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423rd ABG cricket team plays first ever game
LONGSTANTON, United Kingdom – Staff Sgt. Arnold Henry, 423rd Medical Squadron, reacts after a Longstanton Grasshopper hits the ball during the first game played by the team Aug. 19 at Longstanton Bowls Club in Longstanton, United Kingdom. At either end of the pitch, 22 yards apart, are the wickets. These serve as a target for the bowling (aka fielding) side and are defended by the batting side, which seeks to accumulate runs. The pitch is 22 yards in length between the wickets and is 10 feet wide. It is a flat surface and has very short grass that tends to be worn away as the game progresses. The "condition" of the pitch has a significant bearing on the match, and team tactics are always determined with the state of the pitch, both current and anticipated, as a deciding factor. The team has practiced against themselves the last couple of months to prepare for the game. (U.S. Air Force photo by Master Sgt. John Barton)
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423rd ABG cricket team plays first ever game

Posted 8/23/2012   Updated 8/23/2012 Email story   Print story

    


by Staff Sgt. Brian Stives
501st Combat Support Wing Public Affairs


8/23/2012 - LONGSTANTON, United Kingdom -- Taking up the challenge from their honorary commanders that anyone can learn cricket and practicing six or seven times during the last couple of months, the 423rd Air Base Group cricket team ventured into the local community to do battle with someone other than themselves Aug. 19.

Under the direction of Cliff Walker, 423rd ABG honorary commander, and Derek Stebbing, 423rd Communications Squadron honorary commander, the team's first game came against the Longstanton Grasshoppers Cricket Club.

The game was played in a Twenty20 format. Twenty20 is a form of cricket originally introduced in England and Wales for professional inter-county competition by the England and Wales Cricket Board in 2003. A Twenty20 game involves two teams, each having a single inning, batting for a maximum of 20 overs. Twenty20 games are completed in about 3.5 hours, with each inning lasting around 100 minutes, thus bringing the game closer to the time span of other popular team sports.

"We are not worried about the score," said Col. Michael Reiner, 423rd ABG commander. "We are trying to learn the game and build relationships with the local communities."
As team members took their turn to bat, Reiner compared his time batting to a sport most familiar with Americans.

"The hardest part is learning a new motion," said Reiner. "Compared to baseball, everything is different. Batting is different because it is straight in front of you. Bowling, or pitching, is different because you throw it down. But, I can say we are getting better."

At the end of the day, the 423rd ABG cricket team got some much needed practice with a team that plays cricket all the time, and the village of Longstanton got to play England's national sport against Americans.



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