Following are the different types
1. Caught — When a fielder catches the ball before the ball bounces and after the batsman has struck it with the bat or it has come into contact with the batsman's glove while it is in contact with the bat handle.
2. Bowled — When a delivered ball hits the stumps at the batsman's end, and dislodges one or both of the bails. This happens regardless of whether the batsman has edged the ball onto the stumps or not.
3. Leg before wicket (LBW) — When a delivered ball misses the bat and strikes the batsman's leg or pad, and the umpire judges that the ball would otherwise have struck the stumps. The laws of cricket stipulate certain exceptions in favour of the batsman; for instance, a batsman should not be given out LBW if the place where the ball bounced on the pitch is to the leg-side of the area strictly between the two wickets.
4. Run out — When a fielder, bowler or wicket-keeper removes one or both of the bails with the ball by hitting the stumps whilst a batsman is still running between the two ends. The ball can either hit the stumps directly or the fielder's hand with the ball inside it can be used to dislodge the bails. Such a dismissal is not officially credited to any player, although the identities of the fielder or fielders involved is often noted in brackets on the scorecard.
5. Stumped — When the batsman leaves his crease in playing a delivery, voluntarily or involuntarily, but the ball goes to the wicket-keeper who uses it to remove one or both of the bails through hitting the bail(s) or the wicket before the batsman has remade his ground. The bowler and wicket-keeper are both credited. This generally requires the keeper to be standing within arm's length of the wicket, which is done mainly to spin bowling.
7.Hit wicket — When the batsman accidentally knocks the stumps with either the body or the bat, causing one or both of the bails to be dislodged, either in playing a shot or in taking off for the first run. The bowler is credited with the dismissal.
8.Handled the ball — When the batsman deliberately handles the ball without the permission of the fielding team. No player is credited with the dismissal.
9. Hit the ball twice — When the batsman deliberately strikes the ball a second time, except for the sole purpose of guarding his wicket. No player is credited with the dismissal.
10.Obstructing the field — When a batsman deliberately hinders a fielder from attempting to field the ball. No player is credited with the dismissal.
11. Timed out — When a new batsman takes more than three minutes to take his position in the field to replace a dismissed batsman. (If the delay is protracted, the umpires may cause the match to be forfeited.) No player is credited with the dismissal.
Additionally, a batsman may leave the field without being dismissed. For instance, if he is injured or taken ill, this is known as retired hurt or retired ill. The batsman is not out; he may return to bat later in the same innings if sufficiently recovered. Also, an unimpaired batsman may retire, in which case he is treated as being dismissed retired out; no player is credited with the dismissal.
An individual cannot be out — 'bowled', 'caught', 'leg before wicket', 'stumped', or 'hit wicket' off a no ball. He cannot be out — 'bowled', 'caught', 'leg before wicket', or 'hit the ball twice' off a wide.
Some of these modes of dismissal can take place without the bowler bowling a delivery. The batsman who is not on strike may be run out by the bowler if he leaves his crease before the bowler bowls, and a batsman can be out obstructing the field or retired out at any time. Timed out by its nature is a dismissal without a delivery. With all other modes of dismissal, only one batsman can be dismissed per ball bowled. Obstructing the field, Handled the ball, Timed Out and Hit the ball twice dismissals are extremely rare.
Details are from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cricket#Bowling_and_dismissals
2006-09-26 08:04:03
·
answer #1
·
answered by muks320 3
·
1⤊
0⤋
singer gave me a guffawing fit, besides LBW Bowled stuck Stumped Hit Wicket Run Out Timed Out Obstruction Of the field coping with The Ball Double Hit, as a fielding unit the batsman/woman can not take delivery of out till there is an attraction from the fielding crew! only ever been out 0.5 the techniques myself and were given human beings out 3 techniques earlier! i'm hoping I helped the cricketers accessible, thanks for reading!
2016-11-24 20:08:30
·
answer #2
·
answered by ? 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
Bowled
Leg Before Wicket.
Caught
Stumped
Run Out
Hit Wicket
Handled Ball
Obstructed Field
Timed Out
Hitting the ball twice.
2006-09-26 03:08:56
·
answer #3
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
10 Ways a batsman could be out.
1)Bowled.
2)LBW.
3)Run Out.
4)Caught.
5)Stumped.
6)Hit Wicket.
7)Retired hurt (sort of but batsman isn't exactly given out)
8)Caught and bowled.
9)Um, I think I'm out for 8, I hold my head n shame as I make the long walk back to the pavillion.
2006-09-26 09:05:08
·
answer #4
·
answered by Elliot The Runescape Master 2
·
0⤊
2⤋
Bowled
Caught
Run out
Stumped
Leg-before-wicket (lbw)
Hit wicket
Handled the ball (hit the ball twice, with intention of scoring)
Obstructing the field (batsman deliberately interferes with fielders)
Timed out (if incoming batsman takes too long to reach crease)
Retired-out (If any batsman leaves the field of play without the Umpire's consent for any reason other than injury or incapacity, he may resume the innings only with the consent of the opposing captain. else he is recorded as retired - out.)
2006-09-26 03:35:52
·
answer #5
·
answered by coldfire 2
·
0⤊
1⤋
!Here they are:
1. Caught
2. Bowled
3. LBW
4. Stumped
5. Run Out
6. Hit Wicket
7. Handled the ball
8. Obstructing the field
9. Timed out
10. Hitting the ball twice
2006-09-26 20:32:21
·
answer #6
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
Bowled
LBW
Caught
Run Out
Stumped
Hit Wicket
Handled Ball
Timed Out
Obstructing the Fielder
Hitting the ball Twice
Retired Out(many dont know about this way of getting out. Marvan Attapatu of Sri lanka was first against Bangladesh on 200. in the same match Mahela Jayawardene retired out on 150.)
2006-09-26 03:18:40
·
answer #7
·
answered by mayurtilldeath 1
·
1⤊
1⤋
Bowled
LBW
Caught by keeper
Caught in Slips
Caught by another fielder
Caught by bowler in his return
Stump
Run Out
Hit Wicket
Handled Ball
Obstructed Field
Timed Out
Hitting the ball twice
2006-09-26 23:43:08
·
answer #8
·
answered by Bluffmaster 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
BOWLED
CAUGHT
HIT-WICKET
LEG BEFORE WICKET i.e. L.B.W.
RUN OUT
STUMPED
HANDLING THE BALL
HITTING A BALL TWICE
FIELD OBSTRUCTION
IF A BATSMAN DOESN'T COMES TO THE GROUND BEFORE 2 MINUTES AFTER A BATSMAN IS OUT
2006-09-27 02:44:58
·
answer #9
·
answered by HOT STAR 2
·
0⤊
0⤋
The 10 ways are:
Caught
Bowled
Leg before wicket (LBW)
Run out
Stumped
Handled the ball
Timed out
Hitting the ball twice (or double hit)
Hit wicket
Obstructing the field
2006-09-26 06:48:16
·
answer #10
·
answered by aniruddh77 1
·
0⤊
0⤋