Exactly.Lillian Thomson said:I'll just copy and paste the only answer I ever give to this:
"I, as a batsman, will walk when I know I'm out if you, as bowler, don't appeal when you know I'm not out."
Please paste this on Gilchrist's foreheadLillian Thomson said:I'll just copy and paste the only answer I ever give to this:
"I, as a batsman, will walk when I know I'm out if you, as bowler, don't appeal when you know I'm not out."
I was actually thinking that a while back when Gilly walked in India.Stumped said:Just thought i'd get ur thoughts on walking. Adam Gilchrist is known as a big walker when he is out he knows it. But i believe this again is wrong. If the umpire wsays not out and you walk i believe that shouldnt be the bowlers wicket maybe counted as you retiring. What are your views on this?
yer i wonder the same things sometimes....... i really think it should be counted as retireing but i have no say in the rulesJono said:I was actually thinking that a while back when Gilly walked in India.
If the umpire says not out, but the player walks out, is it really a 'wicket' in the strictest term? Or is the batsman just technically retiring, because he wasn't given out by the official umpire.
Na it shouldn't...the bowler deserves credit for dismissing the batsmen (even though the batsmen technically dismissed himself)Stumped said:yer i wonder the same things sometimes....... i really think it should be counted as retireing but i have no say in the rules
But really the umpire has already said not out so it cant be given as out if the umpire has said not out and he had not changed his decision...but thats my opinion and we are all intitled to oneJames90 said:Na it shouldn't...the bowler deserves credit for dismissing the batsmen (even though the batsmen technically dismissed himself)