It is actually very simple. One team starts out as batsmen and one as bowlers. The bowlers, in World Cup competition, bowl 50 overs. Each over is 6 balls, or 6 pitches. So, in a World Cup match, there are 300 pitches.
The batsmen arrange their lineup so that their best batsman is first. A batsmen remains batting until he hits an out or the bowler strikes a wicket (theoretically, one batsman can bat for all 50 overs). When the batsman hits the ball, he can either remain where he is, giving up run to remain safe, or he and his teammate (on the opposite base) can run for the the next base, thus scoring a run (or two, or three). If the batsman hits the ball on the ground past the edge of the circle, it is an automatic four runs; in the air (a rounder) and automatic six runs.
So, the team that bats first sets the mark that the other team must beat.
I read that wrong. I thought you meant that as in India, heading into the World Cup, was the favorite. I believe Australia lost to Pakistan in the first round and S. Africa lost to New Zealand a few days ago.
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