Tag: the story of cricket

Questions Related to the story of cricket

Read the following statements and choose the right option.
Statement I: Certain materials were used to make the cricket bat, but these materials could not be adapted.
Statement II:Australian cricketer Dennis Lillee tried to play an innings with an aluminum bat, only to have it outlawed by the umpires.

  1. Statement I is true and statement II is false

  2. Both the statements are wrong

  3. Statement I is false and Statement II is true

  4. Both the statements are true


Correct Option: D
Explanation:

It consists of two pieces, the blade which is made out of the wood of the willow tree and the handle which is made out of cane. Unlike golf and tennis, cricket has refused to remake its tools with industrial or man-made materials: plastic, fibreglass and metal have been firmly rejected.  Australian cricketer Dennis Lillee tried to play an innings with an aluminium bat, only to have it outlawed by the umpires. 

Cricket connection shows the predominance of the ________.

  1. rural life

  2. urban life

  3. elite life

  4. none of the above


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

Cricket’s connection with a rural past can be seen in the length of a Test match. Originally, cricket matches had no time limit. The game went on for as long as it took to bowl out a side twice. In the same way, cricket’s vagueness about the size of a cricket ground is a result of its village origins. Cricket was originally played on country commons, unfenced land that was public property. 


The stick and ball games played in England some 500 years ago was _______.

  1. hockey

  2. baseball

  3. cricket

  4. polo


Correct Option: C
Explanation:

Nearly 500 years ago, cricket developed in rural England out of several stick and ball games. Till the 18th century, cricket bats were curved like hockey sticks. The game was originally played on unfenced land in English villages with no defined boundaries.

The width of the cricket bat was specified to be _________.

  1. four inches

  2. five inches

  3. six inches

  4. seven inches


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

The MCC’s revision of the laws brought in a series of changes in the game that occurred in the second half of the eighteenth century. The weight of the ball was limited to between 5½  to 5¾ ounces, and the width of the bat to four inches. 

In the early phase of Indian first class cricket, teams were not organised on geographical basis but on __________.

  1. gender basis

  2. communal basis

  3. caste basis

  4. linguistic basis


Correct Option: B
Explanation:

 The early history of Indian first class cricket, teams were not organised on geographical principles and it was not till 1932 that a national team was given the right to represent India in a Test match. Cricket in colonial India was organised on the principle of race and religion. 

The victory of West Indies over England in the first Test series in 1950 was celebrated as __________.

  1. political achievement

  2. social achievement

  3. national achievement

  4. international achievement


Correct Option: C
Explanation:

 When the West Indies won its first Test series against England in 1950, it was celebrated as a national achievement, as a way of demonstrating that West Indians were the equals of white Englishmen. 

The English Test team was led by a professional, the Yorkshire batsman, _______.

  1. Dennis Lillee

  2. Len Hutton

  3. Eric Williams

  4. Frank Worrell


Correct Option: B
Explanation:

Len Hutton was an English Test cricketer, who played for Yorkshire County Cricket Club and England in the years around the Second World War as an opening batsman. He was described by Wisden Cricketer's Almanack as one of the greatest batsmen in the history of cricket.  It was not till the 1930s that the English Test team was led by a professional, the Yorkshire batsman, Len Hutton.

In the early days of cricket, playing cricket by the coloniser was a sign of _________.

  1. pleasure

  2. domination

  3. superior social and racial status

  4. none of the above


Correct Option: C
Explanation:

While British imperial officials brought the game to the colonies, they made little effort to spread the game, especially in colonial territories where the subjects of empire were mainly non-white, such as India and the West Indies. The Afro-Caribbean population was discouraged from participating in organised club cricket, which remained dominated by white plantation owners and their servants. 

The first cricket played in India was in ________ in 1721.

  1. Calicut

  2. Calcutta

  3. Cochin

  4. Cambay


Correct Option: D
Explanation:

The first record we have of cricket being played in India is from 1721, an account of recreational cricket played by English sailors in Cambay.  The first Indian club, the Calcutta Cricket Club, was established in 1792. Through the eighteenth century, cricket in India was almost wholly a sport played by British military men and civil servants in all-white clubs and gymkhanas. 

The first community to play cricket in India was ____________.

  1. Bohra Muslims

  2. Brahmins

  3. Parsis

  4. Christian converts


Correct Option: C
Explanation:

 The first Indian community to start playing the game was the small community of Zoroastrians, the Parsis. They came in close contact with the British because of their interest in trade. Also, Parsis were the first ones to westernise themselves. The Parsis founded the first Indian cricket club, the Oriental Cricket Club in Bombay in 1848.