Neil Pickup
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Fair enough. I couldn't remember OTTOMH when the batting powerplay came in - it will be interesting to see how it plays out, and it's certainly the sort of thing that should affect the way D/L works.
That's weird. Doesn't seem consistent with how D/L works at all; wickets only matter before a rain delay as to set a team a target to chase with their remaining resources. Your target doesn't change if you lose wickets unless there's more lost play afterwards.However, each time we took a wicket, they needed to make extra runs, i.e. when we took a wicket, their target became 34. This is complete rubbish, isn't it?
they also cater for a side to come out and and use less than that to chase down the target
Yeah, I get the feeling the umpires at your game just completely misinterpreted how it was supposed to work.Yeah, I'm sure it's been a total **** up.
Like, my understanding of the less than 25 overs thing is that D/L works out what the total should be off 25, and you can choose to chase it with whatever overs are remaining till compulsory finish time. So therefore it's basically a 25 over innings, so we should have bowled all four of our overs in a powerplay. But there were no bowling restrictions, etc.
EDIT: also, what should have the target off 25 been?
Yeah, I was going to say it sounds like the target if rain shortens the innings while in progress, not if the overs were reduced prior to the innings starting.If the opposition actually thought they had a full 50 overs to chase your 94 and then it rained after 25 overs, they'd need to be:
32/0
34/1
38/2
42/3
etc
So that (or something really similar to that) is probably what's been applied. If so, that is a huge ****-up by whoever was involved, as it makes no sense to apply it like that at all.
Hmm, wondering if that G50 factor at the top might change for grade cricket to play around with the results.If the opposition actually thought they had a full 50 overs to chase your 94 and then it rained after 25 overs, they'd need to be:
32/0
34/1
38/2
42/3
etc
So that (or something really similar to that) is probably what's been applied. If so, that is a huge ****-up by whoever was involved, as it makes no sense to apply it like that at all.
Yeah, I think that's what happened. Genuine goof, tbh, as the only way the playing conditions actually make sense if they were to be set 63 (or something close to that if grade cricket has a different agreed par score as suspected) to win off however many overs they could get in short of 25.Hmm, wondering if that G50 factor at the top might change for grade cricket to play around with the results.
We were given some sort of printout, with those details, and that's what they went by I think, with the 0/29 at 25 overs being used as their total target or something.