And how many actually bowl it in international cricket? What is the point in having a ball if it gets proven that one chucks it?NikhilN said:That would be kinda hard to do cause people do like to use that ball and it would make a lot of people upset if they did that.
I think the way the law is framed at the moment, it is not fair to call any one a cheat. If 14.9 degrees flex is okay and 15.1 degree is not, surely you can, at best call them legal and illegal deliveries not measures of honesty and dishonesty.SpaceMonkey said:well it is a cheat if its outside the rules? where is your problem?
No, that would be a bit stupid. How can someone say that because two people have been found to exceed the limit with it everyone that ever tries it will? These two bowlers already had questions about their action beforehand so how is it any surprise, or the balls fault?Craig said:Could the answer be in banning the ball all together?
Oh yeah I would also like the yorker banned, it gets me out a few times.Craig said:Could the answer be in banning the ball all together?
Yes, let's start a ban the yorker campaign.GoT_SpIn said:Oh yeah I would also like the yorker banned, it gets me out a few times.
If he's breaking the rules, the chances are, he is a cheat..andyc said:And now watch Singh become the next 'dirty cheat' to half the people on this forum.
Why would they do that when the rules they have in draft ATM are some which finally reflect the truth of the situation, instead of false ideals?telsor said:It doesn't matter. If it's found to be illegal, they'll just change the rules again.
Breaking the rules isn't cheating. Overstepping is breaking the rules. A bad tackle in football is breaking the rules.Langeveldt said:If he's breaking the rules, the chances are, he is a cheat..
My point was that they bowl it in exactly the same way - so people are bound to start saying Saqlain must be bowling it illegally too.Son Of Coco said:As I said in the post above yours though, it's got to do with the individual action, not the ball. Well, as far as I'm concerned it does anyway. You can ban someone simply cause they bowl a ball that someone else with a suspected bad action does.
Overstepping isn't breaking the rules - no-balls aren't illegal balls, they're simply deliveries that don't count towards the over and can't take wickets.Neil Pickup said:Breaking the rules isn't cheating. Overstepping is breaking the rules. A bad tackle in football is breaking the rules.
I'm not sure where this perception that you have to chuck to bowl a Doosra comes from.Craig said:And how many actually bowl it in international cricket? What is the point in having a ball if it gets proven that one chucks it?
You can't please everyone.
Except they're totally different balls.DT8 said:Well 22 degrees is a lot. Murali got his down from 14 to 10 so I'm sure Harbajan could as well.