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Rob Moody also known professionally by his stage name Robelinda or Robelinda2 (born 23 November 1977) is an Australian YouTuber, cricket enthusiast, freestyle archive collector, editor and guitarist. He is well known in the cricketing circles especially among the ardent cricket fans for his huge collection of old cricket content and coverage and videos. He owns and runs a YouTube channel titled ‘’’Roblinda2’’ which he uses to upload several cricket footages and he is also often called by the name of his YouTube channel than his real name. His YouTube channel Robelinda2 is also regarded as the largest ever cricket archival channel in the world. It is also believed that he in fact has a large collection of cricket archives in his possession than the combined videos possessed by the
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and other respective cricket boards. Robelinda2 is also often deemed as the most sought-after YouTube cricket channel over the years. Some analysts, experts and critics consider him as someone who had contributed immensely to the prosperity and growth of cricket way beyond the efforts of global cricketing body, International Cricket Council. He is also considered as cricket's greatest librarian and also fondly remembered as cricket's YouTube hero. As of February 2022, he has approximately 1.01 million subscribers.


Career

He had the knack of recording live cricket matches which were broadcast on television virtually onto video tapes from his young age since the 1980s. He first recorded a cricket match to video tape in 1982–83 Australian cricket season which included the Ashes at the age of five. He then switched to DVDs from video tapes to record live cricket matches in 1990s. He also then proceeded towards converting them to hard disks to suit the technological evolution. He has over 300 videotapes, 25000 DVDs and 60 hard drives holding a grand total of whopping 100
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of footage. He initially started the idea of sharing archived videos on YouTube by uploading some random
Sheffield Shield The Sheffield Shield (currently known for sponsorship reasons as the Marsh Sheffield Shield) is the domestic first-class cricket competition of Australia. The tournament is contested between teams from the six states of Australia. Sheffield Sh ...
highlights on YouTube on the request of his online friend. He created his first YouTube Channel titled robelinda on 7 November 2010 but he later opened a new channel named as robelinda2 due to the difficulties he had to deal with when uploading long videos after a few months of time. He started uploading cricket content from 1980s related to Australian cricket in YouTube and also went onto upload cricket videos related to other nations afterwards. The video footage which he shared about the century scored by former Australian cricketer Greg Blewett against England in one of the test matches way back in 1998 was the first real breakthrough behind the origin story of his YouTube channel. The video he posted about
David Saker David James Saker (born 29 May 1966 in Melbourne, Victoria) is an Australian cricket coach and former player who played first-class cricket for the Victorian Bushrangers and then the Tasmanian Tigers later on in his career. He was the fast bow ...
’s half volley bouncer to Jeff Vaughan in a test match on 10 November 2010 had raked the most number of YouTube views for any YouTube video on his channel. He is also highly known for uploading rare cricket videos from obscure matches which are in fact not even broadcast as highlights in television. He revealed that 90 percent of the views on his YouTube channel comes from India. He was also approached by renowned cricket archives of famed institutions and also by former as well as current international cricketers through social media platforms. His videos at times came under scrutiny over possible copyright strikes and claims but he was cleared of involving in any copyright infringement by ICC and
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. In March 2020, he received warnings from the International Cricket Council citing copyright violations and ICC urged him to immediately delete the footages from any ICC event from 1992 onwards including the
1992 Cricket World Cup The 1992 Cricket World Cup (officially the Benson & Hedges World Cup 1992) was the fifth staging of the Cricket World Cup, organised by the International Cricket Council (ICC). It was held in Australia and New Zealand from 22 February to 25 M ...
,
1996 Cricket World Cup The 1996 Cricket World Cup, also called the Wills World Cup 1996 after the Wills Navy Cut brand produced by tournament sponsor ITC, was the sixth Cricket World Cup organised by the International Cricket Council (ICC). It was the second World ...
,
1999 Cricket World Cup The 1999 Cricket World Cup (officially known as ICC Cricket World Cup '99) was the seventh edition of the Cricket World Cup, organised by the International Cricket Council (ICC). It was hosted primarily by England, with Scotland, Ireland, Wales ...
.
2002 ICC Champions Trophy The 2002 ICC Champions Trophy was a cricket tournament that was held in Sri Lanka in 2002. It was the third edition of the ICC Champions Trophy – the first two having been known as the ICC Knock Out Tournaments. The tournament was due to be hel ...
,
2003 Cricket World Cup The 2003 ICC Cricket World Cup was the eighth Cricket World Cup, organised by the International Cricket Council (ICC). It was co-hosted by South Africa, Zimbabwe and Kenya from 9 February to 23 March 2003. This edition of the World Cup was the f ...
,
2004 ICC Champions Trophy The 2004 ICC Champions Trophy was held in England in September 2004. Twelve teams competed in 15 matches spread over 16 days at three venues: Edgbaston, The Rose Bowl and The Oval. The nations competing included the ten Test nations, Kenya (O ...
and
2006 ICC Champions Trophy The 2006 ICC Champions Trophy was a One Day International cricket tournament held in India from 7 October to 5 November 2006. It was the fifth edition of the ICC Champions Trophy (previously known as the ICC Knock-out). The tournament venue was n ...
. ICC initially warned of severe consequences if he failed to delete those video footages and ICC cautioned him that he would be risking himself for a formal action through YouTube and his account with the probability of being closed down. ICC suggested him to delete just over 100 cricket videos and later stated that it did not have any motives of closing his channel. This comes after ICC had announced overnight that it was planning to release its 45-year-old archive of match footage highlights to its broadcast partners and social media partners. On 16 June 2020, his cricket video library was temporarily shut down by Twitter due to copyright concerns. However, Cricket Australia came to his rescue insisting that he was sent an infringement notice due to an error by an agency. He was largely responsible in providing a glimmer of hope to cricket audiences who were deprived of live international matches ever since the outbreak of
COVID-19 pandemic The COVID-19 pandemic, also known as the coronavirus pandemic, is an ongoing global pandemic of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). The novel virus was first identified ...
. His cricket related videos became more popular and viral among cricket fans especially during the onset of the pandemic when the international cricket was brought to a standstill. As of 2021, his YouTube channel saw a rapid spike in subscribers and viewers with over 200, 000 subscribers and 249 million views for his videos since the pandemic induced lockdowns.
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journalist Daniel Brettig in a tweet quoted saying "This guy doesn't profit from what he has done, brilliantly for years. There is only global demand for what he does because the world's broadcasters and boards have failed miserably to do anything serious about making their archives available to public. A social media campaign was launched by Adam Collins and Geoff Lemon from The Final Word podcast in support of his voluntary services for the upliftment of the game and also demanded an
Order of Australia The Order of Australia is an honour that recognises Australian citizens and other persons for outstanding achievement and service. It was established on 14 February 1975 by Elizabeth II, Queen of Australia, on the advice of the Australian Go ...
honour for him in recognition of his services for the betterment of the sport. He claims that he never makes money out of the YouTube content and he insists that he uploads cricket videos solely with the intention of fun and entertainment purposes which he also considers as a side hustle, a dream passion and a hobby for time pass. He is a guitarist by profession and also teaches both electric guitar and acoustic steel-string guitar at the Modern Guitar Tuition in Box Hill, Melbourne. He also plays guitar and saxophone for Royal Caribbean cruises with The Australian INXS Show.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Moody, Rob 1977 births Living people Australian YouTubers Sports YouTubers Australian guitarists