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2006-11-04 19:30:30 · 12 answers · asked by mahesh c 1 in Sports Cricket

12 answers

while facing a delivery if the ball happen to pitch in line with any three stumps and hit the batsman's pad without touching the bat again in line with the stumpsthen he is considered OUT
in case of a spinner if the ball doesnt pitch in line of the stumps but appears to be hitting the stumps then still the batsman is given OUT
if the batsman doesnt appear to be hitting a shot and if the ball doesnt pitch in line of the stumps and appears to be hitting the stumps then without any doubt he is given OUT

2006-11-04 20:11:02 · answer #1 · answered by ♦ arc duke ♦ 3 · 0 1

The rules of LBW is explained below:

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. The bowler is credited with the dismissal

2006-11-05 08:34:35 · answer #2 · answered by vakayil k 7 · 0 2

lbw = leg before the wicket.
It means when the bowler bowls and strikes your leg which is completely in front of the stump (wkt) as if it has blocked any of the three stump (wkt). Under this circumstances if the bowler appeals, the umpire decides whether the leg (i.e. pad) has blocked the wicket or not. For fair and correct decision he often takes the help of 3rd Umpre these days, who watches the incident by TV properly and prompts a correct decision to the umpire. But the entire judgement depends on the umpire and before the introduction of 3rd umpire there had been a number of controversies over the lbw decision arround the world.

2006-11-07 23:53:17 · answer #3 · answered by Cricket Fan 1 · 0 1

lbw = leg before the wicket.
It means when the bowler bowls and strikes your leg which is completely in front of the stump (wkt) as if it has blocked any of the three stump (wkt). Under this circumstances if the bowler appeals, the umpire decides whether the leg (i.e. pad) has blocked the wicket or not. For fair and correct decision he often takes the help of 3rd Umpre these days, who watches the incident by TV properly and prompts a correct decision to the umpire. But the entire judgement depends on the umpire and before the introduction of 3rd umpire there had been a number of controversies over the lbw decision arround the world.

2006-11-05 04:44:59 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

The batsman is supposed to hit the ball for scoring runs when bowled-at and at the same time protect the stumps.

In this process, if the ball is in line with the middle stump and the batsman’s leg or pad touches the ball it is considered as a foul called ‘leg before wicket’ LBW

2006-11-05 03:47:28 · answer #5 · answered by Harish Jharia 7 · 0 2

lbw mwans leg before wicket
if the ball hits the batsman lower,
ie it may hit the wicket if the batsman would not been there
that must lies between the three stumps

2006-11-05 04:52:33 · answer #6 · answered by smith 3 · 0 1

If the ball hits the leg pad of the batsman when his leg is strait at the middle stump.

2006-11-05 05:52:58 · answer #7 · answered by Panchu 2 · 0 2

the ball sposed to hit the persons body and it has to be infront of the wickets and the balll has to be PITCHED in the line of stumps.....easy peesy cheesy squuezy donglee heezy teeny queezy pontee weezy.

2006-11-05 04:49:12 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

ball wicket par aaye jo
apna dharam nibhaye
balla tere haath mein
kaahein tang adaye

2006-11-07 05:15:41 · answer #9 · answered by shambhavi 1 · 0 1

Ball could have hit to wicket if it could not obstructed by leg.

2006-11-05 06:45:01 · answer #10 · answered by narayan 2 · 0 2

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