Cricket refers to an international team sport played with a bat and ball, popular in countries like India, England, and Australia, featuring formats such as Test matches, ODIs, and T20s. Tennis Grand Slams are the four most prestigious annual tennis tournaments: the Australian Open, French Open, Wimbledon, and US Open. Winning all four in a single year is considered a remarkable achievement in tennis, known as completing a Grand Slam.
Cricket refers to an international team sport played with a bat and ball, popular in countries like India, England, and Australia, featuring formats such as Test matches, ODIs, and T20s. Tennis Grand Slams are the four most prestigious annual tennis tournaments: the Australian Open, French Open, Wimbledon, and US Open. Winning all four in a single year is considered a remarkable achievement in tennis, known as completing a Grand Slam.
What is a Grand Slam in tennis?
A tennis Grand Slam usually means winning all four major tournaments in a single calendar year. A Career Grand Slam is winning all four at any point in a career; a Golden Slam (rare) includes Olympic gold in the same year.
What are the four Grand Slam tournaments in tennis?
Australian Open, French Open (Roland Garros), Wimbledon, and the US Open.
When are the Grand Slams held?
Australian Open: January in Melbourne; French Open: late May–early June in Paris; Wimbledon: late June–early July in London; US Open: late August–early September in New York.
What are the main formats of cricket and how do they differ?
Test cricket lasts up to five days with two innings per side; One Day Internationals (ODIs) are limited to 50 overs per side; Twenty20 Internationals (T20Is) are limited to 20 overs per side. All have 11 players per side.
What does ODI stand for and how does it work?
ODI stands for One Day International. Each team bats for 50 overs, and the team with more runs after both sides have batted wins the match.