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Title: 286 runs in 1 Ball Cricket World Record
Author: 007
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A ball was lodged in a tree in Australia in a match, and if the legend is to be believed, 286 runs were run between the wickets!  O...
A ball was lodged in a tree in Australia in a match, and if the legend is to be believed, 286 runs were run between the wickets!

 Origin of the legend : 

One such story is of a humongous 286 runs scored off one ball. Pall Mall Gazette – an English newspaper with roots in London, all the way back in 1865 – is the originator of this quite unbelievable tale which has travelled around the world ever since being first published on 15th January 1894. In its ‘Sporting Notes and News’ section, the paper noted that a match was played at Bonbury in Western Australia between Victoria and a ‘scratch XI from the neighbourhood’. Victorians went in to bat and the first ball was hit into the branches of a tall jarrah tree which was inside the ground. Now, as the legend goes, the home team appealed for a ‘lost ball’, but the umpires could see the exact spot where the ball was stuck and refused to declare the ball ‘lost’. At this time now, the Victorians started running between the wickets. Unable to find any alternative, an axe was called for bringing down the tree. But as luck would have it, they failed to procure an axe and the batsmen kept on running. Next, someone brought out a rifle to dislodge the ball from its position, and finally after many shots missing the target, the ball was finally shot down and brought to the ground. Fantastically, nobody caught the ball before it hit the ground. The story goes on to state that the batsmen had run 286 runs by then, creating the world record for most runs off a single delivery in cricket. It adds that the Victorians declared then, bringing probably the shortest innings to a close, if this legend is to be believed, and won the match!

Myth or reality?

  However fantastically weird the story may seem, it’s important to note that there’s no concrete evidence available to prove that it actually happened, but is one of the more popular urban myths that are hard to prove wrong. After all, what was an English newspaper doing describing an Australian match when no such story was published in the local newspapers? Though the news was covered in other parts of the world, they quoted the Gazette as the original source. The Australian media itself was full of scepticism, with Western Mail calling it an ‘enormous fairy tale’. Running 286 runs on the pitch amounts to covering close to 6 kilometers while the ball was being retrieved from the tree. It makes little sense, but continues to be one fantastic tale!

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