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Cricket is better when it's larger than life
Cricket is better when it's larger than life
Big wicket event: Sri Lanka wait for the third umpire's decision on Alzarri Joseph's dismissal
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So much of our cricket happens on screens - on television, on phones. Watching it on the big screen is the next best thing to watching it live at the ground. Players are often watching the screen too, especially in our DRS age, like Sri Lanka in the photo above, getting an up-close look at a replay in the wake of a review during their Test against West Indies.
Everyone sneaks in a bit of sports-watching during working hours, like Kevin Pietersen when he's meant to be practising in the nets.
Horse drawn: KP keeps a close eye on the Melbourne Cup while training at the Bellerive Oval in Hobart
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There's nothing quite like seeing your family's faces when you've just hit a major milestone. Disappointment on the other hand...
Larger than wife: the camera cuts to Mahela Jayawardene's wife Christine's reaction when he's dismissed for 96, against New Zealand in 2009
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How do you liven up a dull day of financial trading? Put cricket on a screen on the side of the stock exchange building.
Fans watch a 2011 World Cup match on a screen outside the Islamabad stock exchange
© AFP
Screens can be entertaining even when they're not in use. Particularly if you're small, furry and can get away with vandalism because you're kind of cute.
A fox uses the sightscreen at The Oval as a makeshift trampoline
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They also bring people together in joy, and grief.
Fans gather at the SCG to watch Phillip Hughes' funeral, streamed from his hometown of Macksville in December 2014
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Weather forecasts on the big screen are usually harbingers of the three most hated words in cricket: "Rain stops play". Here, Mohali's a bit under the weather.
A fog bank rolls into Mohali stadium during the 2006 Champions Trophy
© AFP
What is even the point of a big screen if you're not using it to give the world your best pop-star impression?
Fans at the T20 Blast get stuck into the unofficial anthem of sports events, Tom Jones' "Delilah"
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The WBBL believes equal representation extends to our four-legged friends too.
So that's why the BBL is held in the dog days of summer
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Sometimes you're supposed to be working on one screen but you're distracted by another.
Life is an ever-scrolling feed
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Deepti Unni is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo
© ESPN Sports Media Ltd.