Overthrow or wilful act of fielder - Laws of Cricket: Difference between revisions

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{{lordsanat|19.8}}Yesterday’s enrapturing Cricket world cup final threw up a key decision, when, three balls from the end of the match, Martin Guptill’s throw from deep-midwicket, which was going to direct hit and run Ben Stokes out<ref>Prove it wouldn’t have okay?</ref>, cannoned off the back of Stokes’ flailing bat as he dived desperately to get anywhere near the crease before it did, and ran down and over the boundary for overthrows.
{{lordsanat|19.8}}Yesterday’s enrapturing Cricket World Cup final threw up a key decision, when, three balls from the end of the match, Martin Guptill’s throw from deep-midwicket, which was going to be a direct hit and run Ben Stokes out<ref>Prove it wouldn’t have okay?</ref>, cannoned off the back of Stokes’ flailing bat as he dived desperately to get anywhere near the crease before it did, and ran down and over the boundary for overthrows.


[[File:Six.png|thumb|left|Six! I mean, ah, five!]] With haste which might transpire to be unseemly, Umpire Dharmasena held up six fingers: Four runs for the overthrow and two for the runs the outfield batsmen completed. But a quick look at Law 19.8 tells a different story.
[[File:Six.png|thumb|left|Six! I mean, ah, five!]] With haste which might transpire to be unseemly, Umpire Dharmasena held up six fingers: Four runs for the overthrow and two for the runs the outfield batsmen completed. But a quick look at Law {{lordsprov|19.8}} tells a different story: where the boundary results from “an overthrow or from the wilful act of a fielder”, the runs scored shall be (a) any applicable penalties (''wides or no-balls: here, none''); (b) the allowance for the boundary (''four'');  (c) completed runs ([[one]])
''together with the run in progress '''if they had already crossed at the instant of the throw or act'''.''
 
The wilful act in question — also as it happens, a throw — is Martin Guptill’s from deep midwicket. The ball’s deflection by Ben Stokes’ bat from what was obviously its true path to obliterate the wicket is certainly not a “throw”, much less a “wilful act of a fielder” — it has no cricketing significance at all, in fact — so the question is where were the batsmen at the time Guptill let the ball go.
 
[[File:Uncrossed2.png|thumb|left]]And at that point, they had not crossed, as this picture demonstrates. Now there is a kicker, because, having only scored one run, Stokes and Rashid should have been sent back to where they started that run, with Stokes at the non-striker’s end.
 
 
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Revision as of 13:44, 15 July 2019

Cricket Anatomy™


Law 19.8:

19.8 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:

any runs for penalties awarded to either side; and
the allowance for the boundary; and
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.

Law 18.12.2 (Batsman returning to wicket he/she has left) shall apply as from the instant of the throw or act. view template


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Yesterday’s enrapturing Cricket World Cup final threw up a key decision, when, three balls from the end of the match, Martin Guptill’s throw from deep-midwicket, which was going to be a direct hit and run Ben Stokes out[1], cannoned off the back of Stokes’ flailing bat as he dived desperately to get anywhere near the crease before it did, and ran down and over the boundary for overthrows.

Six! I mean, ah, five!

With haste which might transpire to be unseemly, Umpire Dharmasena held up six fingers: Four runs for the overthrow and two for the runs the outfield batsmen completed. But a quick look at Law 19.8 tells a different story: where the boundary results from “an overthrow or from the wilful act of a fielder”, the runs scored shall be (a) any applicable penalties (wides or no-balls: here, none); (b) the allowance for the boundary (four); (c) completed runs (one)

together with the run in progress if they had already crossed at the instant of the throw or act.

The wilful act in question — also as it happens, a throw — is Martin Guptill’s from deep midwicket. The ball’s deflection by Ben Stokes’ bat from what was obviously its true path to obliterate the wicket is certainly not a “throw”, much less a “wilful act of a fielder” — it has no cricketing significance at all, in fact — so the question is where were the batsmen at the time Guptill let the ball go.

Uncrossed2.png

And at that point, they had not crossed, as this picture demonstrates. Now there is a kicker, because, having only scored one run, Stokes and Rashid should have been sent back to where they started that run, with Stokes at the non-striker’s end.


References

  1. Prove it wouldn’t have okay?