It is no exaggeration to say that, for sports fans, 2020 is a year like no other. In January, it promised to be special with a sensational ...

It is no exaggeration to say that, for sports fans, 2020 is a year like no other. In January, it promised to be special with a sensational lineup of events. The start of a new decade. Two T20 cricket world cup tournaments. The European Football Championships. The Olympics. And so much more.
And then, in March, there were none.
In what seems to be a dystopian time on the field around the world (even the maidans in Mumbai are empty these days), an already cult figure in the online community has emerged as a saviour of sorts for the masses craving for cricket.
If you are a cricket fan familiar with YouTube, chances are you know robelinda (or, more specifically, robelinda2). The name would immediately ring a bell for anyone who has spent time on the video streaming platform, watching an old cricket video.
The man behind the two YouTube channels worth a combined count of more than 737 million views is Australian Rob Moody, whose extensive collection of old cricket footage has kept fans on social media going with no live cricket to watch. For those growing up in the information age as cricket fans, robelinda is a name synonymous with “cricket gold”.
“Well, it started in 2000 when my then...