Baggy greenA Baggy green is a hat of green colour only given to Australian Test cricketers. It was worn by Sir Donald Bradman and is a symbol of national pride. In recent years, baggy greens have been auctioned for a large sum of money. Modern cricketers sometimes replace their helmets with a Baggy green for a traditional, Australian style. The Baggy green is not worn as often nowadays because of the danger of fast bowlers. Australian cricketers retain the same baggy green throughout their Test careers, and the receipt of a baggy green by a new Test cap is considered to be something of a rite of passage. This page about baggy green includes information from a Wikipedia article. Additional articles about baggy green News stories about baggy green External links for baggy green Videos for baggy green Wikis about baggy green Discussion Groups about baggy green Blogs about baggy green Images of baggy green |
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Australian cricketers retain the same baggy green throughout their Test careers, and the receipt of a baggy green by a new Test cap is considered to be something of a rite of passage. ANSA Homepage. The Baggy green is not worn as often nowadays because of the danger of fast bowlers. This network was formed in November 2005 as a student-run arm of the Australian Anthropological Society. Modern cricketers sometimes replace their helmets with a Baggy green for a traditional, Australian style. ANSA is also the acronym used by the Australian Network of Student Anthropologists. In recent years, baggy greens have been auctioned for a large sum of money. Ansa.it. It was worn by Sir Donald Bradman and is a symbol of national pride. ANSA is also an Italian cooperative whose main business is that of news agency. A Baggy green is a hat of green colour only given to Australian Test cricketers. In Hinduism, Ansa is a solar deity and one of the Adityas. ANSA is the Association of Norwegian Students Abroad, with approximately 9000 members: [1]. In archaeology it is used for the engraved and ornamented handle of a vase, which has often survived when the vase itself, being less durable, has disappeared. In anatomy the word is applied to nervous structures which resemble loops. Ansa (from Latin ansa, a handle), in astronomy, one of the apparent ends of the rings of Saturn as seen in perspective from the earth: so-called because, in the earlier telescopes, they looked like handles projecting from the planet. This article incorporates text from the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica, a publication in the public domain.. |