Yorker: No one like Jassa ...


- Vocabulary-Paresh diameter

- How many meanings do you know of yorker? If you read this article, you will know all its meanings and put your finger in your mouth!

Not unarmed understanding my closed fist,

That where there is nothing there can be thunderstorms.

- Heman Shah

London's Oval Cricket Ground. Fourth Test match. Tumble in the first inning of the fourth match after losing badly in the third. At one stage the score was 12/3. Had Shardul Thakur's eighth-ranked batsman Shardul not been sold, he would not have scored 161 runs. No, we are not talking about the verse of the poem. 'Shardul' means tiger. 'V' means special and 'credit' means the sport he has done. We know the word 'sports'. Sports, sport. In Gujarati, sports (!). Yet after the first inning condition felt like it was easy to lose now and hard to win. But this is English weather like English Bidi. Don't believe it. It changes in an hour. On the first day the sky was overcast but on the last day the sky was clear. The cricket pitch was flat. Batting was easy. The Indian bowlers did not get any help from the fifth day pitch. At lunch, England's score was 12/3. Seeing the ball swinging in reverse, Jaspreet Bumrah asked the captain to bowl. And then that closed fist storm and everything changed. Now everyone knew that the wicket would fall. Before England captain Root, who was batting at the opposite end, could analyze the cause (root cause analysis), Bumrah threw the yorkers and gulped two batsmen in a row. There are many ways a batsman can get out, but the most fun is when someone gets clean bowled. It's more fun to get out of a yorker than to be clean bowled by a googly ball or another ball. Batsmen never feel so helpless. When the bat is brought down, the ball is slammed straight and the stem is doled out. The act of being out is not only visual but also audible. We won the fourth Test. If you look at Bumrah's scorecard at the end of the match, he took only two wickets in the fourth innings, but his bowling spell of 7-6-7-6 spellbounded England, bamboozle. These words have been printed in the newspapers regarding this news but today's word is not spellbound (enchanted) or bamboozle (confuse or deceive). Today's word is Yorker. And when Bumrah hits the ball, the batsman gets confused, the batsman gets confused! -This is a proven fact.

Today, the word 'Yorker' has to be codified, which Sehwag calls 'stump breaking' ball. According to the Gujarati lexicon, a yorker is a ball that falls under a typical bat and bounces. The word is understood in English in England or Australia. There is no understanding of cricket in America so they mean yorker. York is a historic city in the north of England. The inhabitant is also called Yorker. But the word yorker is a word in the language of cricket for us. The difference is that the bowlers of Yorkshire region were famous for this type of bowling hence the name Yorker. However there is another theory about the origin of this word. Yorker also has another meaning. Yorker means cheater. Cheater. However until the beginning of the twentieth century the meaning of yorker was positive. Yorker means bright, clever, aware, vigorous, quick-witted, quick-witted, but then the meaning changed to 'cheating'. If a swindler is deceitfully robbed, it is said 'I have been yorked'. This is not a good thing for Yorkshire residents, but it is a language. A city or region is associated with a word. Things like Ahmedabadi 'Kanjusai' and Surati 'Galvani' are coming up in the language. As far as cricket is concerned, the Yorker's motive is to deceive the batsman. The ball in front of the wicket is also important. All the balls are going out from inside or there are bouncers. Yorker is a very different ball from an away-going bouncer. The chances of getting a wicket from a bouncer are low but then suddenly comes a ball that is released at the last minute in bowling action with a thump from the hand, which hits the batsman's boot on the pitch, the batsman has no time to react, does not bring the bat down. Shake and get clean bold. Forced cheating, huh? But this is a game. Says that in love and war everything is justified. Justifiable means just, fair, just, reasonable, reasonable, lawful. Now the same is true in the game. Yes, rules are needed. But is it fun to play according to the rules? Of course the yorker ball is according to the rules. But there are deceptions and you need qualifications to cheat, right? Not all pace bowlers can kill a yorker. If he is not a perfect yorker, he either hits a half-valley (shorter than normal) or a flower toss (longer than usual) and the batsman can easily hit him outside the boundary. There is a risk in being clever! It is not easy to walk the path of Bumrah.

It is not good to have noodles in life. People are good at taking advantage. Discrimination should be tried when there is competition and there is no price, no penalty. Yorker means distinction. Difference means mystery, essence, creepiness, difference, the process of separation. Thus, of course, discrimination should not be used forever. But to learn the scripture of that weapon. Who knows when it will be needed? And yes, you must learn not to be clean bold if a yorker comes from the opposite end. Sometimes it should be straight like jalebi and smooth like fafda. Not to stumble, but to cultivate the ability to stumble, is today's yorker knowledge. Iti.

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'I'm not just a yorker, I'm a lot of others.' -Jaspreet Bumrah

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