honestbharani
Whatever it takes!!!
Doesn’t sound like Dhawan to mock another player on the field.
However, the fact you haven’t mentioned other players doing it means YOU’RE A MASSIE HYPOCRITE!
Doesn’t sound like Dhawan to mock another player on the field.
However, the fact you haven’t mentioned other players doing it means YOU’RE A MASSIE HYPOCRITE!
No need to bring Bob into this.Doesn’t sound like Dhawan to mock another player on the field.
However, the fact you haven’t mentioned other players doing it means YOU’RE A MASSIE HYPOCRITE!
I'd love to invite everyone to discuss this matter over in this thread, where all the cool kids are:Bump in light of Ponting's comment about having a "hard conversation" with Ashwin on the topic.
You can make the same argument against run outs. Or stumpings. Or any kind of out. Batsmen get to make one error, bowlers can make many. That's how it is in cricket.In simple terms, a bowler who oversteps the mark before the ball is delivered is doing so to gain an advantage. Is that advantage unfair? If so, why shouldn't he be open to being restricted from bowling for the rest of the innings?
There's an obvious difference which makes your argument flawed. A bowler doesn't deliberately overstep when bowling whereas backing up at the non-striker's end is a conscious and pre-meditated movement.In simple terms, a bowler who oversteps the mark before the ball is delivered is doing so to gain an advantage. Is that advantage unfair? If so, why shouldn't he be open to being restricted from bowling for the rest of the innings?
Mohammad Amir and Suraj Randiv would disagree.A bowler doesn't deliberately overstep when bowling
Nah, as I wrote in the other thread:You can make the same argument against run outs. Or stumpings. Or any kind of out. Batsmen get to make one error, bowlers can make many. That's how it is in cricket.
If Mankad must be replaced with a penalty of few runs then all other forms of dismissals should be replaced with same penalty. It won't be cricket anymore though.
Same thing applies to stumping.A run out is not the same thing because it's a fielder vs a batsman and it's a contest and skill and judgment are involved. It's what sport is all about.
Backing up too much should definitely be punished (with runs). But it's not in the same realm as a run out, sporting wise.
Bowlers definitely do it deliberately. They can easily choose to bowl from a decent space behind the line. They push the line as far as possible on every delivery with full knowledge.There's an obvious difference which makes your argument flawed. A bowler doesn't deliberately overstep when bowling whereas backing up at the non-striker's end is a conscious and pre-meditated movement.
No.. They CAN do it deliberately. Doesn't mean every no ball ever bowled is deliberate, but every runner backing up outside the crease before the ball is delivered is 100% deliberate, EVERY TIME.Bowlers definitely do it deliberately.
If someone does something repeatedly with the knowledge that 2% of the time, X-event will happen (as known from past data), it would be wrong of them to say "it wasn't deliberate" when X-event does happen.No.. They CAN do it deliberately. Doesn't mean every no ball ever bowled is deliberate, but every runner backing up outside the crease before the ball is delivered is 100% deliberate, EVERY TIME.
Its pretty much always accidentalNo.. They CAN do it deliberately. Doesn't mean every no ball ever bowled is deliberate, but every runner backing up outside the crease before the ball is delivered is 100% deliberate, EVERY TIME.
I do know. The bowlers push the line with full knowledge. There is nothing accidental about it. They might not think in the terms I have used, but the terms accurately depict what's happening.nah, come on Harsh, you are now talking as if you have never played the game. This is not an intellectual simulation, FFS. You know how it is when you are out there playing.