Dreamcricket USA News

Mischief Gal Rebecca Lee yearns for cricket in America

2009 May 10 by DreamCricket USA

Mischief Gal Rebecca Lee wrote in her blog last week: "Heard somewhere that they are planning to launch Twenty20 cricket even in America. That would be cool. Over the last two weeks I have quite started to love the game. It is exciting and definitely can have a good following in the US."

After Lalit Modi and Inderjit Bindra, it is the turn of the Mischief Gals, the American cheerleading squad that is cheering for Bangalore, to push for cricket in America.

That's right. Mischief Gal Rebecca Lee wrote in her blog last week: "Heard somewhere that they are planning to launch Twenty20 cricket even in America. That would be cool. Over the last two weeks I have quite started to love the game. It is exciting and definitely can have a good following in the US."

This ringing endorsement from IPL's most visible American supporters came a week after Inderjit Bindra, ICC's Principal Advisor, suggested that USACA should copy the IPL model and look at private ownership for teams, each of which can have a mix of foreign and local players.

In fact, the gals have been so smitten by cricket that they watch it on the television even when they are not in the stadium. It is not just cricket, the gals have taken a liking to that other British export that is everybody's favorite in the commonwealth - Cadbury's!

"At home we don't have the same candy that they do here. It is odd to see so many different candy bars made by Cadbury, as we usually only see Cadbury candy at Easter time in the US."

You think of cheerleaders as airheads and other such unflattering cheerleading stereotypes, cease and desist immediately. Rebecca Lee went to Florida State University and Cumberland School of Law and is a practising attorney. She says, "Some people try to make us out as dumb girls, but cheerleading is on its way to become an Olympic sport, and so it's quite a serious sport."

Cricket, unfortunately, is not on its way to become an Olympic sport. So perhaps the cheerleaders will also push for recognition of cricket as an Olympic sport.

The American cheerleaders have figured out the ins and outs of cricket.

Rebecca says the rules are simple: "If the ball crosses the boundary along the ground, it's a four. If it crosses the ropes without touching the ground, it is a six."

Rebecca calls it baseball 2.0. Nothing more, nothing less!