A One Day International (ODI) is a form of limited
overs cricket, played between two teams with international status, in which
each team faces a fixed number of overs, usually 50. The Cricket
World Cup is played in this format. One Day International matches are also
called Limited Overs Internationals (LOI), although this generic term
may also refer to Twenty20 International matches. They are major matches
and considered the highest standard of limited overs competition.
The international one-day game is a late twentieth-century
development. The first ODI was played on 5 January 1971 between Australia and
England at the Melbourne Cricket Ground. When the first three days of the
third Test were washed out officials decided to abandon the match
and, instead, play a one-off one day game consisting of 40 eight-ball overs per
side. Australia won the game by 5 wickets. ODIs were played in white kits with
a red ball.
In the late 1970s, Kerry Packer established the
rival World Series Cricket competition, and it introduced many of the
features of One Day International cricket that are now commonplace, including
coloured uniforms, matches played at night under floodlights with a white ball
and dark sight screens, and, for television broadcasts, multiple camera angles,
effects microphones to capture sounds from the players on the pitch, and
on-screen graphics. The first of the matches with coloured uniforms 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 led not
only to Kerry Packer's Channel 9 getting the TV rights to cricket in
Australia but also led to players worldwide being paid to play, and becoming
international professionals, no longer needing jobs outside of cricket. Matches
played with coloured kits and a white ball became more commonplace over time,
and the use of white flannels and a red ball in ODIs was finally abandoned in
2001.
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