dontcloseyoureyes
BARNES OUT
No, just implied.Who did I call a sociopath? You'll find the answer is no-one.
No, just implied.Yet again, not what I said.
No, just implied.Who did I call a sociopath? You'll find the answer is no-one.
No, just implied.Yet again, not what I said.
That you've inferred something doesn't necessarily mean that I've implied it. It may also mean, for example, that you're paranoid and easily offended.No, just implied.
No, just implied.
Speaking generally, if the majority of an audience infer or take implication from something at differs from the writer or speaker's intention, the writer/speaker bears at least some responsibility for that.That you've inferred something doesn't necessarily mean that I've implied it. It may also mean, for example, that you're paranoid and easily offended.
I'd quibble with the suggestion that the majority of my readership thinks what you attribute to it.Speaking generally, if the majority
Not when the writer or speaker has repeatedly, and explicitly, and in exhaustive detail, clarified his position.of an audience infer or take implication from something at differs from the writer or speaker's intention, the writer/speaker bears at least some responsibility for that.
I said generally speaking.I'd quibble with the suggestion that the majority of my readership thinks what you attribute to it.
Not when the writer or speaker has repeatedly, and explicitly, and in exhaustive detail, clarified his position.
And I wanted to illustrate why the general terms are inapplicable to this specific case. That's all. :-)I said generally speaking.
He says, after clogging up the thread with several pages of nonsense posts...And I wanted to illustrate why the general terms are inapplicable to this specific case. That's all. :-)
But sledger is right: This thread is very ****. Unless something interesting gets raised, I'm calling it a day.
Um since when did taking a quick single become against the spirit of the law. If the bowler doesnt like how far a batsman is backing up he can negate that simply by not bowling the delivery and warning the non-striker that he is backing up too far.The batsman who is trying to gain an advantage by taking a start from his crease as the bowler runs in is soiling the spirit of cricket just as much as the bowler who slows down just before his delivery stride in the hopes of catching the non-striker almost having left the crease as his back is turned to the bowler. In the earlier Eng-SL series, the Mankad was well deserved. In this instance, it seems more like a desperate ploy by the bowler which just happened to come off due to the missing frame which may have shown the non-striker's bat was in.
I dont think there is a definition, but can I ask, why you want to know this, and its relevance to the Mankading discussion.Is there a clear definition of "delivery stride"? Is it when the bowler (e.g. right armer) plants his left foot first to jump? Or is it when the bowler gets airborne first? Or when the bowler lands his back foot?
All fair points, well made. One wrinkle to this, though, is that the Preamble to the Laws does set out examples of what the SOTG entails and requires. So we're in a curious legislative halfway house between what is defined and what isn't.The "spirit of cricket" means nothing more or less than "sportsmanship." [...] To cite the laws of cricket, in a discussion about sportsmanship, is to miss the point. When we're talking about the spirit of a law, it doesn't help in the slightest to invoke its letter. If you haven't grasped this by now, you never will.
ICC Law 42.5I dont think there is a definition, but can I ask, why you want to know this, and its relevance to the Mankading discussion.
That's a good argument, from a different direction. Wish I'd made it myself.The thing about Mankading is that some things are not in the rules, but by way of custom you are still required to do or not do something.
I know there is nothing in the rules that says the batsman must be warned first, but a custom of doing so has developed over the years, and not following the custom around Mankading is not in the spirit of the game.
Get ****ed.Look, darling. It's an analogy, not an equation. Analogies are thought experiments; equations are claims of parity. Either you don't know that, in which case I'm not going to waste any further time arguing with you, or you do, in which case you're being wilfully stupid. Either way, this performance doesn't redound much to your credit.
The sarcasm makes it even worse. Don't you think it's time you attempted one of the higher forms of irony?