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how a person 'out' frm play
all rules ®ulation of cricket

2006-12-26 06:28:16 · 11 answers · asked by hiba i 1 in Sports Cricket

11 answers

A player while he is batting will be out for the following reasons.

1. Bowled
2 Caught
3. Run Out.
4. Stumped..

For rules and regulations google it. You will find the answers..

2006-12-26 15:11:14 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Law 1 (The players)
Law 2 (Substitutes and runners)
Law 3 (The umpires)
Law 4 (The scorers)
Law 5 (The ball)
Law 6 (The bat)
Law 7 (The pitch)
Law 8 (The wickets)
Law 9 (The bowling, popping and return creases)
Law 10 (Preparation and maintenance of the playing area)
Law 11 (Covering the pitch)
Law 12 (Innings)
Law 13 (The follow-on)
Law 14 (Declaration and forfeiture)
Law 15 (Intervals)
Law 16 (Start of play; cessation of play)
Law 17 (Practice on the field)
Law 18 (Scoring runs)
Law 19 (Boundaries)
Law 20 (Lost ball)
Law 21 (The result)
Law 22 (The over)
Law 23 (Dead ball)
Law 24 (No ball)
Law 25 (Wide ball)
Law 26 (Bye and Leg bye)
Law 27 (Appeals)
Law 28 (The wicket is down)
Law 29 (Batsman out of his ground)
Law 30 (Bowled)
Law 31 (Timed out)
Law 32 (Caught)
Law 33 (Handled the ball)
Law 34 (Hit the ball twice)
Law 35 (Hit wicket)
Law 36 (Leg before wicket)
Law 37 (Obstructing the field)
Law 38 (Run out)
Law 39 (Stumped)
Law 40 (The wicket-keeper)
Law 41 (The fielder)
Law 42 (Fair and unfair play)

2006-12-30 12:55:09 · answer #2 · answered by jatin 2 · 0 0

Hello,
this is Your Answer

Law 1 (The players)
Law 2 (Substitutes and runners)
Law 3 (The umpires)
Law 4 (The scorers)
Law 5 (The ball)
Law 6 (The bat)
Law 7 (The pitch)
Law 8 (The wickets)
Law 9 (The bowling, popping and return creases)
Law 10 (Preparation and maintenance of the playing area)
Law 11 (Covering the pitch)
Law 12 (Innings)
Law 13 (The follow-on)
Law 14 (Declaration and forfeiture)
Law 15 (Intervals)
Law 16 (Start of play; cessation of play)
Law 17 (Practice on the field)
Law 18 (Scoring runs)
Law 19 (Boundaries)
Law 20 (Lost ball)
Law 21 (The result)
Law 22 (The over)
Law 23 (Dead ball)
Law 24 (No ball)
Law 25 (Wide ball)
Law 26 (Bye and Leg bye)
Law 27 (Appeals)
Law 28 (The wicket is down)
Law 29 (Batsman out of his ground)
Law 30 (Bowled)
Law 31 (Timed out)
Law 32 (Caught)
Law 33 (Handled the ball)
Law 34 (Hit the ball twice)
Law 35 (Hit wicket)
Law 36 (Leg before wicket)
Law 37 (Obstructing the field)
Law 38 (Run out)
Law 39 (Stumped)
Law 40 (The wicket-keeper)
Law 41 (The fielder)
Law 42 (Fair and unfair play)


If You want more in any Law then visit :- http://www.therulesofcricket.co.uk/

Thanking You

2006-12-26 23:59:45 · answer #3 · answered by PATEL'S 2 · 1 0

A batsman can be out by 10 different ways, which are listed below.

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. The bowler and catcher are both credited with the dismissal.

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. The bowler is credited with the dismissal.

3) Leg before wicket (lbw) — When a delivered ball misses the bat and strikes the batsman's leg, pad or body, and the umpire judges that the ball would otherwise have struck the stumps. The laws of cricket stipulate certain exceptions. For instance, a delivery pitching outside the line of leg stump should not result in an lbw dismissal, while a delivery hitting the batsman outside the line of the off stump should result in an lbw dismissal only if the batsman makes no attempt to play the ball with the bat. The bowler is credited with the dismissal.

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.

6) 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.

7) Handled the ball — When the batsman deliberately handles the ball without the permission of the fielding team. No player is credited with the dismissal.

8) 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.

9) Obstructing the field — When a batsman deliberately hinders a fielder from attempting to field the ball. No player is credited with the dismissal.

10) 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). This rule prevents the batting team using time limits of the game to unfair advantage. 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.

Batsmen cannot be out bowled, caught, leg before wicket, stumped, or hit wicket off a no ball. They cannot be out bowled, caught, leg before wicket, or hit the ball twice off a wide.

Some of these modes of dismissal can occur 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 is, by its nature, a dismissal without a delivery. With all other modes of dismissal, only one batsman can be dismissed per ball bowled.

For all other rules of cricket, please check the following link:

http://www.therulesofcricket.co.uk/

2006-12-26 22:59:20 · answer #4 · answered by vakayil k 7 · 0 0

Most common are:

caught - fielder catches the ball (glove counts as bat)
bowled - ball hits the wicket and the bails fall off (doesn't matter if it hits something else before hitting the wicket)
runout - when the bails are removed before batsman reaches crease
lbw - basic concept is that even though it hit batsman's pad, the ball was going to hit the wicket
stumped - batsman runs out of crease to hit ball and keeper hits wicket w/ ball while batsman is out of crease

Uncommon dismissals:

hit wicket - batsman hits own wicket with bat or body (Inzamam did this once and lost balance and fell on wicket)
obstructing field - batsman intentionally stops ball from hitting wicket during run out or he gets in way of fielder intentionally (Inzy does this too)
handled the ball - when batsman stops ball with hand without fielding team permission (steve waugh does this)
timed out - when bastman takes more than 3 min to be ready to bat after someone else gets out
hit the ball twice- self explanatory

2006-12-26 18:15:25 · answer #5 · answered by SciencEnthusiast 2 · 1 0

a ''ruler'' is a scale but what is ''ciriket''?
pal the question ought to be : What are the ''Rules'' of '''cricket''?

2006-12-27 03:20:03 · answer #6 · answered by mink 6 · 0 0

by LBWS
catches
stumps
bowled out
run out
theres probably more but thats all i know

2006-12-26 19:28:29 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

the ans is www.wisden.com
pliz chk ur spelling...

2006-12-27 03:00:45 · answer #8 · answered by sunny 1 · 0 0

out of sence?

2006-12-27 12:43:09 · answer #9 · answered by hrdkml 2 · 0 0

watz up there plz tell me clearly???

2006-12-26 15:10:52 · answer #10 · answered by rkveeram 2 · 0 1

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