blamebrampton (
blamebrampton) wrote2011-01-04 05:02 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
It is possible ...
... that there is a god, and he or she really likes Alastair Cook. Being a lovely lad, Cook expressed sympathy to Beer, who had no-balled his potential first test wicket.
It's all a bit exciting today!
It's all a bit exciting today!
no subject
no subject
no subject
(still, there's nothing I enjoy more in cricket than a tail that wags - invariably puts me on the side of whoever is batting, regardless of my normal cricketing affiliations)
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
I thought that no-balls were purely left to the subjective appreciation of the umpires. But the BBC report says that TV technology was used to determine if it was a no-ball or not. Are there strict rules about what makes a no-ball? The distance to the wicket or the height of the bounce for instance?
Cheers
no subject
The rule, though allows for bowling motions that don't put the heel down, and only land on the front part of the foot, which is why the umpire called for a review, because if the photograph had shown that the back of Beer's foot had been in line to be landing in the right place, it would have been good, even though he did not put the heel down.(If you watch the footage, he first went to check if he could see any heel mark on the ground.)
Standing behind the bowler, it wasn't possible to judge this line, while the photograph made it clear that his foot was, sadly, too far forward.
no subject
no subject
no subject