budster
Regular Contributor
Posts: 22
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Post by budster on Mar 14, 2016 20:25:39 GMT
Training course issue yesterday. we were covering a fielder returning without permission and advised the students of the penalties, when we told them that the ball would not count as one in the over, one student asked 'what if the ball was already a no ball' ( and therefore did not count in the over) - one rather unsure Tutor was perplexed - any one able to help?
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Post by gooders on Mar 14, 2016 21:56:07 GMT
Well it's not suddenly going to become a legal delivery is it? However, the ball is still live, and as such is subject to illegal fielding and the penalties awarded thereto. If, however , it's in an international match, then I'm sure the ICC will have some ridiculous playing regulation to make everything different.
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Post by tippex2 on Mar 15, 2016 10:10:47 GMT
If a ball doesn't count in the over, it doesn't count. There's no question of claiming that, because there are 2 reasons for it not to count, you would rewind the count back a delivery so that there would have to be 7 legal balls.
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budster
Regular Contributor
Posts: 22
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Post by budster on Mar 15, 2016 20:07:10 GMT
Thanks Guys
very helpful jon
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