nick-o
State 12th Man
I'm having problems figuring out how this works in practice.
If I'm a middleman offering spot fixing, I can deliver if I have a bowler in my pocket and he's instructed to bowl a certain kind of ball at a certain stage in his spell. That's quite easy. But how does that work when 'my' team is batting?
I could deliver on a promise of a wicket falling in the first over, say, or even on the xth ball of the first over -- I'd only need one or two players in my pocket. But if i was saying "a wicket will fall on the xth ball of the 15th over" I will have no way of knowing in advance who will be batting at that time, so I need a lot of players in my pocket.
Likewise, I could deliver on the promise of a maiden in the first or second over with one or two players in my pocket. But, for example, if I was saying "the 10th, or the 30th, over will be a maiden" I can't deliver unless I have practically the entire team in my pocket.
So that only leaves me with something like "batsman X won't get off the mark until he has faced 10 balls" -- then I'd only need bastman X to be in my pocket.
So when the ICC talks about "certain scoring patterns during the game" what else can they be describing?
If I'm a middleman offering spot fixing, I can deliver if I have a bowler in my pocket and he's instructed to bowl a certain kind of ball at a certain stage in his spell. That's quite easy. But how does that work when 'my' team is batting?
I could deliver on a promise of a wicket falling in the first over, say, or even on the xth ball of the first over -- I'd only need one or two players in my pocket. But if i was saying "a wicket will fall on the xth ball of the 15th over" I will have no way of knowing in advance who will be batting at that time, so I need a lot of players in my pocket.
Likewise, I could deliver on the promise of a maiden in the first or second over with one or two players in my pocket. But, for example, if I was saying "the 10th, or the 30th, over will be a maiden" I can't deliver unless I have practically the entire team in my pocket.
So that only leaves me with something like "batsman X won't get off the mark until he has faced 10 balls" -- then I'd only need bastman X to be in my pocket.
So when the ICC talks about "certain scoring patterns during the game" what else can they be describing?