BoyBrumby
Englishman
Fair enough, as I said I don't pretend to be an expert & I except I'm wrong as per the accepted interpretation of the law, but it looks like umpires are venturing into the realms of psychoanalysis of the shot to me. One interpretation is that, yes, he was only defending his stumps but if a player hits the ball and runs the fact that defence wasn't his sole intention is equally supported by the evidence; it may have been his primary intention even, but the law isn't phrased like that. It isn't like there's a long pause between a batter playing a shot & running, it's usually a matter of fractions of seconds.Not to keep banging on about this (!). But if you look at the laws, there is a penalty laid down if the batsmen do run (before any overthrow), namely that the run is disallowed (as per leg byes being disallowed).
I fail to see how you can describe a batsman hitting a ball which is about to hit his stumps as a scoring shot. The mere fact that after the batsman has guarded his wicket he then decides to run does not convert a shot which was solely in order to guard his wicket into a scoring shot.
Just for clarity, if the ball wasn't going to hit the stumps & the batsman hit it again he would be out? Otherwise I can't see how anyone could be out hitting the ball twice. Even then tho there's room for dispute; couldn't a batsman argue he thought he was defending his stumps?