News

The ‘Cricket’s Greatest Canvas’ exhibition which, which recently came to a close after celebrating the marriage of sport and art, saw Indian artist Paresh Maity presenting his artworks on cricket. The ...
Scoreboard at stumps on day two of the one-off Test between Sri Lanka and Afghanistan at the Sinhalese Sports Club in Colombo on Saturday: ...
Scoreboard from the World Cup match between India and the Netherlands in Bengaluru on Sunday: India R. Sharma c Barresi b de Leede 61 ...
Right now, it’s sitting in a Sydney suburb warehouse, biding time and waiting for a homecoming. For 60 years, the old scoreboard of the Sydney Cricket Ground (SCG) stood at the top of the Hill.
COLCHESTER Royal Grammar School has submitted plans to install electronic scoreboards for cricket matches, but will need to wait for archaeologists to survey the playing fields for Roman remains ...
Passenger Gets Handwritten Cricket Score From Pilot On Flight, Internet Calls It "Epic" The tweet, posted on October 30, is gaining traction online. It has received 373 likes and 25 retweets so far.
[Written by Patrick Bean] During the recent Western Counties All-Star match, Thomas Ball and his nephew, Eugene Ball of T & T Scorers introduced a cutting-edge piece of technology to their cricket ...
The iconic Adelaide Oval scoreboard has received a subtle change ahead of the summer of cricket, which eagle-eyed fans will be able to see in action in the final of the Women's Big Bash League.
The scoreboard at a regional Victorian cricket club has been snatched. The Walhalla Cricket Club scoreboard, which dates back to the 1970s, was taken a couple of weeks ago.
The Adelaide Oval stadium in Australia has tweaked its iconic scoreboard to make it more gender-neutral. The list of batters will now come under the heading 'batting' instead of 'batsmen'.
Adelaide Oval’s iconic scoreboard has introduced gender-neutral terminology, replacing the word ‘batsmen’ with ‘batting’ to align with recent changes to the Laws of Cricket.
Adelaide Oval’s iconic scoreboard has introduced gender-neutral terminology, replacing the word ‘batsmen’ with ‘batting’ to align with recent changes to the Laws of Cricket.