Pup Clarke
Cricketer Of The Year
I know but he probably would've sensed a question like this, and his CW senses would've triggered leading him to sign on.
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I know but he probably would've sensed a question like this, and his CW senses would've triggered leading him to sign on.
I know but he probably would've sensed a question like this, and his CW senses would've triggered leading him to sign on.
Plus it's only a matter of time he comes on.
That's right, BTW - andmark is, amazingly, Mark; cdm is John.Before Richard answers...
Andmark - Mark
CDM - John (I think... I am not a 100 percent on that)
I think incredibly is a bit of a strong word, i know that in itself this rule does not really favour bowlers at all, but i wouldn't really say it massively helps batsmen either as the free hit almost always gets toed to long on and the captain is allowed to change his field.While the free hit rule favours the batsman incredibly, hopefully it leads to the bowlers starting to realise that they can't get away with no balls all the time. Morne Morkel and Dilhara Fernando are in trouble.
Thats punishment enough IMO for a no ball. Extra ball seems excessive punishment.Well... for starters it instantly gives away 1 (sometimes 2) runs for nothing... for 2nd it gives an extra delivery for the batsman to score off at the end of the over... for 3rd it sometimes (if the call's early and the batsman's reaction is good) gives a free-hit that ball.
Not sure i agree with the extra delivery bit that much, in a ODI game maybe there's 6 no balls by one side and 8 by the other, that changes it from 300V300(deliverise per side) to 306V308, any difference the no balls make in that regard don't really change the outcome of the match.Well... for starters it instantly gives away 1 (sometimes 2) runs for nothing... for 2nd it gives an extra delivery for the batsman to score off at the end of the over... for 3rd it sometimes (if the call's early and the batsman's reaction is good) gives a free-hit that ball.
And with the new free-hit-next-ball introduction, that's something worse than anything yet.
And I hope it might just encourage bowlers and bowling-coaches to take don't-bowl-no-balls a teeny incy bit more seriously. There's never any excuse for it ITFP, and now there's more than no excuse for it.
What you forget is that punishment is not solely punishment - it also acts as disincentive. You know - the consequences if you were to put a bullet through someone's head I'd imagine discourage you from doing so?Thats punishment enough IMO for a no ball. Extra ball seems excessive punishment.
If the free-hit's a no-ball (or a wide) you get another one next ball. Simple as.Also, what if the free hit ball is also a no ball? Does he get two more or just one more?
Why do you care about watching them>??????I'm hopeful that the more punishment for no-balls, the less we're going to see them.
Which is why they've introduced them, in theory. However, I highly doubt it will work - the deterrent already exists. The no-ball exploits we're seeing are from bowlers who genuinely struggle with them IMO, not those who can't be bothered to fix them up. All we'll see now is otherwise-good bowlers becoming substandard due to harsher penalties for their no-balls, and dire replacements come up who would otherwise be worse than those dropped.Richard said:I'm hopeful that the more punishment for no-balls, the less we're going to see them.
You're kidding, aren't you? That's fourteen extra deliveries!!!!!!!!!!!! Heaven knows how many runs can be scored off those - and that's before we even consider the 14 extra runs, plus anything you get for hearing the call early and having a swat.Not sure i agree with the extra delivery bit that much, in a ODI game maybe there's 6 no balls by one side and 8 by the other, that changes it from 300V300(deliverise per side) to 306V308, any difference the no balls make in that regard don't really change the outcome of the match.
Why give them away when you can not give them away? Just a couple of no-balls per 10 overs can quite easily cost you 10 runs - that changes a good 10-37-1 into a poor 10-47-1.And there is an excuse for it, i think the fact that it happens shows that no balls are as much a part of the game as dropped catches and run outs, sure excessive no balling is something that should be worked at but giving away 1-2 no balls per 10 over spell imo is fine.
Why not just award the game to the other side if someone bowls one? Again, the punishment should fit the crime. No-balling is a bad thing, and is thus punished. The free hit is ridiculous. Do batsmen get punished in their next innings if they get out to a bad shot?What you forget is that punishment is not solely punishment - it also acts as disincentive. You know - the consequences if you were to put a bullet through someone's head I'd imagine discourage you from doing so?
I'm hopeful that the more punishment for no-balls, the less we're going to see them.
Think that's the first I've seen you dishing the discipline, Manan.Family forum Beleg.![]()
The more the punishment, the more the disincentive. I'm happy for it to go this far, you're not - simple as.Why not just award the game to the other side if someone bowls one? Again, the punishment should fit the crime. No-balling is a bad thing, and is thus punished. The free hit is ridiculous. Do batsmen get punished in their next innings if they get out to a bad shot?
It's just pure indiscipline IMO - whether ingrown or just slackness. And I hate it like I hate virtually nothing in cricket, except dropped catches.Why do you care about watching them>??????
I like dropped catches when India is batting.It's just pure indiscipline IMO - whether ingrown or just slackness. And I hate it like I hate virtually nothing in cricket, except dropped catches.
I don't know about either of those, TBH. I honestly don't think most people regard the bowling of no-balls (as long as it's not excessive, to the tune of one every other over or so) as a problem. You hear all the time about bowlers doing it every single time in practice, you see spinners bowling them sometimes... enough, IMO, to suggest it's not taken seriously enough for the current punishment to be any real deterrant. This might just be the shot in the arm that requires it to be.Which is why they've introduced them, in theory. However, I highly doubt it will work - the deterrent already exists. The no-ball exploits we're seeing are from bowlers who genuinely struggle with them IMO, not those who can't be bothered to fix them up. All we'll see now is otherwise-good bowlers becoming substandard due to harsher penalties for their no-balls, and dire replacements come up who would otherwise be worse than those dropped.