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You are the umpire - ICF game


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Yes I would. Both sides agree. So it should be ok.
Correct. If both captains agree it is allowed Situation #21
A wicket falls in the final over before lunch. After the break the not out batsman comes out with his new partner, just as they get to the middle it begins to rain. They go inside, when they come back out the not out batsman comes out with a different partner. Do you allow it?
Prize: $20000 ICF
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Situation #22 A side is 9 wickets down and require 10 to win. Their star batsman is batting alongside the worlds worst #11. The batsmen attempt a 2, but they quickly realise they won't make, in order to keep the strike, the star batsman deliberately runs one short. What happens here? Prize: ICF $20000 Situation #23 You give a batsman out, but as the batsman is walking off, your colleague informs you that you have miscounted the deliveries and he was out on the 7th delivery. What do you do? Prize: ICF $15000

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Situation #22 A side is 9 wickets down and require 10 to win. Their star batsman is batting alongside the worlds worst #11. The batsmen attempt a 2, but they quickly realise they won't make, in order to keep the strike, the star batsman deliberately runs one short. What happens here? Prize: ICF $20000
No runs are awarded to the batting team.the strike remains with the star batsman,a sort of dead ball Situation #23
You give a batsman out, but as the batsman is walking off, your colleague informs you that you have miscounted the deliveries and he was out on the 7th delivery. What do you do? Prize: ICF $15000
nothing,a delivery once bowled cant be cancelled.an umpire can only reverse his decision if he feels he has given the batsman out wrongly,that too before him crossing the boundary line
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Situation #22 A side is 9 wickets down and require 10 to win. Their star batsman is batting alongside the worlds worst #11. The batsmen attempt a 2, but they quickly realise they won't make, in order to keep the strike, the star batsman deliberately runs one short. What happens here? Prize: ICF $20000 Situation #23 You give a batsman out, but as the batsman is walking off, your colleague informs you that you have miscounted the deliveries and he was out on the 7th delivery. What do you do? Prize: ICF $15000
Situation22: the umpire declares one run short.. so the team is awarded only one and the star batsman goes to the non-striker end. Situation 23: Nothing can be done. You are out.. since the ball is already bowled. it ll b considered as a 7 ball over. and yuo will walking out..
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Situation #22 Decision All runs are cancelled. Both batsmen return to their ends. A batsman can not deliberately run one short. If this happens again, the opposition is awarded 5 penalty runs. Lord is the closest. Situation #23 Decision The batsman is out. It was a mistake on the umpires part, but it can't be reversed.

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Situation #24 The keeper is standing up to a spinner. The batsman comes down the wicket and edges the ball, which goes up in the air and hit the keeper on the cap which he is wearing on his head. The ball bounces off and falls onto the stump. What decision do you give here and why? Prize: ICF $20000 Bonus Would the situation be any different if the keeper was wearing a helmet? Prize: ICF $10000

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Situation #24 The keeper is standing up to a spinner. The batsman comes down the wicket and edges the ball, which goes up in the air and hit the keeper on the cap which he is wearing on his head. The ball bounces off and falls onto the stump. What decision do you give here and why? Prize: ICF $20000 Bonus Would the situation be any different if the keeper was wearing a helmet? Prize: ICF $10000
1) Batsmen is Run Out in either case. The batsmen is out as he's short of his crease while the wickets are broken and the ball is still in play. The question is whether he's stumped or run out. For a stumping I think there needs to be a deliberate play to break the stumps by the keeper and not simply a fluke like the one above. For the helmet...I remember a rule saying that if the ball hits the helmet and is caught it's not out, but the rest of the body goes. But that's for catches....I don't think a helmet should make a difference in this case.
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Situation #24 The keeper is standing up to a spinner. The batsman comes down the wicket and edges the ball, which goes up in the air and hit the keeper on the cap which he is wearing on his head. The ball bounces off and falls onto the stump. What decision do you give here and why? Prize: ICF $20000
THE BATSMAN IS RUNOUT!once the batsman has played the ball,even its an edge,he cannot be stumped .
Bonus Would the situation be any different if the keeper was wearing a helmet? Prize: ICF $10000
no he would still be out,a batsman is not if he is caught runout a fielder's protectoive gear but it doesnt include the keeper
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Situation #24 The keeper is standing up to a spinner. The batsman comes down the wicket and edges the ball, which goes up in the air and hit the keeper on the cap which he is wearing on his head. The ball bounces off and falls onto the stump. What decision do you give here and why? Prize: ICF $20000 Bonus Would the situation be any different if the keeper was wearing a helmet? Prize: ICF $10000
Here in the first case he is not out He is not out because there should be a part of the wicket keepers body involved while running a batsman out.In this case the ball touched the cap and then crashed on to the stumps so its not out Bonus case In this case also it will be not out as no part of his body is involved in run out
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Situation #24 The keeper is standing up to a spinner. The batsman comes down the wicket and edges the ball, which goes up in the air and hit the keeper on the cap which he is wearing on his head. The ball bounces off and falls onto the stump. What decision do you give here and why? Prize: ICF $20000 Bonus Would the situation be any different if the keeper was wearing a helmet? Prize: ICF $10000
Situation 24: The batsman is considered to be stumped out because he has advanced to hit the ball and hasn't been running yet. Also, the hat is part of keeper's body, which the ball makes contact with before hitting the stumps. Bonus: Wearing a helmet instead of a cap won't change the situation so he would still be considered stumped out.
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