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18 answers

Listen Carefully: If the ball bounce above the batsman for straight umpire he only calls an wide., If the batsman touches the leg umpire must appeal it for no-ball. Then straight umpire will agree and approve it. For straight umpire it is wide if he hits for leg umpire its a no-ball

2006-07-23 18:06:39 · answer #1 · answered by JJ 4 · 5 1

If the batsman leaves it when the ball goes over the head then it is wide. If the batsman hits it then its not a wide and it is counted as a allowable bouncer in an over and if caught it is out. But if it is the second time and the batsman hits it and it is caught it is not out as it is a no ball as a bowler can bowl only on bouncer in a over in ODIs

2006-07-23 17:37:59 · answer #2 · answered by Immanuel Alwin 2 · 1 0

most of the answers here are wrong..if the ball bounces over the batsman shoulder height for a second time in 1 over than its a no-ball..however if the ball bounces over the head of the batsman its a wide..
also if the batsman does hit it and gets caught he is out..

2006-07-23 05:55:39 · answer #3 · answered by Anubhav~~!! 3 · 0 0

The ball goes above from batsman head, if batman touch the the ball means its no ball else its a wide ball ( but both the no ball and wide ball are same only)

2006-07-23 04:33:34 · answer #4 · answered by abu 1 · 0 0

If the ball passes over the batsman's head, then its WIDE and if he hits the ball and get caught, hecant be out.. if ball passes above his shoulder but below his head AND the ball has bounce once, then its warning for first time and noball for the rest of them in same over.

2006-07-23 07:39:03 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

ball going above head is no-ball. and batsman is not out even if he hits that ball. ball bouncing on either side of wicket above the shoulder level is wide ball.

2006-07-23 05:15:38 · answer #6 · answered by rahul 2 · 0 0

It is a no-ball. Wides are called when the batter can't reach the ball on either side.
As long as the batsmen doesn't touch the ball as it sails over his head, he can't be given out caught.

2006-07-23 04:30:12 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Nice question.

As per my knowledge.

If the batsman leaves the ball then it is called WIDE.

If he touches it then it is given the first bouncer (if it is the first) and the batsman is declared out. If that is the second one then the umpire declares it not out as the second bouncer for the over is a NO-BALL.

Hope I am correct and you got it.

2006-07-23 07:09:07 · answer #8 · answered by Sherlock Holmes 6 · 0 0

IF a ball bounces so, it is called as wide atpresent by umpires, incase if the batsmen hits it then it will be called as NO-Ball. So it willbe not out.
But actually if a bowler bowls a bouncer ball like that, its a NO-BALL. so therse no way for talking about out decision.

2006-07-23 04:59:58 · answer #9 · answered by surya 2 · 0 0

if it is caught after the batsman hits it, then yes he's out. if it goes over his head then im pretty sure thats no-ball though

2006-07-23 08:09:44 · answer #10 · answered by froggy 2 · 0 0

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