A Broken Flower
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See also...
Waschtag - Jour de lessive - Washing day - Lavare il giorno - Panni stesi - Día de lavandería - wasdag
Waschtag - Jour de lessive - Washing day - Lavare il giorno - Panni stesi - Día de lavandería - wasdag
Keywords
Cricket Street Championship
Boys in India claim whatever space they can find as a cricket ground, just as boys in Europe turn any patch of concrete or grass into a football pitch. A narrow lane between houses, a side street with parked scooters, or a dusty open corner near apartments becomes enough as long as there is room to bowl and swing a bat. The pitch is simply the flattest strip of ground available, and the boundaries are imaginary lines drawn between a doorway, a tree, and a parked car.
Everything is improvised and slightly bent to fit the surroundings. The ball is usually a tennis or rubber ball so that windows and passing people are a little safer, and stumps are whatever stands upright: a backpack, a crate, or three chalk lines on a wall. Rules shift from place to place: one particular balcony might be “out,” a six hit onto a neighbour’s roof might end the innings, and a one‑bounce catch might still count, because nobody wants to lose the ball or break anything. The tight space forces the boys to keep their shots low, find gaps between obstacles, and react quickly when the ball kicks off a stone or edge in the road.

The rhythm around the game feels very similar to street football culture. As school or chores end, someone arrives with a bat, another brings a ball, and teams are picked quickly, usually with a bit of bargaining over who gets the best batter or fastest bowler. Play is filled with chatter: appeals, mock outrage, laughter, and endless arguments over close decisions that are settled by a mix of loudness and compromise. Younger kids start at the edges as fielders, gradually earn a turn to bat, and slowly become part of the core group.
For the boys, these informal matches are more than a way to pass time; they are their daily tournament, a place to copy the stars they see on TV, test themselves against friends, and carve out a little piece of the city where they feel completely at home.
Everything is improvised and slightly bent to fit the surroundings. The ball is usually a tennis or rubber ball so that windows and passing people are a little safer, and stumps are whatever stands upright: a backpack, a crate, or three chalk lines on a wall. Rules shift from place to place: one particular balcony might be “out,” a six hit onto a neighbour’s roof might end the innings, and a one‑bounce catch might still count, because nobody wants to lose the ball or break anything. The tight space forces the boys to keep their shots low, find gaps between obstacles, and react quickly when the ball kicks off a stone or edge in the road.

The rhythm around the game feels very similar to street football culture. As school or chores end, someone arrives with a bat, another brings a ball, and teams are picked quickly, usually with a bit of bargaining over who gets the best batter or fastest bowler. Play is filled with chatter: appeals, mock outrage, laughter, and endless arguments over close decisions that are settled by a mix of loudness and compromise. Younger kids start at the edges as fielders, gradually earn a turn to bat, and slowly become part of the core group.
For the boys, these informal matches are more than a way to pass time; they are their daily tournament, a place to copy the stars they see on TV, test themselves against friends, and carve out a little piece of the city where they feel completely at home.
Annemarie, John FitzGerald, William Sutherland, Boarischa Krautmo have particularly liked this photo
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