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Cricketing Clichés

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BackwardPoint View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Quote BackwardPoint Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Topic: Cricketing ClichĂ©s
    Posted: 03 December 2011 at 9:42am
We've all heard them. Phrases that are ridiculously over-used, be it in the commentary box or in presentation interviews. So let's list all the ones we've heard over the years here. I'll get the ball rolling with a few:

"It was a half-tracker, just asking to be hit."
"It was short and wide but it still had to be put away."
"Really soft dismissal, he's thrown his wicket away."
"Don't bowl on his pads, he'll hit you through the on-side all day long."
"We've got momentum now and hopefully, we can carry it forward to the next game."
"Thanks to (partner at the other end). We just kept taking the singles."
"I just wanted to go out there and play my natural game."

Got more funny/irritating ones to add?

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Post Options Post Options   Quote Clobber Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 03 December 2011 at 11:49am
"I'm hitting it well in the nets, and I'm sure if I keep working hard the runs will come out in the middle" - any batsman who hasn't made a score for years.

"it's all about hitting the right areas" - far too many bowlers
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Post Options Post Options   Quote BackwardPoint Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 03 December 2011 at 6:29pm
"This next session is very crucial" (said by pundits after every session in a Test)
"He only knows how to play one way" (usually after an attacking batsman has hit it down the throat of long-on) 
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Clobber Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 03 December 2011 at 8:24pm
"that's sensible batting" - a batsman has taken a single after hitting the previous ball for 6. Surely hitting another 6 would have been even more sensible?
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Post Options Post Options   Quote BackwardPoint Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 04 December 2011 at 2:38am
No Clobs, the term "putting the bowlers to the sword" is reserved for the batsman who can hit two consecutive sixes and if he manages three then "the wheels have come off" for the opposition.

"Line-and-length stuff, right in the corridor of uncertainty"
"The bowler won't mind that at all" (after a batsman has smashed a spinner for a six)
"He's dropped a sitter"
"When this guy hits it, it stays hit"
"Well, ladies and gentlemen, it's been a fantastic game of cricket but at the end of the day, *team* held their nerve" (Ravi Shastri at virtually every presentation ceremony)
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Post Options Post Options   Quote sam_ahmed Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 04 December 2011 at 5:34am
lolzzz, some nice ones there...
God is a better planner... so whenever u'r plan fails, cheer up... God has a better plan for you!
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Post Options Post Options   Quote BackwardPoint Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 04 December 2011 at 9:59am
"It’s not where he intended but he’ll take it" (after a streaky boundary)
"He’s living dangerously" (after a couple of risky shots)
"The key will be some early wickets" (start of every innings)
"It’s a flat track and the batsmen should look to cash in"
"It’s criminal for a spinner to over-step the line"
"The line belongs to the umpire" (after every no-ball and during every third umpire run-out/stumping decision)
"That ball did everything but get the wicket" (after a play and miss)
"You can’t play those" (as above)
"*India or Pakistan* have really improved their fielding with a lot of young players" (commentators make sure to remind us during every IND or PAK match)
"The batsman can count himself unlucky, it was probably going down leg" (after an absolute howler)
"It’s a really tough job being an umpire"
"We have the benefit of replays and camera angles. The umpire gets one view in real time"
"All credit goes to the boys" (classic Inzi)

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Post Options Post Options   Quote spin wizard Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 04 December 2011 at 8:39pm
Well, seeing that no new words are being invented, I guess we're stuck with those. LOL
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Tallpaul Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 27 December 2011 at 12:45am
When the batting side are on top:

"It's a batsman's paradise out there."
"This is buffet bowling!"
"That was a real long hop and got what it deserved."
"This was a good toss to win."
"You can't set a field for that."

When the bowlers are on top:

"There are a lot of gremlins in the pitch."
"He did well to get an edge on that."
"That's a jaffer!"
"Oh, he's given his wicket away."
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Post Options Post Options   Quote Clobber Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 05 January 2012 at 8:32am

Ravi Shastri missed what appeared to be a clear-cut opportunity to utter a cliché last week, stunning onlookers and plunging himself into a state of deep introspection and existential angst.

"Ravi is understandably in a fragile state of mind at the moment," said Sunil Gavaskar. "We ask that his privacy be respected at this difficult time as he tries to cope with his loss."

Shastri, who has earned himself a special place in hell the hearts and minds of cricket fans the world over for his endlessly repeated banalities, is said to have locked himself in his Sydney hotel room, and hadn't responded to calls for an interview at the time of writing.

According to witnesses who were present at the time, there had been very little sign that anything was amiss in the events leading up to the disaster.

"He seemed just fine earlier in the day," said Shastri's personal groomer. "In fact, when I asked him if he needed me to trim his hair before he left for his dinner appointment, he said, 'If you're going to flash, flash hard!' which I took to mean a yes. Yeah, he was doing fine."

According to reports, Shastri and Gavaskar then went out to dinner at one of Sydney's exclusive seafood restaurants with friends and colleagues to discuss the day's play and how to better embed BCCI propaganda into their work. Then, tragedy struck.

"Someone at the table noticed a boat racing along the waters outside," said Gavaskar in a quiet voice. "The question was put to Shastri as to how fast he thought the vessel must be travelling. It was an innocent question at the time, but in hindsight I think we all wish it hadn't been asked."

Experts and analysts generally agree that the responses presenting themselves for articulation in the narrow byways of Shastri's ingenuity would have most likely been one of the following, in order of probability: a) "A speed of knots", or b) "Like a tracer bullet". As it transpired, he said neither.

"'Fast,' Gavaskar said, shaking his head sadly as he turned away. "Ravi said the boat was traveling 'fast'."

Harsha Bhogle, who was also present at the time, spoke of the dawning horror at the dinner table. "At first, we didn't think anything of it," said Bhogle. "But as soon as Ravi offered this unexpected description of the boat's speed, a terrible pall descended upon us all. Everyone suddenly stopped talking, Ravi started turning a very bright red, and soon it was quite obvious that something wrong, something terribly wrong, had happened."

"You have to understand, Ravi's a very proud person," he continued. "He's nothing if not the consummate professional, and not many people may know this, but there's a great deal of care and love that goes into what he does. He knows that a lot of people out there depend on him for getting their information in the form of tired, overused phrases. So for a slip-up of such magnitude to have occurred, he's not going to be taking it lightly. Knowing Ravi, he's probably in his room drinking and watching Peter Sellers in The Party, his favorite film. He'll be back with a bang, don't you worry."

The crisis comes at an ironic juncture in Shastri's career, as he is rumoured to be up for the first ever Dead Horse award, for being the first commentator of any sport to flog a cliché 100,000 times. He is currently in first place, with 77,821 cliches uttered, and at the time of writing was expected to reach the unique milestone before you can say bob's your uncle.

Both the Indian and Australian teams have announced that they will be donning black armbands to mark the sad event.



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Post Options Post Options   Quote zuhair_abbasi Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 05 January 2012 at 12:45pm
Short - wide - four
He had all the time in the world to play that
Edged and gone
Edged and dropped (Kamran Akmal keeping)
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Post Options Post Options   Quote sam_ahmed Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 05 January 2012 at 5:42pm
LOL nice one Clobs!!!

... and Zuhair, that last one was superb!!!! LOL
God is a better planner... so whenever u'r plan fails, cheer up... God has a better plan for you!
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Post Options Post Options   Quote sam_ahmed Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 05 January 2012 at 5:57pm
The ball was coming on to the bat nicely (Sachin at every MOM award won).

The good thing about him is that he is a good runner between the wickets (Ravi Shastri - whenever a batsmen runs two).

you need to keep the strike rotating (Ravi Shastri - whenever a batsmen plays out an over).

That was needless (Ravi Shastri - whenever a batsmen gets out playing a shot)

ohhhh, thats an absolute beauty, how did that miss the stumps???? This game is not over yet!!! (Tony Greg all excited when the batsmen misses a ball with his team requiring 5 runs off 20 balls with 5 wickets in hand)

catches win matches - (almost every Hindi commentator in India)

That's a nothing shot! (when a batsmen gets out caught)

Boys need to go out there and just enjoy the Game (Younus Khan at almost every presentation ceremony when he was captain)




Edited by sam_ahmed - 05 January 2012 at 5:59pm
God is a better planner... so whenever u'r plan fails, cheer up... God has a better plan for you!
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