San Francisco, CA
Pro cricket in the Bay Area: Rules to know, and what you’re watching
Don’t expect many donkey drops at the Coliseum the next week and a half. But there will be plenty of sloggers, dibbly dobblies and, if you listen closely, the sweet – or sickening – sounds of a death rattle echoing through the A’s old home.
Major League Cricket is making its debut in the Bay Area this week. The six-team league, which includes the San Francisco Unicorns, was established three years ago in the hope of exposing the world’s second-most popular sport (after soccer) to a new audience.
Cricket is not new to the United States. The 1844 match between the U.S. and Canada in Toronto is considered the sport’s first international event. But for the most part, interest in cricket in the United States has drawn mostly, well, crickets. Many Americans had no idea there was even a U.S. national team until, led by Oracle developer Saurabh Netravalkar, the U.S. stunned Pakistan in a T20 World Cup match last summer.
The Bay Area is one of the stronger cricket communities in the U.S., so the games in Oakland could draw significant interest. It’ll also appeal to curious sports fans.
For those unfamiliar with cricket, here is a primer about the sport and what’s happening at the Coliseum starting Thursday.
What is the MLC?
The San Francisco Unicorns were a charter member of Major League Cricket in 2023, along with the Los Angeles Knight Riders, Mumbai Indians New York, the Seattle Orcas, the Texas Super Kings, and the Washington Freedom. All the games were played in Grand Prairie, Texas and Morrisville, North Carolina the first two seasons. This season Oakland and Lauderhill, Florida will host nine games each, with the 16 others in Grand Prairie.
The first nine games of the season will be played at the Coliseum, starting with the Unicorns’ opener Thursday at 6 p.m. against Netravalkar and the defending champion Freedom in a rematch of last year’s championship match. The Unicorns also play Saturday (6 p.m. vs. the Knight Riders) and Sunday (6 p.m. vs. MI New York).
The Oakland leg of the season concludes on June 18, when the league moves to Texas for two weeks before the regular season ends in Florida. The playoffs are July 8-13 in Texas.
What’s going on?
Cricket is often compared to baseball. Both are bat-and-ball games where the object is to hit the ball where your opponent isn’t and to score runs. Bowlers, like pitchers, use high velocity and deception to get the ball past their opponent (in this case, to knock over the wicket or stumps) or induce a catchable ball to the 11 defensive players in the field.
Cricket is played on an oval – balls can be batted or deflected in any direction and potentially produce runs. There is no foul territory, which baseball fans who attended games at the Coliseum will find amusing.
MLC plays Twenty20 cricket, a streamlined – and increasingly popular – version of the sport. It’s only been around since 2003 but will be part of the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics, ending cricket’s 128-year absence at the Games. Test matches, the most traditional form of cricket, can last up to five days. One-Day Internationals (ODIs) last around eight hours.
T20 matches take about three hours, and batters tend to be more aggressive because of the condensed format. Following a coin toss to see who bats first, each team plays one inning, which lasts until the team has attempted to bat 120 balls, has scored more points than its opponent or made 10 outs.
There are 10 ways to record an out in cricket. The most common are: caught (a batted ball is caught in the air by a fielder), bowled (the batsman misses the pitch and it knocks down the wicket), given leg before wicket (the batsman used their body to block the ball from hitting the wicket) and run out (a runner is beat to the wicket by a throw or a fielder).
At the center of the playing area is the strip, a 66-foot-long (and 10-foot-wide) stretch with wooden wickets at either end. There is one batter positioned at either end of the strip, and the bowler faces one batter at a time.
If the ball is put in play, the batter and partner stationed on the bowler’s side of the strip can run toward the opposite end (with bats in hand) before one of the fielders knocks down a wicket with a throw, but they don’t have to. (Think of the kids’ game rundown or hotbox.) If the throw beats the runner, they are out.
If both runners are successful, it’s worth one run. If they can cross the length of the strip twice, it’s worth two, and so on. If a ball rolls or bounces outside of the edge of the oval (called the boundary and typically roped off), it’s worth four points. A ball that clears the boundary on the fly (between 250-300 feet) is the cricket equivalent of a home run and worth six points.
Using a straight-arm delivery – bending your elbow to throw is illegal – the hardest-throwing bowlers don’t quite reach 100 miles per hour. The balls are slightly harder and smaller than a baseball. The balls have a raised seam down the middle, which is very useful because most “pitches” are intended to be skipped on the ground near the feet of the batters. Some bowlers are skilled enough to skip the ball around the batter to strike down the wicket.
Bowlers throw six pitches and then are subbed out (called an over). Unlike in baseball, bowlers can sub back in, but only for four overs. T20 matches consist of 20 overs. Batsmen continue until they make an out.
Who’s winning?
A successful inning for an individual batter is around 40 runs, and 160 is considered a good team score.
But following the score as the match progresses can be confusing.
The first thing to remember is the teams do not alternate batting. Team A will face its 120 pitches or make 10 outs, then Team B bats.
Here is how last year’s title match between the Unicorns and the Freedom looked:
Freedom 207/5 (20 overs)/ Unicorns 111 (16 overs)
What it meant: The Freedom batted first and scored 207 points and made five outs in 20 overs. The Unicorns scored 111 points before they made their 10th – and final – out in the 16th over.
IN CASE YOU HEAR IT
Wicket – The Aloha of cricket jargon has multiple meanings. The most common is the three wooden posts (or stumps) positioned behind the batter and held together at the top by two bails. The pitch, the strip in the center of the playing surface where the bowler faces the batter, can also be called the wicket, and a batter who is put out can be referred to as taking a wicket.
Sticky wicket – Originates from references to when a wet pitch (or the wicket) is drying out after a rainstorm, creating inconsistent bounces. Also known as sticky dog.
Biffer – A big, aggressive hitter looking to slog the ball – hit it high and far. A batter swinging for the “boundary” and six points. The opposite is a rabbit, who bats low in the order and is not a good hitter. Even worse is a ferret.
Pie chucker – A bowler who is easy to get a hit against. Also called cafeteria and buffet bowling. A dibbly dobbly is an easy pitch to hit, but can induce non-scoring contact.
Crease – A series of straight white lines painted at the edge of the pitch near the wickets used, among other things, to judge if a run has been scored.
Death rattle – The sound of the ball missing the bat and breaking the wicket.
Duck – When a batter is dismissed without scoring a run. Golden duck is retired on the first ball thrown.
Peach – A high velocity ball that is practically unhittable. A corker is similar, but because of location or movement and not speed. A donkey drop can also be nearly unhittable – a lob, similar to the eephus pitch in baseball thrown as high as possible in an attempt to drop behind the batsman onto the wicket.
Perfume ball – A ball that bounces near a batter’s face, close enough to smell it.
Sledging – Trash-talking during the match. Some players are world class.
Gardening – When a batter scratches at the pitch with his bat between deliveries, usually to try and smooth out the surface. A pitch that is uneven or has cracks is considered spicy.
Boot Hill – The defensive area to be covered on the batsman’s dominant side. High upside to get an out but perilous because of the location. Much like the “hot corner” in baseball.
Chucker – A bowler who delivers with a bent elbow. Implies the bowler is cheating.
If you want to go
There will be at least one match at the Coliseum every day from Thursday through June 18. Two matches are scheduled for Saturday and Sunday.
The games will be streamed on WillowTV, Sling TV and CBS Sports Network.
More information: https://www.majorleaguecricket.com/
Originally Published:
San Francisco, CA
Elderly driver sentenced to probation in West Portal crash that killed family of 4
SAN JOSE, Calif. – An elderly driver who killed a family of four in San Francisco’s West Portal neighborhood two years ago was sentenced Friday to probation.
No jail time
What we know:
Mary Fong Lau, 80, learned in court that she will not serve any jail time or home detention for the March 2024 crash.
The collision killed Diego Cardoso de Oliveira, a 40-year-old father; his wife, Matilde Moncada Ramos Pinto, 38; their 1-year-old son, Joaquim; and their 3-month-old son, Caue. The family was waiting at a Muni bus stop at the time. They were headed to the zoo.
No contest plea
Lau pleaded no contest to four felony counts of vehicular manslaughter, and a judge accepted the plea.
The Superior Court judge said Lau’s age, remorse and lack of criminal history were factors in the sentencing decision. She was placed on probation for two years and is banned from driving for three years. She also has to complete 200 hours of community service.
2024 crash
The backstory:
Prosecutors said that on March 16, 2024, Lau was driving more than 70 mph in an SUV when she jumped a curb and struck the victims at a bus stop at Ulloa Street and Lenox Way.
Family, prosecutors criticize sentence
What they’re saying:
Friends and relatives of the victims said the sentence fell far short of the justice they were seeking.
District Attorney Brooke Jenkins also criticized the outcome.
“The court is not requiring Ms. Lau to even acknowledge her guilt,” Jenkins said. “Rather than requiring a guilty plea, the court decided it is sufficient for her to enter a no contest plea. That isn’t justice. That isn’t taking responsibility for the loss of four innocent lives.”
Jenkins added that Lau could eventually regain her driving privileges, which she called “troubling.”
“This is someone who has demonstrated she can’t be trusted on the roads of California nor San Francisco,” she said.
Defense cites remorse
The other side:
Lau’s defense attorney said his client is remorseful.
“Ms. Lau feels the pain of this tragic loss,” attorney Seth Morris said. “She has taken accountability by pleading no contest and not requiring the case to go to trial, which could have taken years with an unknown outcome.”
He added that Lau hopes the plea will help begin the healing process for the victims’ families and the community.
The Source: Sentencing hearing for the defendant, Mary Fong Lau
San Francisco, CA
San Francisco Fought to Name a Major Street After Cesar Chavez. Will It Be Renamed Again? | KQED
Many Latino San Franciscans saw the dedication as an acknowledgment of the farmworker movement Chavez helped build.
But after allegations surfaced this week that the civil rights icon sexually abused multiple young girls, and United Farm Workers co-founder Dolores Huerta, as he led the movement in the 1960s and ’70s, politicians have quickly proposed stripping his name from dozens of streets, schools, parks and monuments, and the state holiday in his honor at the end of the month.
The revelations have raised questions about how to further the movement’s legacy, without Chavez as the figurehead.
“He was a symbol,” San Francisco State University labor historian John Logan said, “for a recognition of the farmworker movement, of the Chicano civil rights movement.”
“This [is an] incredibly important social movement and incredibly important worker movement,” he said, adding that now, it will be important “to find a way of trying to recognize those things without using his name.”
Reckoning with abuse
On Tuesday, The New York Times published an investigation revealing accounts from two women, now in their 60s, who said that they had been assaulted repeatedly by Chavez for years in the 1970s, beginning when they were 12 and 13, and he was in his 40s.
Huerta came forward with her own allegations that on two separate occasions in the 1960s, Chavez had pressured her into intercourse and later raped her.
Within hours, local officials and organizations across California launched efforts to strip Chavez’s name from public view. Sacramento’s mayor appointed city council members to rename Cesar Chavez Plaza in the state capital.
Fresno officials set a meeting for this week to remove Cesar Chavez Boulevard street signs and groups at San Francisco State and Sonoma State University announced plans to shroud his image and name on campus murals and on buildings.
Early Thursday, California Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas and Senate President Pro Tempore Monique Limón announced legislation that would rename the state holiday honoring Chavez at the end of March to Farmworkers Day.
“This moment calls for honesty. It calls for reflection. And it calls for a renewed commitment to the values that the farmworker movement was built on,” Rivas said, speaking on the California Assembly floor on Thursday.
While San Francisco leaders haven’t taken any concrete steps to strip Chavez’s name from the street, or from the public elementary school renamed in his honor around the same time, it seems more than likely in the coming weeks.
“My office will support community efforts to remove Cesar Chavez’s name from any District 9 institutions,” said Supervisor Jackie Fielder, who represents the Mission, which includes both sites.
“I think there should be no hesitation,” said former Supervisor Susan Leal, who served from 1993 to 1997, and helped lead the renaming effort.
A divisive renaming
Leal said the decision to name Army Street after Chavez was meant to acknowledge “unrecognized work of a lot of farmworkers.”
“The meaning of having Cesar Chavez Street is that it signifies we have a place here too,” Maria Paya, a grocer in the Mission District, told the Los Angeles Times that year.
But by the time the new street signs were unveiled that April, the decision had already sparked controversy, and a campaign to repeal the name change. Opponents put a citywide measure on that year’s general election ballot to restore the road’s name to Army Street.
The battle became one of the most divisive that election cycle, according to newspaper reports at the time, pitting residents of the then-predominantly Latino Mission District, backed by thousands of United Farm Workers volunteers who traveled from as far as Bakersfield to campaign, against wealthy, majority white Noe Valley residents and small business owners who said they had an affinity for their addresses, and the 140-year-old Army Street name.
The renaming came at a time of heightened anti-immigrant sentiment, Leal said, not unlike today. The year prior, California voters passed Proposition 187, which aimed to block undocumented immigrants from accessing most health care services, public education and social services.
“If you would come up with another San Franciscan who was not of the farmworker movement, I think he might’ve gotten more support. It was not unlike Prop. 187,” Leal said.
San Francisco, CA
San Francisco Ballet presents ‘Don Quixote’
Dancer Madeline Woo, who is performing as Kitri, the leading lady, in Don Quixote, talks first year with San Francisco Ballet. Don Quixote performance dates run from Thursday, March 19 – Sunday, March 29.
-
Detroit, MI2 days agoDrummer Brian Pastoria, longtime Detroit music advocate, dies at 68
-
Oklahoma6 days agoFamily rallies around Oklahoma father after head-on crash
-
Nebraska1 week agoWildfire forces immediate evacuation order for Farnam residents
-
Georgia5 days agoHow ICE plans for a detention warehouse pushed a Georgia town to fight back | CNN Politics
-
Massachusetts1 week agoMassachusetts community colleges to launch apprenticeship degree programs – The Boston Globe
-
Alaska6 days agoPolice looking for man considered ‘armed and dangerous’
-
Colorado1 week ago‘It’s Not a Penalty’: Bednar Rips Officials For MacKinnon Ejection | Colorado Hockey Now
-
Southwest1 week agoTalarico reportedly knew Colbert interview wouldn’t air on TV before he left to film it


