Nah"A non-striker who is out of his crease before the point of release is either taking an advantage or is acting carelessly, and runs the risk of being legitimately run out" according to the WCC. Seems like the onus is on the non-striker.
This part seems contradictoryNone of the laws mention the timing of these particular actions, therefore they must refer to the physical occurrence of them, 'expected release point' referring to a point at which the bowler, having gone through his run-up and going through his bowling action, would normal release the ball rather than retaining a hold of it.
The laws do not in any way state, "where the batsman has made a mental calculation as to when these actions would have occurred".
So in that case would that effectively make a "fake out" illegal? Or at the very least a dead ball?Nah
Law 41.16: “If the non-striker is out of his/her ground at any time from the moment the ball comes into play until the instant when the bowler would normally have been expected to release the ball, the non-striker is liable to be run out.”
It's specifically worded that way so that the bowler can't pretend to be bowling and wait for the batsman to leave the crease
Yes which we have mentioned quite a few times in this thread. The discussion is that some people think the law should be changed to make the "fake out" legal, and they clearly haven't thought out the consequences.So in that case would that effectively make a "fake out" illegal? Or at the very least a dead ball?
You can still just Mankad the batsman if he's leaving his crease early though. That's in the rules. The main discussion here is about Mankading the batsman when he's not leaving the crease early.As NotMcK said the umpire probably needs more power in situations like this. It's probably one of the most clouded rules in all of cricket. An "official warning" made by the umpire in the event of repeated instances of a non-striker backing up before the bowler has released the ball would at least remove some of the grey area. Tough one though, as I don't know if a non-striker should necessarily be penalised for doing this. It's risky business.
It isn't. What the people who dislike running out the non-striker always defend, inadvertently or not, are batsmen like Jos Buttler who turn their back on the bowler—often before the latter has entered his delivery stride—and begin wandering up the pitch because they have made a calculation or an assumption that by the time they pull their bat out of the crease, they will be safe. If anyone watches the bowler, they will see them swing their arm round to a point in space (and therefore by physics, time) where they will—normally—let the ball go rather than keeping a hold on it. Supposing one comes in and bowls with a completely different bowling action and style, the expected point of release may change, but I, the non striker or whoever, can still find it by watching the bowler: if I turn my back on him and just make an assumption, that is not the bowler doing something after his expected point of release, that is just me being inattentive.This part seems contradictory
Not really, as ['expected point of release'] is an expectation independent of one's position as a non-striker, striker, umpire, fielder, spectator, match referee, ball-boy, groundsman, commentator, Trent Copeland, scoreboard operator, server at the pizza stand, janitor, etc.
More clearly, [the law] does not say, "from the point where the batsman assumes that the bowler, who having not actually started the swing of his arm, will begin to do so and therefore bring the ball to the point where it can be expected to be released."
And by the laws, leaving the crease early is defined as anywhere up to the expected point of release, which by my interpretation given no reference to timing or anything in the laws, means when the ball has been moved by the bowler to that particular point.You can still just Mankad the batsman if he's leaving his crease early though. That's in the rules. The main discussion here is about Mankading the batsman when he's not leaving the crease early.
That's a complete contradiction. Of course "expected point of release" is referring to the timing. I can see how it could be interpreted as a physical "point of release" purely by the wording (is that what you're suggesting?) but in the context of the game of cricket, it clearly is referring to the point in time that the ball is expected to be released.And by the laws, leaving the crease early is defined as anywhere up to the expected point of release, which by my interpretation given no reference to timing or anything in the laws, means when the ball has been moved by the bowler to that particular point.
Problem with it being purely a point in time is that if I, as non-striker or anyone else, count five seconds between the commencement of run up [which, under the laws, marks the instant of the ball coming into play] and release, and the bowler instead dawdles and uses a slower arm action and takes seven seconds, I would be expecting him to release the ball far earlier than he actually would; therefore, under such an interpretation, he could not run me out after five seconds have elapsed.That's a complete contradiction. Of course "expected point of release" is referring to the timing. I can see how it could be interpreted as a physical "point of release" purely by the wording (is that what you're suggesting?) but in the context of the game of cricket, it clearly is referring to the point in time that the ball is expected to be released.
Look, I'm not going to cop advice on posting standards and sensitivity from you of all people.
But just to be clear, if the bowler goes past the point where he normally releases the ball, and the batsman moves out of his crease, you're fine with a run out being effected?
Its not always a point in time, juz read above.That's a complete contradiction. Of course "expected point of release" is referring to the timing. I can see how it could be interpreted as a physical "point of release" purely by the wording (is that what you're suggesting?) but in the context of the game of cricket, it clearly is referring to the point in time that the ball is expected to be released.
You are overthinking it massively and confusing matters. I understand that you're trying to analyse what to do if such a situation was taken to an umpire to adjudicate, and that's fair, but IMO it's not necessary, practically speaking. I'm not even sure what your point is anymore.Problem with it being purely a point in time is that if I, as non-striker or anyone else, count five seconds between the commencement of run up [which, under the laws, marks the instant of the ball coming into play] and release, and the bowler instead dawdles and uses a slower arm action and takes seven seconds, I would be expecting him to release the ball far earlier than he actually would; therefore, under such an interpretation, he could not run me out after five seconds have elapsed.
A big issue is that terms such as 'when', 'instant', 'point', etc. that are used in the laws do not necessarily unambiguously refer to points in time without reference to physical actions, and the big dispute here appears to be how these instants are defined or generalised.
I believe that the best interpretation is to take things in a ball-by-ball manner, the instant being the time at which one sees the hand reach a position at which one would expect that bowler to let go of the ball (defining both time and space simultaneously), otherwise variations in action, arm-speed, run-up etc. if performed by a single bowler would affect their chances of getting a run out.
I do not think it's right to say that because one could extrapolate to or assume an expected timing of release based on when one last looked without the hand actually getting there, the non-striker should not be run out if the bowler swings his hand into the bails rather than round and over his head.
lol not simple though because that's the whole thing we've been arguing about. Actually released or "would normally have been expected to release the ball".End of the day - the Mankad law is a good one. Batsmen just need to wait for the ball to be release before starting a run at the non strikers end. Simple.
Your proposed change won't help because then the bowler can fail to release the ball and run the batsman out even though he was in his ground at the point where the bowler normally releases the ball. The rest of your post is typical gobbledygook, mate. Of course blokes have a normal release point. Bowlers don't, for example, generally release the ball at the point where their bowling arm is past perpendicular and down in front past their shoulder, because otherwise the ball would hit their own toe (save that little fella who bowls side atm, and even he has a normal release point).