been out of cricket for quite a while but can't imagine the WI 134-4 boundary double throw wasn't awarded a 6 because he was over the line when he jumped the second time. I would have thought you had to be in the field of play before you jumped for the second throw to be considered legitimate.
At the time they allowed it because the idea was a new phenomenon. Subsequently there was a rule change where they adopted the "basketball" idea of having to step inside the field of play
The reasoning at that time was that it is relative to where the ball was grounded and not the fielder and if you look, the ball was not grounded. In bygone times of REAL fenced boundries a fielder was permitted to lean over the fence and catch the ball provided he was grounded inside tha fence.
To be bowling for a hat trick is pretty common but to actually get the wicket on the third ball is what's rare. For example, my 16 year old son in the last 3 seasons has bowled for a hat trick 19 times, yet only has one. Special moment for him as it was his first seniors game at 14. He was given the ball after the game as a momento and it now sits proudly on his bookshelf 😊
It's difficult to understand, but when you finally understand it, it is an amazing game. Test cricket is the pinacol. It goes for some days, but it is a game of strategy and management of players and the all-important final outcome. The best team wins, usually.
One of the things that confuses baseball players is when cricket players "work the ball". During a spell of bowling they'll actually spit on, and polish, one side of the ball. You cant dig fingernails in it, or rub it on the ground to rough it up, but polishing it is fine. You'll notice that bowlers sometimes have a red streak on their pants - that's from rubbing the ball. They do it because it you manage to keep one side of the ball fairly polished, while the other side natural degrades due to play, the ball will swing more.
The players in coloured uniforms are playing either a 50 or a 20 over version of the game, which are done in a day, or a day/night format. Teams can be either at city, state, or country level. 1 over equals 6 deliveries. The players in white are playing test cricket. This is played between 2 countries, and a match lasts 5 days of 90 overs each, barring inclement weather, or 2 innings each, whichever is reached first
Yeah you're very right on the catches I play 12th Division local cricket & the few catches i've taken hurt alot the ones you drop though hurt more because you usually get it on the finger. Brett Lee who was the guy playing his final game had been an Australian Player for ages & That was his last professional game & it was the final of the Australian T20 League.
There have been 2518 test matches played over 146 years. During that time there have only been 46 hattricks taken at test level (less than one every three years). Plenty more in first class fixtures, one-day games, and even a few in T20 games. Only 4 players have ever taken more than one test hattrick - in 1999, Pakistan's Wasim Akram took 2 hattricks in consecutive test matches, a bit over a week apart. - in 1912, Australia's Jimmy Matthews took 2 hattricks in the SAME match. Despite taking them in different innings, they were both taken entirely on the SAME DAY! Re: the outfield catching/fielding on/near the boundary, the standards have risen vastly in recent years due to increased professionalism, all-round fielding and overall athleticism.
there are primariry 2 types of bowlers: !)fast bowler , they take 10-12 stried before bowling the ball to generate speed and there are 2 sub categories a pace bowler who uses pure speed to take the wicket and bowl around 140-160 km/hours (100 miles/hour), another sub category is swing bowler who uses the wind,pitch and the 2 sides of the ball divided by seam to produce left-right movement of the ball to beat the batmans and take wickets. 2) spin bowler : tries to use the grip of ball on the pitch and riction to like move the ball in different ways ( iknow swing and spin sounds same but is quite diffent) while watch a match spin bowler generally taker 2-3 strides before the ball as they try to bowl slower comparitively to generate more spin.
That acrobatic save by India No 69 at 3:59 did not save six. As soon as the fielder stepped out of bounds and touched the ball, it was a six. And at 7:09, the fielder didn't necessarily throw the ball to his team mate - he only had to throw it back in bounds before he landed out of bounds for the six to be saved. Having a team mate backing you up to gather and return the ball is part of training.
I remember reading Cricket was the US summer sport till the civil war when it was easier to pick up a round stick than carry a bat. Catching a ball at speed can hurt like hell.
Not as rare as an immaculate inning by a pitcher...9 pitches, 9 strikes, 3 strikeouts. Or a batter hitting 2 grand slams in a single inning, or even a single game.