Standard rule.Been mean to ask....
When a batsman is run out on a second run, the first run still counts. Is that a new rule or am I cracking up? ODI/T20 only?
Standard rule.Been mean to ask....
When a batsman is run out on a second run, the first run still counts. Is that a new rule or am I cracking up? ODI/T20 only?
Standard rule.
Been meaning to ask....
When a batsman is run out on a second run, the first run still counts. Is that a new rule or am I cracking up? ODI/T20 only?
We had a match last season, S Yorks v East, where East needed two runs to win from the last five overs.No, that's been the case for as long as I've been watching cricket. And it's for all forms of the game
I think the most important ruling is about the run being awarded if the batsmen have crossed at the time of the ball being thrown. Because until they have crossed the batsmen are deemed to be backing up.
And had 5 been given it would have been a different scenario, because Stokes would have gone to the none striker's end for the next delivery.
As others have said - butterfly effect. If we had won the toss, if we had been given the 4 when it was stopped on the boundary, if that ball hadn't taken a freakish bobble on it's way to Buttler when it went for 4 etc etc etc.
Honestly, for your own sake I think you'll be happier just holding your hands up and saying fair enough, better team won it on the day.
Yep two fine teams, and neither of them were Australia.agree with you on the whole, but i'd argue that the two teams were absolutely even on the day, with the luckier team winning! And that's not normally us.
agree with you on the whole, but i'd argue that the two teams were absolutely even on the day, with the luckier team winning! And that's not normally us.
agree with you on the whole, but i'd argue that the two teams were absolutely even on the day, with the luckier team winning! And that's not normally us.
As others have said - butterfly effect. If we had won the toss, if we had been given the 4 when it was stopped on the boundary, if that ball hadn't taken a freakish bobble on it's way to Buttler when it went for 4 etc etc etc.
Honestly, for your own sake I think you'll be happier just holding your hands up and saying fair enough, better team won it on the day.
Not when the worse team on the day fluked a draw.
Getting a bit sick of the likes of Piers Morgan fawning over Stokes.
It's the same when a football team wins on penalties, it's a draw, and England had some extraordinary luck in getting it too.
The ball runs along the ground many times in a game of Cricket, it doesn't often hit the bat of a player running between the wicket and trundle off for a four.
Sorry, I did not even think about comparing you with Morgan, I am just sick of him thinking he won it.
It's just my opinion, I am certainly not anti England cricket, but after that titanic battle from both sides it should have been left as a draw.
I fully understand real England cricket fans would have been hugely disappointed, that is why they are claiming victory.
I feel exactly the same in a massive football game when a team wins on penalties, especially if they fluke the winning penalty, like slipping etc.
And I also thought that after probably the best cricket match of all time that England didn't go straight to the kiwis rather than whooping around Lords.
That's the sort of thing I expect from Aussies (who would have bowled the super over under arm) and Americans
Sorry, it's only my opinion, Cricket can be a draw and that was a draw.
Don't you dare lump me in with Piers Moron.
No, when a team wins on penalties, they win, not draw. All that "it's a lottery" stuff is absolute bollocks. We held our nerve and won by the rules of the game. It took massive balls and composure, along with skill. We did it.
As for luck, the toss was massive in this tournament and NZ won it, so immediately they got the biggest slice of luck available on the day.
Re: the ball hitting Stokes' bat, freakish yes but then how about the ball taking a random bobble on it's way to Buttler and going for 4?
The stop on the boundary for NZ where you could clearly see the boundary being moved by his foot, where they refused to look from a better angle?
Numerous wides given to Archer that weren't/the same balls not given as wides for NZ?
There was plenty of luck/bad luck on both sides.
The stop on the boundary for NZ where you could clearly see the boundary being moved by his foot, where they refused to look from a better angle?
Numerous wides given to Archer that weren't/the same balls not given as wides for NZ?
That's just bollocks. The fact that he moved the boundary pad with his foot was irrelevant, he'd let go of the ball by then so 2 was the correct decision (as confirmed by the video replay)
And you're just inventing things when you say that wides weren't called for NZ when they were called for England. There were two lines drawn by the side of the wicket that gave guidance as to what was a wide and what was not. I watched the entire match and could tell instantly whether it was wide or now - well before the umpire's call. There was nothing remotely contraversial about it.
Yes, NZ got a massive stroke of luck in winning the toss but England got the rub of the green from then on (as Morgan admitted) so I think it was pretty even.
That's just bollocks. The fact that he moved the boundary pad with his foot was irrelevant, he'd let go of the ball by then so 2 was the correct decision (as confirmed by the video replay)
And you're just inventing things when you say that wides weren't called for NZ when they were called for England. There were two lines drawn by the side of the wicket that gave guidance as to what was a wide and what was not. I watched the entire match and could tell instantly whether it was wide or now - well before the umpire's call. There was nothing remotely contraversial about it.
Yes, NZ got a massive stroke of luck in winning the toss but England got the rub of the green from then on (as Morgan admitted) so I think it was pretty even.