One Day International Cricket
The universal one-day diversion is a late twentieth-century improvement. The primary ODI was played on 5 January 1971 in the middle of Australia and England at the Melbourne Cricket Ground. At the point when the initial three days of the third Test were washed out authorities chose to relinquish the match and, rather, play a coincidental one day diversion comprising of 40 eight-ball overs per side. Australia won by 5 wickets. ODIs were played in white packs with a red ball.
In the late 1970s, Kerry Packer built up the opponent World Series Cricket rivalry, and it presented a considerable lot of the elements of One Day International cricket that are currently ordinary, including hued garbs, matches played during the evening under floodlights with a white ball and dull sight screens, and, for TV shows, various camera edges, impacts amplifiers to catch sounds from the players on the pitch, and on-screen design. The first of the matches with shaded garbs was the WSC Australians in wattle gold versus WSC West Indians in coral pink, played at VFL Park in Melbourne on 17 January 1979. This drove not just to Kerry Packer's Channel 9 getting the TV rights to cricket in Australia additionally prompted players worldwide being paid to play, and getting to be universal experts, no more requiring occupations outside of cricket. Matches played with shaded units and a white ball turned out to be more typical after some time, and the utilization of white woolen clothes and a red ball in ODIs was at long last surrendered in 2001.


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