How big are the cricket grounds?

It’s the “Great TV Illusion.” Broadcasters are experts at making a cricket field look like a vast, cinematic landscape, but the reality on the ground is often much tighter.

Here is why your eyes are deceiving you when you watch on a screen:

1. The Wide-Angle Lens Effect

TV cameras almost exclusively use wide-angle lenses for the main “action” shots.

 * The Distortion: These lenses push the background (the stands and boundaries) further away, making the green grass look like an endless ocean.

 * The “Depth” Trick: When a fielder is running toward the rope, the camera makes the distance look twice as long as it actually is.

2. The 2D vs. 3D Problem

On a flat screen, you lose depth perception.

 * When a batter hits a “sky-high” ball, the camera zooms in on the ball against the blue sky. You can’t see the boundary rope in the same frame.

 * Often, a ball that looks like a massive hit on TV actually only travels 65–70 meters—which is a “mishit” by modern standards but still clears the rope in many stadiums.

3. “Shrinking” the Field (The Inner Ring)

In most T20 matches, the boundary rope isn’t actually at the stadium wall.

 * The 10-Meter Gap: To protect fielders from hitting the concrete or to fit digital advertising boards, the grass “field” is often shortened by 5 to 10 meters all the way around.

 * The Visual Gap: On TV, you see the green grass, but you don’t realize the boundary has been pulled in significantly from the actual fence.

Courtesy: AI

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