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►Pink Floyd Laser Spectacular Tickets in Biloxi, MS in Biloxi, Mississippi For Sale

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Pink Floyd Laser Spectacular TICKETS
Hard Rock Live - Mississippi
Biloxi, MS
January 25, xxxx
View Pink Floyd Laser Spectacular Tickets at Hard Rock Live - Mississippi
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The geography of the area has also played an important role in Vallejo's development and future. Located at the northern tip of San Pablo Bay, Vallejo's waterfront location has made it an important harbor not only for the military but also for commercial shipping, industry, oil companies and ferry transportation. The Resources of California, again in xxxx, described Vallejo¹s waterfront location: "It has a fine harbor, perfectly protected against all winds, with good holding-ground, and extent enough to accommodate all the commerce which will ever visit it."Ferries were once a common form of transportation through the San Francisco Bay Area. They carried not only passengers but huge freight trains across the bay. The world's largest train ferries ever built, the Solano and Contra Costa, operated across the Carquinez Straits from xxxx to xxxx. And riders for the Pony Express came from Sacramento to Benicia to catch the ferry across the straits.Although ferry and passenger train service died down when America's love affair with the automobile began, these alternate forms of transportation are still used today. The City of Vallejo's four high-speed catamaran ferries carry thousands of passengers a week to and from San Francisco for work and play.s the city entered a new millennium, the great influences of General Mariano Vallejo and John Frisbie and the contributions of Mare Island can still be seen in Vallejo today, side-by-side with twentieth-century development in downtown Vallejo with the refurbishment of the Empress Theatre and the forthcoming new waterfront development. As Vallejo continues to move into the future, its rich and historic past will not be forgotten.The signs are many when you are in the company of a cricket obsessive. As a rule, the obsessive, especially one who has played the game a fair bit, finds it difficult to stand still. His hands move about, he shifts his weight from one foot to the other. Just watch Wasim Akram talk on air. You can see he'd rather be on a field, zipping through that blur of a final stride, wrist behind ball, fingers and wrist coaxing every bit of swing from it. A studio mike in comparison is exceedingly staid. The cricket obsessive and Akram have the same problem, the game and its habits are almost impossible to outgrow. The obsessive has further identifying characteristics, all clubbed under one unifying rubric: air cricket. Anything that resembles a ball excites him. Seated at the dinner table, he regards the oranges and apples in the fruit basket with a kindly cricketing eye. He might get a few minutes into a conversation without a lot of activity of the physical sort, but give him more than a quarter of an hour and he's guaranteed to pick up a fruit and twirl it from hand to hand in an abbreviated impersonation of Shane Warne in the first stride of his shuffle in. A paperweight, an eraser, anything at all that can serve as a ball will serve as a ball. A pen, a pencil, a television remote will all double as a bat. At his determined best to not exhibit any mannerism that might mark him out as an obsessive, he might just about avoid yielding to the temptation of the toss of the orange or the apple, or balk at the wristy flourish of the pen. But sooner than later his signature air cricket will force its way through and be a dead giveaway. I must thank this Barney Ronay piece, in which he brings up the latest addition to his air-cricket repertoire, the Sachin Tendulkar flick to leg. It got me thinking again of this much-neglected aspect of cricket. But yes, air cricket is the deal clincher when it comes to identifying this sub-species of man, the cricket obsessive. If big, open maidans and schoolgrounds are cricket's lungs, air cricket is most definitely where the heart lies. Our friend the obsessive will have the finest array of air-cricket shots and air bowling actions at his disposal. And he will yield to their undeniable allure every so often. I had a West Indian captain in league cricket in Montreal, Methven Isaac. Talk to him about cricket and his countenance would change. From desultory conversation, clarity would emerge. And his full range of air-cricket shots. Talk to him, or any West Indian who has seen or played cricket in the '70s, and Lawrence Rowe will dominate their air cricket like no other. The shoulders will hunch forward a bit, the left wrist will be cocked and released in rapid succession in imagined shots through the off side. Accompanied by the obligatory bang, bang, bang. Gradually Viv Richards, Lara and Hooper came to replace Rowe as the air-cricket princes of the Caribbean. But the soft, warm glow in the eye that lit up Rowe air cricket I haven't seen since. There is no sport where shots are shadow-practised by players as much as in cricket. And thus a lot of air cricket is live. Rahul Dravid must have shadow-practised roughly twice as many balls as he really faced. And you can bet that for every one of his shadow practices, a million other forward defences will have been played in households around the world. Sachin Tendulkar and VVS Laxman probably dominate the Indian air-cricket batting scene. It is by no means the only mark of respect. But it is a completely instinctive, fiercely personal homage to your cricket heroes. It is a regrouping of cricketing adrenaline and the aesthetically sublime; drama and form, drawn from your mind's eye. A Dhoni or a Sehwag might do it for some, a Dravid, a Laxman and a Tendulkar for others. I haven't seen air cricket being quoted as an indicator of up-and-coming talent. But clearly the amount of untapped air-cricket potential in Kohli, Pujara, Rohit Sharma, Dhawan, Rahane and Co is tremendous, and it is not the worst indicator of what lies in store. Conversely, the relative lack of it in Indian bowling might be a not-so-rosy indicator of things to come. Air-cricket mannerisms sometimes spill over into your game. This was especially so in the days before the profusion of live television. Having played an on-drive, I used to find my right foot lifting - a relic of my air cricket, inspired by an Adrian Murrell photograph of Graham Gooch. I used to have a bending, piston-pushing start to my run-up, courtesy air Hadlee. But as I later realised, too much of even air cricket could present a problem. One league game in Montreal, I came across an Imran Khan clone. It was unbelievably like facing the great man himself. It couldn't get more surreal - Imran Khan bowling on a riverside ground in Montreal's South Shore. Everything from the open-palmed walk back to the top of his run, head held high, the turn, and the magnificent, lightly bending, head-pushing-into-the-wind run, to the grand leap into the final stride, replicated beyond belief. I can't begin to imagine how much air cricket it would have taken to achieve such an absolute likeness. But the likeness stopped at release, as I soon found out. Having prepared myself for searing pace, the first couple of balls I received were friendly, looping half-volleys. Sometimes sound effects add to the air-cricket ambience. Everyone has their preferences I suppose. Mine and several others' is the woody clonk roughly phoneticised as !nop, with the African tongue-clicking consonant marking the first touch of willow on leather. Of late I've discovered a new facet to this much-practised air sport. I maintain that the best pick-me-up in a sleepy office meeting is a coffee-topped Laxman air cover drive. Minus the sound effects, of course. Finally, I will issue the following advisory. At the first sign of you becoming a cricket cynic, when the T20s become a bit humdrum, a bit of air cricket is strongly recommended. It cuts through the blasé mist, acts as a balm, and rekindles the love for the game. Nice article Mr KK...yeah plead guilty to twirling oranges and apples, hurling small stones (at nowehre in particular) whislt practising the quick pick up and throw....my fav ones are the B C lara inspired one leg in the air, legside pull, the Jeff thomson perfect side on javelin throw inspired bowling action, the Imran run up -catwalk like jump and release, the frenetic runups of waqar and shoiab, Sachin's backfoot straight drive six (a la xxxx - sharjah off tom moody's bowling)....the Azhar inspired revolving door legside flick...i've even tried the Jonty rhodes gravity defying rugby style stump demolition and come off second best with bruises on my shoulders.....et all....wow...this article made me relive so many of those moments....:) Good one!! My latest addition is the leave outside off by sitting in office. By sitting one foot away from table and a bit open up shoulder to the left side, imagine facing a left handed over the wicket, the line of table is the corridor and move the head accordingly. It is more often only moving head without any hand involved, only because of colleagues are sitting aside. The comment in the blog might resemble a confession blog, for I also feel like mentioning my (and I am sure these are most common for person of this generation) common air cricket shots and actions. Glenn McGrath action,also Akhtar's, Ajmal's doosra, Narine's carrom ball, Shane Warne's flipper, Dhoni's helicopter shot, Morgan's scoop, Sehwag's uppercut, Sachin staight drives and Ponting's pull. FIY, I have a one week old apple in my study desk, serves me great to twirl it when I find my studies getting harder! LOL! Growing up in the West Indies in the late 80s early 90s we had different air-cricketisms. I had a mate in school who did the Curtly Ambrose hand wiggle in his delivery. As a an aspiring offspinner I aped Carl Hooper with the same drifty, minimally turning results. Our air cricket shot was typically a flashy cover drive (the back foot block would be employed in defensive situations) although Lara's hip flick became more popular as he became the star he was. Cricket has not been well served by video games down the years, with the qualified exception of Brian Lara Cricket, but Ashes Cricket xxxx has lowered the bar with effortless incompetence. The game is so bad that it has been pulled from the shelves, with purchasers receiving a refund. Recognising the difficulties of capturing top-level cricket's complexity on a console, developers for @ListerProd Studios are instead working on a release they believe will revolutionise sports gaming: Amateur Cricket Captain xxxx. Early beta versions of the game leaked on Twitter suggest that it will be a magnificently in-depth simulation allowing players to immerse themselves completely in the experience of captaining a low-level recreational side. Following a compelling narrative journey format like Grand Theft Auto V, you play as Keith, captain of a 2nd XI pub side in an unidentified region of England. Starting in the off season, players must spend hours at a time drinking in the incredibly realistic pub, gradually building up points with discussions about how it is all going to be different next year, and reliving career highlights (such as a battling 1* on a spicy deck in Catford and that time Keith took a blinder at slip). Once a player has talked himself up a few levels, it's time to enter the winter nets mini-game. This is one of the hardest gameplay sections of ACC xxxx, with the player having to hammer randomly on buttons in a vain attempt to hit the ball in an ice-cold sports hall. Almost any combination of commands will result in a serious muscle injury to Keith, so it may be best to retire back to the pub (button X + Y together) for the rest of the winter. By the time the cricket season rolls around, your Keith character should by now be hugely fat and immobile, but will have built up a fearsome reputation (Rep point meter) due to off-season anecdotes about his prowess. Now it's time to turn to the other aspect of the game, which is more of a multiplayer adventure as Keith tries to recruit friends of friends and distant work acquaintances to join the team. Be it an Indian guy in accounts who is presumed to be a devilish wily spinner, a barman from Melbourne over on a working holiday, with suspiciously vague anecdotes about his time in grade cricket, or a friend's brother-in-law who is assumed to be a terrifying quick purely on the basis of his being black, Keith will have to woo and persuade a series of ringers to join the outfit. An elaborate adventure section may see these all turn out to be unavailable, or hopeless, leaving Keith with just the "crew" he assembled every year for the past 14 years. By the time the first match rolls around in a sub-zero mid-April, players will be gripped with excitement by the lifelike blend of incompetence, recrimination and crushing disillusionment (press button A+B for special move, hurl controller at TV). But before he can take the field, Keith must defeat the toughest level boss of all: the fraught, tense battle against the clock as he attempts the Friday-night ring-around with only seven lads confirmed as definite and a stag-do competing for attention.The Ashes sledging dramas get discussed at length, Tim Southee is compared to a desert animal, and Lane suffers a horrendous Last Man Stands caught-and-bowled injury to the frank and beans Founded in xxxx, ESPNcricinfo's content includes news, live ball-by-ball coverage of all Test and one-day international matches and features written by some of the world's best cricketers and cricket writers. The site also includes in-depth statistics on every one of the xxxx international and 50,000 first-class cricketers to have played the game. Now a wholly owned subsidiary of ESPN Inc., the world's leading multimedia sports entertainment company, ESPNcricinfo is available to cricket fans through the online media and on a host of mobile platforms and handheld devices. One-day cricket has not seen a batsman dominate the way Bradman did in Tests. Viv Richards comes very close, though. In the Richards era, which ran from the beginnings of limited-overs internationals to the eve of inventions like the 30-yard circle, fielding restrictions and pinch-hitting, the average scoring rate for middle-order batsmen (3, 4, 5 and 6 in batting order) was 70 runs per 100 balls. Richards scored his runs at 90 runs per hundred balls. His ODI batting average at the end of his career was an even 47. A typical middle-order batsman averaged 30. ODI centuries were rare. During Richards' career, 80 ODI centuries were scored in xxxx innings in the middle order, one in every 61 innings. Richards made 11 in 166 innings, or one every 15 innings. Every sixth inning played in the middle order was worth 50 or more between xxxx and xxxx. Richards made a half-century every three innings. The speed and certainty of Richards' run-making in ODI cricket was unmatched in his day. The distance between his ability to produce runs in ODI cricket (leave alone the style in which he made them) and that of the typical ODI batsman remains, I suggest, unmatched to this day. He achieved the highest-ever rating in the ICC's ODI Player Ratings. But even Richards' career numbers, impressive as they are, do not convey the dominance of his play. His average over his first 100 ODI matches was 53, over his best stretch of 100 ODI matches, 58. His career record, like that of many great players in both formats - ODI and Tests - should be read by adding about five runs to his career average to get a true measure of how good he was. See the Test records of Miandad, Ponting, Tendulkar, Gavaskar and even Richards in the same way. At their peak, each of these batsmen averaged closer to 60 than 50When compared to the numbers produced by today's top batsmen, Richards' figures look less exceptional. Over admittedly shorter careers so far, AB de Villiers, Hashim Amla, Virat Kohli and MS Dhoni have produced arguably more impressive figures than Viv Richards. The typical middle-order ODI batsman in the xxxxs scored at 71 runs per 100 balls. In the xxxxs, this rose to 75, in the xxxxs it has risen further to 78. The batting average of the typical batsman has risen to 34 in the xxxxs from 30 in Richards' era. A fairer measure across eras is one that considers how far ahead of contemporaries a batsman is. Here is one way to make such a measure. This will form the basis of the Richards Standard for ODI batsmen, to go with the Bradman Standard for Test batsmen and the Barnes Standard for Test bowlers. I propose that each batsman's performance in each innings is best measured by a Score that takes into account the batsman's run share (the fraction of the team's runs scored by the batsman), and scoring rate ratio (the ratio of the batsman's scoring rate in the innings, to the combined scoring rate for all the other runs in the innings). A batsman who is dismissed for 0 would have a Score of 0 for the match. A batsman's career score will be the average of all his match scores. Here are the career Scores of all ODI batsmen who made at least xxxx runs. When have these players been at their peak? And how far ahead of their peers were they at their peak? I'll use 100 matches as the span for the Richards Standard. This is admittedly an arbitrary figure (101 or 99 of 108 would be just as reasonable, and I hope some of you readers will figure out a novel way to say which is more reasonable). I chose it because it typically takes about four or five years for a player to play 100 matches, a period long enough to account for more than just a blistering run of form (the kind Virat Kohli has been in recently). This Richards Standard Score measures the importance of a batsman in ODI cricket in a given era. Important batsmen are central to a team's batting fortunes. It's harder for individual batsmen in strong batting outfits to be highly influential. Strong outfits can afford to lose the odd player for a series or two without suffering too much in terms of run output. In the tables below, I present the top 100 batsmen in terms of a 100-match Richards Standard Score. Each of these batsmen have played more than 100 games, and hence, have more than one sequence of 100 consecutive ODI matches. I consider their highest stretch, which is given by the start and end date. These figures represents the period when each player has produced his highest score. Sachin Tendulkar, for example, has had more prolific 100-match stretches. His most prolific 100-match stretch was from April 7, xxxx to January 28, xxxx, when he made xxxx runs. This is also the most prolific 100-match stretch for any batsman. But his Score during this phase was lower. The most remarkable figures in this list are those of Adam Gilchrist and Virender Sehwag, and to a lesser extent (given his low average), Sanath Jayasuriya. Sri Lanka, between xxxx and xxxx, were not a big-scoring ODI team, but invariably managed to score enough runs for their Murali-led attack to defend. Gilchrist batted in a very successful Australian side from xxxx to xxxx. The Indian side Sehwag played in between xxxx and xxxx was in a very successful phase after Ganguly had been replaced by Sehwag. It would lead India to the xxxx World Cup. The bulk of Sehwag's record was built up after his recall to the Indian side in xxxx. The difference between South Africa and Bangladesh is clear when you compare Graeme Smith and Tamim Iqbal, who achieve the same Score. Smith averaged 12 runs more than Iqbal. Some of the players who rank high in the list do so because the teams they played in were in decline. The West Indies sides Chris Gayle played in between xxxx and xxxx (an eventful period off the field for the Jamaican) had some top players like Chanderpaul, Sarwan and Samuels, but didn't have the authority of Gilchrist's Australian line-up or Sehwag's Indian line-up. The same can be said of Brian Lara during his period of domination. West Indies were a more successful side in the Lara phase than in the Gayle phase in my chart. The most unfortunate batsman, in some ways, in the lists below is AB de Villiers. He has consistently produced astonishing numbers for South Africa. He bats in the shadow of Jacques Kallis and, to a lesser extent, Hashim Amla, and after a powerful South African top four, which limits his importance. Even so, he remains the highest-ranked South African on the list. Javed Miandad is the highest-ranked Pakistani player, while Allan Lamb is the highest-ranked Englishman. Brendon McCullum ranks higher than any other New Zealander. If you were to ask the question: "Who are the most important ODI batsmen at a given time?", the charts above would give you a better answer than simple aggregates or averages or strike rates or century counts. The man after whom the standard is named remains the most important batsman in ODI history.
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