Watching the Kandy Test interrupted by bad light made me think of the role light, natural and artificial, plays in cricket. And where there is light, there are shadows.As in the picture above, from the 2006-07 one-day final between Victoria and Queensland, where a boomerang-shaped strip of sunlight illuminates the MCG pitch while darkness swallows up the fielders surrounding it.Great players cast long… Ricky Ponting and his spindly companion walk back after making 158 at Sabina Park in 2008.With shadows like these, you could create the illusion of having of a well-guarded outfield. Alice Springs, 2013.Fielders? Fans? Impatient batsmen awaiting their turn? Mumbai, 2007. Instead of shadow-batting (which would be too predictable for this blogs sensibility), heres a picture of shadow-boxing, from Lords in 1984. The combatants: 26-year-old Malcolm Marshall (left) and 22-year-old Richie Richardson. Lester Hayes Womens Jersey .com) - Following a late-game loss to the reigning NBA champs, the Toronto Raptors will look to sustain their recent high-level play as they travel to Indiana to take on the Pacers. Fred Biletnikoff Youth Jersey . PETERSBURG, Fla. http://www.footballraidersmall.com/Youth-Otis-Sistrunk-Elite-Jersey/ . Detroit and Boston are deadlocked, 1-1, and Tigers manager Jim Leyland could be forgiven if he was caught rationalizing instead of dissecting how his club could blow a 5-1 lead late in Game 2. Custom Oakland Raiders Jerseys . This should be celebrated because it will not always be this way. With the amount of money given to players by their clubs these days, it is a wonder that so many of those teams allow the sport to continue to take away many of their assets so they can play for a different team in the middle of their season. Fred Biletnikoff Jersey .com) - The Calgary Flames aim to bounce back from their first regulation home loss of the campaign on Friday night when they host a Detroit Red Wings club that they swept in three meetings a season ago. A final-quarter blitz from the Sydney Kings has propelled them to an 87-71 NBL win over Melbourne United.Looking to spoil Melbourne basketball legend Andrew Gazes first visit home as a NBL coach, United kept in touch with the star-studded Sydneysiders on Saturday night for three quarters.However, guards Kevin Lisch and Jason Cadee then inspired a 24-12 final term to secure the Kings seventh victory of the season.The Sydney backcourt duo combined for 10-of-18 shooting from long range, with Lisch scoring 13 fourth-quarter points on the way to a game-high 30, Cadee finishing with 26.Following key injuries and the release of import Cedric Jackson, Melbourne fought valiantly but could not maintain their offensive efficiency in the second half, the loss leaving them anchored to the bottom of the table.A balanced United attack opened the match, hitting 10 of 14 shots from the field, but 12 points from Cadee kept the scores level at 29-29 after the first quarter.Things remained tight until midway through the second quarter when Lisch and Aleks Maric sparked an 11-0 Sydney run, capped by a long bomb from CCadee.ddddddddddddBut United guard Kyle Adnam again sparked his side, matching the hot-shooting Cadee with back-to-back triples, with Tai Wesley chipping in to see the home side down by five at halftime.Melbourne held sway with the visitors throughout the third term before Lisch stepped up a gear in the fourth, consecutive long bombs signalling the end of Uniteds challenge.Gaze sang the praises of Lisch post-match after the reigning MVPs scoring burst guided the Kings to victory.It was just a privilege to sit back and watch, said Gaze. When Im watching it, Im like you. Im a fan on the sideline.That is just an amazing individual performance.United coach Dean Demopoulos was pleased with the competitiveness of his group despite falling short in the final quarter.Hard fought game, I didnt think the score really indicated it, said Demopoulos. We didnt do very well finishing the game out but they (Sydney) had a lot to do with that.Give them credit; they are a nice ball club. ' ' '