True, true, but it's so much easier just to enter in an established comp. =DI know, I know! I'm just very torn right now...
There's no reason one cannot start a social indoor cricket competition at Sydney, though.
And mortally unfit sometimes? I'm mortally unfit all the time =P
My doctor forbids me from getting too tired - so it looks like I'm mortally unfit. Though I probably am.
And to think I kept wicket for 3 straight indoor seasons. Yes, I continually shat bricks every time a fast bowler was brought on. D:True, but if you're indoor... you can get hit more easily.
I remember when I was the designated 'forward point' in a game of indoor cricket. For their purposes I was a 'deep forward point' - right on the fence saving 2 or whatever the rules stipulate. If I was in a real match (and with a ball like that, I considered it to be - for my purposes - a real match) I was a silly forward point with no helmet. I have no idea to this day, how I survived.
Also wicketkeeping is horrid. You have medium or fast paced bowlers and you're keeping in a place which is suitable for a spinner. <_<
In fact, I'm not even sure I was playing on a proper indoor cricket field.
Haha, what a loser.Thread needs to end
I.e. CSP places.Fees, aside from national priorities, are tied directly to the potential earning power of the degree. People with commerce, law and medicine degrees are likely to earn the most, so fees are the highest, while people doing arts are more likely to earn comparatively less, thats why art courses are much cheaper to do.
For local students with Commonwealth support, the government sets a limit, so unis don't really have a say in increasing fees.I know for international students they charge differently but not sure about local students.