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Reply to: Message to Pakistan cricketers
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Previously on "Message to Pakistan cricketers"
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I love the idea of a new ball for every run scored. It shows original, blue-sky thinking.
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Missed this thread due to the ASBO crowd. Alexei, you have surpassed yourself for the amount of drivel posted on a subject in one thread. Well done.
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Originally posted by AtWPut a bin with lots of balls.
Polishing the ball seems to me an attempt to make it behave differently - if that's legal then similar attempts should also be legal, sounds like a rather serious inconsistency.
Cricket also has another rule about legs being in front of the wicket :
1. Out LBW
The striker is out LBW in the circumstances set out below.
(a) The bowler delivers a ball, not being a No ball
and (b) the ball, if it is not intercepted full pitch, pitches in line between
wicket and wicket or on the off side of the striker’s wicket
and (c) the ball not having previously touched his bat, the striker intercepts
the ball, either full-pitch or after pitching, with any part of his
person
and (d) the point of impact, even if above the level of the bails,
either (i) is between wicket and wicket
or (ii) is either between wicket and wicket or outside the line
of the off stump, if the striker has made no genuine
attempt to play the ball with his bat
and (e) but for the interception, the ball would have hit the wicket.
2. Interception of the ball
(a) In assessing points (c), (d) and (e) in 1 above, only the first interception is to
be considered.
(b) In assessing point (e) in 1 above, it is to be assumed that the path of the ball
before interception would have continued after interception, irrespective of
whether the ball might have pitched subsequently or not.
3. Off side of wicket
The off side of the striker’s wicket shall be determined by the striker’s stance at
the moment the ball comes into play for that delivery.
More esoteric rules next week, pals !!!!
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how can it be possible to cheat in such situation
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Originally posted by wendigo100That is about 100 new balls, each of which needs to be brought onto the field, which will waste of time.
Polishing the ball seems to me an attempt to make it behave differently - if that's legal then similar attempts should also be legal, sounds like a rather serious inconsistency.
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Originally posted by AtWExcuse me? Art of the Bowler? You mean art to damage the ball or to scratch or to polish it in a way that is nothing else but cheating?
How many runs in a single day, say 1000? Well get 1000 balls, use them once only then sell to people who attend the game - if they sold 100000+ tickets, then they will surely sell these once used balls at a profit.
Mainly, it is more far more complicated and unfair than the current system, which actually works quite well.
Secondly, why change with every run? Why not every over, or every ball? What is your logic?
Thirdly, tests usually see about 300 runs a day, at about 100 scoring shots (I assume you wouldn't change the ball four times after a boundary, and I assume you don't include runs given for extras). That is about 100 new balls, each of which needs to be brought onto the field, which will waste of time.
Fourthly, and most importantly, batsmen don't want to face a new ball throughout the innings, they want to see it off. The older ball's seam flattens and softens, stopping it moving off the pitch so much, and the ball itself gets softer making it easier to play.
BTW you implied that polishing one side of the ball is cheating. It is perfectly legal.
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Don't feed the trolls...........
Originally posted by TrollIts probally too deep for your limited attention span
your right, weeks to play one series that ends in a draw - riveting !
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Originally posted by lORD lUCANThis can be achieved in other places. My good friend has the right idea though. He's off to watch the test in Oz later this year. If your gonna waste time watching it, may aswell go somewhere nice.
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Originally posted by DaveBActually polishing the ball *is* perfectly legal.
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I think the ball tampering was quite innocent, he was merely poring the hydrogen peroxide into the ball to make it up to correct weight and squeezing the toothpaste tube to clean the ball, and it wasn’t a real fuse connected to the ball it was a piece of string that accidentally stuck to it, but I wasn’t too sure about him shouting Ala Akbar when he was bowling.
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Originally posted by djfootI tend to agree with you, but then I only go for the beer and a suntan...
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Originally posted by AtWExcuse me? Art of the Bowler? You mean art to damage the ball or to scratch or to polish it in a way that is nothing else but cheating?
How many runs in a single day, say 1000? Well get 1000 balls, use them once only then sell to people who attend the game - if they sold 100000+ tickets, then they will surely sell these once used balls at a profit.
Actually polishing the ball *is* perfectly legal.
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You are not problem solvers guys - I am, so you should read the solution rather than try to clung to current situation that seems to only encourage cheating.
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Originally posted by AtWExcuse me? Art of the Bowler? You mean art to damage the ball or to scratch or to polish it in a way that is nothing else but cheating?
<snip>.
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