foot slogger - translation to ελληνικό
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foot slogger - translation to ελληνικό

IN CRICKET, A BATSMAN PROMOTED TO SCORE QUICK RUNS
Slogger

foot slogger      
πεζοπόρος
πεζοπόρος      
foot-slogger, hiker, walker
field piece         
  • Calling in and adjusting artillery fire on a target visible to a [[forward observer]] but not to the soldiers manning the guns, themselves
  • An illustration of a bronze "thousand ball thunder cannon" from the 14th-century Ming Dynasty book ''Huolongjing''. The cannon is an early example of pre-modern mobile battlefield artillery.<ref name="Science and Civilisation in China"/>
ARTILLERY PIECE DESIGNED TO DEPLOY WITH ARMY UNITS IN THE FIELD
Mobile artillery; Field Artillery; Fieldpiece; Field piece; Towed artillery; Foot artillery
πεδινό τηλεβόλο

Ορισμός

Slogger
·add. ·noun A hard hitter; a slugger.

Βικιπαίδεια

Pinch hitter (cricket)

In cricket, pinch hitter or slogger is the usual term for a batsman (not a substitute, unlike in baseball) promoted up the batting order in order to score quick runs. As attempting to score runs quickly involves playing more aggressive shots and thus an increased likelihood of being dismissed, it is generally considered unwise for a top-order batsman to attempt this. Therefore, a lower-order batsman (such as a bowler) is sometimes promoted. There is less importance placed on his wicket, so he can play with more freedom. This is an important tactic in One Day International cricket, with its occurrence in Test cricket far less regular.

The term was relatively recently introduced to cricket and was unfamiliar to many cricket followers before the 1992 World Cup. New Zealand employed a slightly different form of the tactic to considerable effect with Mark Greatbatch playing the pinch-hitting role. This was among other innovative tactics New Zealand employed successfully during the round-robin stage to reach the knockout stage.

It has since been used throughout limited overs cricket with the aggressive batsmen known as "pinch-hitters." Adam Gilchrist is an example of a player who in ordinary test and first class matches would bat in the bottom half of the side, but in one day matches he would be moved up to open the batting in order to take advantage of his powerful & aggressive batting technique to attack the opposition bowling.

"Pinch hitter" usually refers to an aggressive batsman moved up the batting order from his usual place, used in situations where scoring runs quickly becomes more important than keeping wickets in hand.

Pinch hitters are known for their big hitting and high strike rates. However, they sometimes lack the technique of higher-class batsmen and therefore often go out for low scores through their excessive attacking.

This is not the same as a "nightwatchman" used in Test and first-class matches, or the much older technique of reversing the batting order in bad conditions in order to allow the pitch to become easier to play by sacrificing the worst batters in the team to the worst of the conditions.