boogiespinner
Active Member
The question is, did the batsman cross for the second run before the throw was initiated?One of my worries is that I'll be walking out to a match with no-one able to score, so I'm trying to learn now - watching full IPl matches on youtube and scoring them. I've just seen this scenario.
Bat hits the ball with the intention of a single, runs the single and in the meantime fielder picks up the ball and has a go at the stumps. Ball misses the stumps and there's no-one there backing up and the ball goes for 4. So the total including the run is 5.
If the bats had set off to run two and batsman runs more than 1/2 the length of the wicket before the ball hits the boundary rope would that be 2 runs plus the boundary 4 or does he have to get back to the crease before it can count as a second run?
From http://www.lords.org/mcc/laws-of-cricket/laws/law-19-boundaries/
7. Overthrow or wilful act of fielder
If the boundary results from an overthrow or from the wilful act of a fielder the runs scored shall be
(i) any runs for penalties awarded to either side
and (ii) the allowance for the boundary
and (iii) the runs completed by the batsmen, together with the run in progress if they had already crossed at the instant of the throw or act.
No, this would simply be a 'run out', whether it's the batsman on strike or the other one being dismissed. There is no credit for 'run outs' in the bowling analysis whoever does them. The special case is stumping. It is only the wicketkeeper who may 'stump' a batsman.There's another question that arises out of this depending on the answer to the above.
Q - The bowler bowls catches the ball off a bump ball, turns and hits the stumps with a throw and runs out the batsman - does that go in his bowling figures as a wicket?
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