The Baconator
International Vice-Captain
I've never really had a chance to walk where I knew for certain, but I think I probably would.
LMFAOJono said:Next season I'm not even walking when I'm bowled.
Harbhajan has inspired me.
IMO you can't walk for an lbw.andyc said:Not sure. Never really had a chance to. The one time that I think something came up, we were 8 down with two bunnies to come (if they're batting behind me, they're bunnies), and we needed to bat out about fifteen overs to tie it. I was bowled a yorker that hit me right on the foot, dead in front of middle stump, and my bat was nowhere near it in my mind, and I definitely didn't hit it. The umpire laughed off the halfhearted appeal, with everyone but my partner at the other end fairly sure it wasn't out. I almost walked, just because I thought he'd have given it out. But he didn't, and I sure as hell wasn't going to. So I guess no, I wouldn't walk.
Pedro Delgado said:A ridiculous scenario, but yes I would walk without a second thought. You either walk or you don't, walkers walk whatever the situation otherwise what's the point?
That truly was a bizarre instance.Jono said:Next season I'm not even walking when I'm bowled.
Harbhajan has inspired me.
I can honestly say I've never been in the situation.adharcric said:Surely every cricket aficionado has witnessed or experienced an instance of the umpire getting a call wrong.
As a batsman, you edge the ball and are caught by the keeper but the umpire doesn't signal anything. Keeping the circumstances of the match in mind, do you stay or walk?
On the other hand, a batsman is adjudged LBW but it's obvious to the fielding side that bat was involved. As the captain of the fielding side, do you bring the batsman back or take the gift from the umpire? Do you follow the path of "integrity" even if you're confident that the opposition wouldn't do the same when it was your turn to bat?
Just wondering what your stances are on this issue.
Dropped catches are a part of the game. Should a bowler feel bad for taking a wicket off a mistimed heave to deep square leg? After all, the majority of wickets these days come off bad shots rather than awesome balls. Does that invalidate the value of all those wickets?Richard said:I can honestly say I've never been in the situation.
But everyone knows my stance on the issue.
For me, runs made once you've had a let-off aren't really worth a lot.
If I were a better batsman, I'd feel pretty hollow had I scored a match-turning 66* on a horrible wicket to help my team to a 2-wicket victory off the penultimate ball if I'd known I'd gloved one down leg and stood innocently there. Or, indeed, if I'd been dropped off a sitter at extra-cover, but sadly there's not much I can do about that except run myself out or leave a straight ball, and that really WOULD look odd.![]()
PLEASE DON'T!adharcric said:Dropped catches are a part of the game. Should a bowler feel bad for taking a wicket off a mistimed heave to deep square leg? After all, the majority of wickets these days come off bad shots rather than awesome balls. Does that invalidate the value of all those wickets?
Jono said:PLEASE DON'T!
For the love of God please![]()
Jono said:PLEASE DON'T!
For the love of God please![]()
Take this into aco****, if you walked, you would be letting your whole team down on the buggest moment of their lives, i would walk in other situations, but when it emant so much to the team, i just wouldn;t be able to walk back to the dressing room if i;d walked in that situation.adharcric said:What if you get selected for England and face Australia in the World Cup final next year? 2 balls remaining, scores levelled, Australia will win in the case of a tie, you're the #11 batsman. (yes, anderson got dropped) McGrath bowls a good-length delivery and gets a faint edge. You know you should be out but Rudi Koertzen misses it because of the noisy, raucous Bridgetown crowd. The entire English CW community is waiting to either worship or kill you based on what you do. You gonna walk?![]()
Well - you can't. It's against the rules.open365 said:Richard, i was just wondering, would you walk if a fielder dropped a catch because you were out on the FC average rule?
Never walking is every bit as bad as walking depending on the circumstances.BoyBrumby said:Never walk here. Although I'm sufficiently crap for it to not be a massive issue.
I think consistency is the key here, either always or never. If one believes it's the right thing to walk the circumstance should not matter.
"aco****"!!!!!!!open365 said:Take this into aco****, if you walked, you would be letting your whole team down on the buggest moment of their lives, i would walk in other situations, but when it emant so much to the team, i just wouldn;t be able to walk back to the dressing room if i;d walked in that situation.