How to Win Book Cricket (Always!)

To follow up on our book cricket series (previous posts here and here), here is Scorpicity on how he was the pioneer of match fixing long before anything like that happened in international cricket:

How I fixed it was simple… after the first 50 odd pages, I tore away all the pages with 0 in it and that gave me the leverage of playing extremely well because of the knowledge of the conditions. It got my classmates pissed off because they could never figure out how I kept winning all the time and they never would have imagined anyone tearing off key pages of a textbook! So I lived to become a book cricket legend!

Phew… now that’s a whole lot out of my chest!

Somebody notify the match fixing police and get him banned from math classrooms for the rest of his life! You say he is retired from taking classes? Oh, well.

More Book Cricket Memories

scorecard

Remember our article on “Book Cricket” sometime back. It looks like while regular cricket was the most popular outdoor sport, book cricket was the most popular indoor game. At least, that is what we deduce from the recent proliferation of articles on book cricket. Here is Ducking Beamers on the subject:

it works like this: you have a scorecard in front of you. You randomly open pages in a book and the last digit of the page number determines the batsman’s score. So, if you open page 21, you say a batsman scored 1 run. Pages that end in 5, 7, and 9 were not counted.

How did a batsman get out? If you opened up to a page number ending in 0. We didn’t know this at the time, since Twenty20 had not yet been invented, but this game clearly belonged in the ultra-modern variety where batsmen had to score, or get out.

Maybe I don’t quite understand this, but I would think that the left page is always an even number and the right page an odd number. So, you could always avoid getting out by not using the left page. Or was there some other aspect that determined whether the left or right page would be selected? Or maybe the book had page numbers only on one side?

Moral of the story: You can keep the boy out of the playground, but you cannot keep the playground out of the boy!

[Photo licensed from diongillard]

Book Cricket

Book cricket was a form of cricket that was very popular for a time in the Indian sub-continent, mainly the main Test playing nations of India and Pakistan. As Krish Ashok explains,

The classic version of this game a involved large, voluminous book (hereinafter referred to as The Book) being randomly opened and the last digit of the page number being scrutinized like Dickie Bird pondering over a leg-before decision. 2, 4 and 6 counted as they were, and 8 counted as 1 run. A page number ending in 0 was of course out. [...]

There were the Openers (the ones who opened The Book first) and the Middle-Order (players who preferred opening The Book right down the middle, as if it had magical powers that kept the dreaded zero-ending page numbers away) and the annoying Accumulators (who would fold certain pages that end in a 6 and keep opening that very page till somebody realized that something was rotten in the state of CBSE pass mark). Games lasted 2 innings and the final innings was usually a spine tingling affair, and often some idiot would get over-excited and attract the attention of the teacher [...]

Pinastro describes one form of book cricket, which that he created and called “Ludo Cricket”

I used to play a very different form of book cricket indigenously developed by Pinasto and his Sister.It had all the elements of Modern day T20 Cricket. Quick Scores , Quick Wickets and Massive Entertainement.The game was basically a cross breed of two timeless masterpieces of Time-Pass games ; LUDO and BOOK-CRICKET.

I named it LUDO Cricket.Me and My sister used to play this Weird Form of Cricket for hours and sometimes days.The plus point was it recreated the same thrill generated out of all the action on the field like , the Commentator’s excited commentary over the huge six that goes out of the park,The crucial Third Umpire decisions,The batsman hit on the Grill, Batsman being Run out by just a few inches from the crease, the sledging wars between the players,Catch being dropped by the fielder in the Slip,No Ball, Wide,Stunning Catch by the Wicket Keeper and almost everything that used to happen during the 1990’s to 2000 in the world of cricket.

Take a peek at his post. He has some very interesting pictures of the game like this excerpt of a picture:

book-cricket1

Zapak.com seems to have an online version of the game. I don’t have much idea of how much it is similar to the dead-tree version.