Why not take it out of the hands of interpretation and make it black and white Mitchell Starc suggests the use of on field cameras to prevent batters from venturing out of the crease
Why not take it out of the hands of interpretation and make it black and white - Mitchell Starc suggests the use of on-field cameras to prevent batters from venturing out of the crease Notifications New User posted their first comment this is comment text Approve Reject & ban Delete Logout
What do you think about this event between Mitchell Starc and ? ?
SOUND What do you think about this event between Mitchell Starc and ? ? Suggesting that if the batter is off the crease when the delivery is bowled, the umpire should proceed to call it a short run with the help of the third umpire, Starc told The Age and : “While it is hard to do at all levels, why not take it out of the hands of interpretation and make it black and white? There are cameras for front foot no-balls, a camera there all the time [in international cricket] and someone watching the line." Starc continued: “Every time the batter leaves the crease before the front foot lands, dock them a run. There’s no grey area then. And in T20 cricket where runs are so handy at the back end and games can be decided by, one, two, three runs all the time, if all of a sudden you get docked 20 runs because a batter’s leaving early, you’re going to stop doing it aren’t you?" Despite the mode of dismissal being permitted through the amended laws, Indian Women bowler received a mixed reception after running out Charlie Dean at the non-striker's end during the third ODI between India and England last month.
Why not take it out of the hands of interpretation and make it black and white - Mitchell Starc suggests the use of on-field cameras to prevent batters from venturing out of the crease
Mitchell Starc has come up with an unorthodox yet potentially effective solution to keep the batters inside the crease Australian bowler has suggested an out-of-the-box solution to resolve the distorted notion of a run-out at the non-striker's end. The left-arm fast pacer recently came into the spotlight after he appeared to warn England white-ball skipper during the recently concluded three-match T20I series. The International Cricket Council (ICC) appeared to draw the line by declaring the non-striker run-out as a legitimate mode of dismissal after earlier being categorized as unfair play. Despite being legalized, several teams and bowlers are still hesitant to effect such a dismissal. Numerous bowlers have dished out a warning to batters who backed up too far at the non-striker's end. SOUNDWhat do you think about this event between Mitchell Starc and ? ?
SOUND What do you think about this event between Mitchell Starc and ? ? Suggesting that if the batter is off the crease when the delivery is bowled, the umpire should proceed to call it a short run with the help of the third umpire, Starc told The Age and : “While it is hard to do at all levels, why not take it out of the hands of interpretation and make it black and white? There are cameras for front foot no-balls, a camera there all the time [in international cricket] and someone watching the line." Starc continued: “Every time the batter leaves the crease before the front foot lands, dock them a run. There’s no grey area then. And in T20 cricket where runs are so handy at the back end and games can be decided by, one, two, three runs all the time, if all of a sudden you get docked 20 runs because a batter’s leaving early, you’re going to stop doing it aren’t you?" Despite the mode of dismissal being permitted through the amended laws, Indian Women bowler received a mixed reception after running out Charlie Dean at the non-striker's end during the third ODI between India and England last month.