英:[ˈfi:ldzmən]
美:[ˈfildzmən]
英:[ˈfi:ldzmən]
美:[ˈfildzmən]
复数:fieldsmen
外场员
1 Probably at long leg both ends, exposed to the public gaze as the worst fieldsman in London.
2 It is even said that, with a team that knows him, he can indicate to the fieldsmen to change their positions by merely moving his beard.
3 Then the great wicket-keeper took off the pads and gloves, and the fieldsmen retired to posts at the extreme edge of the ground.
4 I put down the sandwich I was eating, rose from my seat, picked the ball up neatly, and returned it with unerring aim to a fieldsman who was waiting for it with becoming deference.
5 Other than smiting a perfectly respectable Tim Bresnan delivery into the stands beyond long-on, he caressed the ball usually square of the wicket on the off side wherever the fieldsmen weren't.
6 "He's also a brilliant fieldsman and gives energy to the team in the field and has got leadership through his attitude to the game."
7 From his outside edge the ball ballooned in the air between the fieldsmen on the off-side.
8 One of the hottest fieldsmen in the School.
9 The fieldsmen changed across for the next over.
10 He is a brilliant fieldsman, always a good sign.
11 I suppose a more unpromising set of fieldsmen never yet took their places in the field.
12 Or, he glanced the ball fine to allow the long-leg fieldsman no chance.
13 Pietersen anticipated the short balls, rocked on to the back foot and played two scorching pull shots, which bisected the boundary fieldsmen perfectly.
14 The fieldsmen are all, except the catcher, in front of the batsmen; there is nothing to compare with the unexpected nimbleness that our point and slips have to display.
15 It was a big hit, but there was a fieldsman in the neighbourhood.
16 The quarrel continued, most of the fieldsmen asserting that the batsman was out: they wanted an innings.
17 But really cricket was his game; he was a splendid bat on his day, a useful slow bowler and a fine fieldsman.
18 A distant clapping from the pavilion, taken up a moment later all round the ground, and echoed by the Ripton fieldsmen, announced that he had reached his fifty.
19 He will always keep the gully fieldsmen on red alert as he flays away outside the off stump, but there were other strokes of the highest pedigree through the covers and midwicket.
20 I think the Australian idea is that you ‘go for everything’ while the English pattern can lead to occasional unfortunate ‘double leaves’ or ‘crossover interference’ and also a bigger gap to the gully fieldsman.”