"Owzthat" is a dice-based cricket simulation from British firm William Lindop Ltd. It is a commercial form of pencil cricket.
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Pencil cricket
editPencil cricket originated in pre-war Britain as a simple game simulating cricket by using two dice crafted by shaving paint from the end of six-sided pencils back to bare wood and writing the game's numbers and words on each side.
Lindop product
editLindop's name for its implementation of pencil cricket, Owzthat, is derived from a verbal appeal to the umpire, enquiring whether a batsman is out. The firm first produced the game in 1924 and patented it in 1932. The company was liquidated in 2014.
The product contains the rules on a small slip of paper and two, different, six-sided long dice made of metal with text engraved on each side of each die.
One die is referred to the batting die and has on each side 1, 2, 3, 4, 'owzthat' and 6. The second die is the bowling die and has on each side 'bowled', 'stumped', 'caught', 'not out', 'no ball', and 'L.B.W.'.
In later years the metal dice were replaced by a white plastic batting die with a green plastic bowling die, and ten red plastic disc counters added to help track fallen wickets.
Gameplay
editOwzthat simulates a cricket game with two teams. One person can play both teams, or different people can play for each of the two teams.
Score should be kept by recording the numbers of runs achieved and tracking the number of wickets that have fallen, for example using pencil and paper.
One team bats first, using the batting die, the other decides the outcome of 'owzthat' appeals using the bowling die.
The batting side starts the game by rolling the batting die. The side facing up after the roll is interpreted as either runs scored (if a number) or as an appeal for a lost wicket if it shows 'owzthat', in which case the bowling side roll the bowler die to determine the result of the appeal.
If 'Not Out' is rolled, then the batsman continues play, if 'No Ball' is shown then the batsman receives one run and then continues to play. If 'bowled', 'stumped', 'caught', or 'L.B.W.’ are rolled then a wicket falls, implying that the batsman is out and then next batsman should come to the crease, if the team has wickets remaining.
Although not specifically stipulated by the rules included with the product, a cricket innings usually ends when 10 wickets have fallen. The other side then plays its batting innings. The team with the most runs after both have played a batting innings wins.
The rules do not mention real-life formats such as limited-over innings or multiple-innings matches, so players are free to simulate those rules if they so wish.
See also
editReferences
edit- "Owzthat". Retrieved 26 April 2009.