Those scorching afternoons and early evenings – they were the time when all the cousins and neighbours got together for a game of cricket, or two. That is, before the mums started calling us in one by one! A look back at the silly and sweet rules we invented for our gully cricket games:

Those who got bats to the match had special privileges. Like first batting. Perfectly fair.
The ghar ki maryaada was sacrosanct. Besides, we didn’t want the over-enthu batsman to hit hard and lose the ball.
If the ball bounced once, the fielder could still stump the batsman. Only, the catch had to be with one hand. The good thing about this rule was that it got people out quickly.
Cricket was a nuisance to Sharma aunty and Vinod uncle. Window panes were broken, flower pots damaged. We had to create this rule out of fear for our lives, you know.
How could we ever get the batsman out without this one?
For some of us, it was a chauka if the ball touched the gate. For others, it was a chakka if the ball crossed the garden. We had to make do with the space. We even had ones and twos for pre designated spots.
For people with the least sportsman spirit, including the writer of this article, this rule was meant to be exploited.
When the fielders weren’t enough, we could ask other members of the batting side to field. Against their own team.
The person who took the wicket next had the chance to bat. The problem arose, when it was a catch. That really was a Catch 22 situation!
This post is inspired by a Quora post.
Published: 26 Mar 2015,01:21 PM IST