Cricket how many ways to be out




















This states that a batsman is out if the ball, while in play, strikes any part of their person or is struck by the bat and then, before being touched by the fielder, the batsman deliberately hits the ball with the bat or any part of their person. No batsman has ever been dismissed hit the ball twice in any form of international cricket. Only a handful of instances at first-class level, mainly deep in the early historical days of the game, exist.

The threat of dismissal seems to be enough to prevent anyone trying it on. So your ten ways of getting out in cricket, for those ready to blitz their next trivia night, are: caught, bowled, LBW, stumped, hit wicket, run out, timed out, handled the ball, obstructing the field, and hit the ball twice. Not retired hurt. Depending on the circumstances, it can be agreed that a player who retires is not out.

BBC Sport cricket. Sport Homepage. Latest scores. Future tour dates. International teams. Women's cricket. Laws and Equipment. The batsman is not out if the wicket does not break. Leg Before Wicket: If the batsman misses the ball with his bat, but intercepts it with part of his body when it would otherwise have hit the wicket, and provided several other conditions described below are satisfied.

An umpire must adjudicate such a decision, and will only do so if the fielding team appeal the decision. If the ball bounces outside an imaginary line drawn straight down the pitch from the outside edge of leg stump, then the batsman cannot be out LBW, no matter whether or not the ball would have hit the stumps.

If the batsman attempts to play a shot at the ball with his bat and misses he may only be given out LBW if the ball strikes the batsman between imaginary lines drawn down the pitch from the outside edges of leg and off stumps ie.

If the batsman does not attempt to play the ball with his bat, then he may be given out LBW without satisfying this condition, as long as the umpire is convinced the ball would have hit the wicket.

If the ball has hit the bat before the hitting the batsman, then he cannot be given out LBW. Stumped: If a batsman misses the ball and in attempting to play it steps outside his crease, he is out stumped if the wicket-keeper gathers the ball and breaks the wicket with it before the batsman can ground part of his body or his bat behind his crease.

Run Out: If a batsman is attempting to take a run, or to return to his crease after an aborted run, and a fielder breaks that batsman's wicket with the ball while he is out of the crease.

The body beautiful. Red tape, white lies. Speculative science. This sceptred isle. Root of all evil. Ethical conundrums. This sporting life. Stage and screen. Birds and the bees. Tony Whyte, London In Test matches, six.

There are six fairly common ways of being dismissed - caught, bowled, lbw, stumped, run out and hit wicket. On only seven occasions have batsman been otherwise dismissed in Tests five "handled ball", one "obstructed field" and one "retired not hurt" - in two of those instances West Indies v India, St John's, Antigua, , and West Indies v India again, Bombay, , the other batsman were variously dismissed in five other ways.

Jeremy Gilling, Sydney, Australia Sadly, the symmetry is not as perfect as the question implies.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000