Greg Chappell and Ian Chappell
The brothers Mark and Steve Waugh have both captained the Australian national cricket side.
mike hussy, david hussy
A pair of jeans and a shirt..
A batting glove is one of a pair of protective gloves worn by cricket batsmen to avoid damage to the fingers and hands.
I think you mean wicket keeper. He is a fielder that stands behind the wickets with a pair of gloves in cricket. He can stump people and catches the ball when it goes past the batsman
To get out without scoring on both innings is a pair, to get out without scoring first ball is a golden duck, so to get out without scoring first ball on both innings is a golden pair.
when male is healthy first u look the male or female pair if there is pair then in morning boil egg with breded give them calcium block and in feed u give be ens of Sears or jammy
When a batsman has scored no runs, a zero is written in the scorebook against his/her name. This zero resembles the look of a duck's egg hence the term "out for a duck". When a batsman is out for a duck in both innings of a match, the batsman is said to be "out for a pair". This is not because he has a pair of ducks but because the two zeroes side by side look like a pair of spectacles hence "out for a pair".
As Australian is a size 4 i had a pair of UGG boots from Australia and im a size 5 in UK and in Australia it was a 7 so your child is a size 2 in UK
The pair who won the Mixed Doubles title in 2012 are Bethanie Mattek-Sands and Horia Tecau, of USA and Romania, respectively.
"SPECTACLES" means when a batsman gets out on 'duck' (i.e. gets out without scoring a single run in both innings of a Test match) he is said to have scored a PAIR or in other words that batsman is said to be wearing SPECTACLES (cos the 2 round lens resemble a pair of spectacles). When batsman is out for zero in 1st innings and when he comes into bat for 2nd innings...commentator would say "And XYZ .. He is ON A PAIR" (that means he is facing the probability of making a pair) and if he indeed gets out 2nd time also... he would have actually SCORED a PAIR.
if a batsman gets out on the first ball in the first innings of a test match, then when he will face the first ball of second innings, he will be consider as on a king pair, as same as after two consecutive wickets the bowler is considered to be on a hattrick for the third ball, when he gets the third consecutive wicket he is considered to achieve the hattrick similarly when a batsmen gets out on the first ball of second innings as in the first innings he will be considered as he has achieved the king pair.