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RULE
9. FIELD PLACEMENT
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Fielders
Per Half Court A
court is divided into halves, the dividing line being the non-striker's
running crease. No more than 4 fielders may be in either half of the
court from the moment the bowler commences their run up until the
ball leaves the bowler's hand. A player standing with a foot, or part
thereof, on the line is considered to be in both halves, and would
therefore contravene this rule. If this contravention occurs, the
umpire will call "No Ball" as soon as the bowler releases
the ball (even if by then the fielder has moved back into the 'correct'
half). Further discussion on this rule in the Umpiring
section.
-
Fielders
on Pitch With
the exception of the bowler, no fielder (including the wicket keeper),
can move onto or extend any part of the body over the pitch from the
commencement of the bowler's run up until the ball is played (hit)
by the batsman, hits the batsman, or passes the batsman's wicket.
If this rule is contravened, the umpire will call "No Ball".
- Exclusion
Zone The
Exclusion Zone is an arc extending to a radius of 3 metres from the
exact centre of the batting crease. No fielder can move into or extend
over the Exclusion Zone from the commencement of the bowler's run up
until the ball is played at by the batsman, hit by the batsman, hits
the batsman, or passes the batsman's wicket. The AICF then go on to
tell us that the "wicket keeper may move into the Exclusion Zone
after the ball has been bowled" - which is very charitable, seeing
as it's almost impossible for a 'keeper to not be in the Exclusion
Zone as they wait for the ball to be bowled. As long as the 'keeper
is in position to field the ball, and doesn't pass forward of the line
of the stumps until the ball has been hit, has hit, or has passed behind
the stumps, the rule has not been contravened. If however this rule
is somehow contravened, the umpire will call "No Ball".
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Wicket
Keeper
-
The
AICF considers a fielder is to be classified as the wicket keeper
if they take up position behind the stumps at the striker's end
in the area designated for the wicket keeper. I make the subtle
qualification that they have to be in that position at the commencement
of a delivery ... they are then the 'keeper for the remainder
of that delivery. And so on ....
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The
area designated for the wicket keeper is between the lines extending
along the extremities of the pitch to the net immediately behind
the wicket, the actual net immediately behind the wicket, and
the line running at right angles through the stumps at the striker's
end. In other words - on the pitch, from the stumps to the net
immediately behind the wicket. When describing this rule, the
AICF rulebook confusingly calls this net the "back net".
This is demonstrably wrong ... the "back net" is the
net which scores 4, 5 or 6 (see Rule 11 Scoring). The net refered
to in this rule is the "front" net, or scoring zone
A.
-
The
wicket keeper must take up a position with both feet wholly inside
the designated area (above) and cannot move out of that area until
the ball leaves the bowler's hand. If this rule is contravened,
the umpire will call "No Ball". The spirit of this particular
rule is that once the ball leaves the bowler's hand, the 'keeper
may move out of the designated area to field a delivery which
he couldn't reach otherwise. Although the AICF rules don't actually
state it, the 'keeper cannot move out of the designated area once
the ball has been delivered to take up a position where he thinks
the batsman will hit the ball, in an attempt to field the ball.
The rule should more accurately state that any movement outside
the area, before the ball has reached the batsman, can
only be to attempt to field the delivery as bowled.
-
As
stated above, the wicket keeper may move into the Exclusion Zone,
or more accurately may stay in it, after the ball has been bowled
provided they are legitimately getting into position to field
the ball - my qualification would be "provided they are getting
into position to field the delivery" - and they do not pass
forward of the line through the stumps. If this rule is contravened,
the umpire will call "No Ball".
-
The
wicket keeper cannot take the ball either in front of or from
the side of the wickets (this means "in a line directly
to the side of"), with the exception of when the ball strikes
the batter's person or equipment. If this rule is contravened,
the umpire will call "No Ball".
-
The
wearing of gloves by the wicket keeper is optional. [See Rule
5C - Playing Equipment].
- A
wicket keeper is optional. There can only be one wicketkeeper each
time a ball is bowled.
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RULE
10. PLAY BALL / LIVE BALL / DEAD BALL
PLAY
BALL / LIVE BALL
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The
game commences once the players take up their positions and the
umpire calls "Play". I prefer "Play ball", but
......
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The
ball remains "live" throughout the over, right up until
the umpire calls "Over", unless the umpire calls "Dead
Ball" or a wicket falls.
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Play
cannot recommence after the fall of a wicket or a call of "Dead
Ball" or before the start of a new over, until the umpire calls
"Play". ... or "Play Ball".
-
It
is the batsman's responsibility to have taken strike when the bowler
is ready to bowl, provided the batsman has been given reasonable
time to do so. The umpire will be the sole judge of what is "reasonable
time". However, most of the time a bowler bowls when the batsman
is not looking or has not properly "taken guard", I would
call "Dead Ball". Only if a batsman was being cute and
deliberately wasting time would I call them to face-up and then
call Play Ball.
DEAD
BALL There
are several situations where a call of Dead Ball is called for.
-
"Automatic" Dead Balls. No runs can be scored
or wickets lost, and the ball must be rebowled. There are other
situations which gain an automatic Dead Ball call, but with different
consequences and conditions - they are covered further down the
page -
-
The
bails are not properly placed on either set of stumps when the
bowler commences their run up.
-
A
ball leaves the court, other than as a result of an attempted
run out by a fielder.
-
A
ball, after being struck by the batsman, lodges in the net or
any part of the net's framework. The original batsman must face
the rebowled delivery.
-
The
bowler attempts an illegal mankad. [See Rule 17F(iii) and (iv)
- Dismissals]. This is a "No Ball / Dead Ball" call,
and the batting side receives 2 runs for the "No Ball"
component.
-
"Discretionary" Dead Balls. In these particular
situations, the decision to have the ball rebowled or to allow runs
scored or to apply penalties for wickets taken will be at the discretion
of the umpire.
-
An
injury to a player. If a player is hurt and it looks serious (dropping
to the ground and not moving is a good indicator it's serious),
the umpire should immediately call Dead Ball. No runs would be
counted, and the ball would rightly be rebowled in that case.
However, if a batsman is hurt but not incapacitated, the judgement
can be to let the play reach a conclusion before calling Dead
Ball. Runs would count (including wickets) and the ball wouldn't
have to be be rebowled. As the rule says, these situations are
discretionary, and it can be a difficult decision to make. If
in doubt, call Dead Ball immediately, but be aware of batsmen
suddenly limping when it looks like they're going to be run out
by ten feet. Let them play on .....
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The
batsman hadn't properly taken strike before the bowler delivered
the ball (discussed above).
-
The
bat accidentally left the batter's hands (aka throwing the bat)
as a result of playing a shot at the ball. Highly amusing in hindsight,
but particularly dangerous at the time. Good gloves should prevent
this happening, but happen it does.
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"Special Case" Dead Balls. The ball is not
rebowled.
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The
ball after being bowled, but before reaching the batsman, hits
a fielder. A bowler would have to be rather wayward to have
this happen, but again, it does happen. The call of "DUCK!!!"
is to be avoided. Instead, call "No Ball, Dead Ball"
and give the batsman 2 runs.
-
A
fielder throws the ball to run a batsman out, and the ball finds
a hole somewhere and leaves the court (or becomes lodged in
the netting or netting fixtures). The score (net zone and physical
runs) made up until when the ball leaves the court will count
(although the AICF rules are contradictory, as described under
Rule 15). In general practise in games at your local centre,
the run in which the fielder made the runout attempt would probably
be counted by the umpire, if the batsmen were very close to
completing it when the ball disappeared.... technically though,
only runs FULLY COMPLETED before the ball left the court should
count. To avoid argument and to be consistent, umpires should
stick steadfastly to the technical definition. Most of the time,
by the time a throw has missed the stumps and then found a way
out of the court, the batsmen would have completed the run initially
under threat. If alert and paying attention, they might be just
beginning an extra run, and the commonsense and fairness of
a "Dead Ball" call at that point would not draw any
argument..
-
A
ball, when bowled, hits the top or side net before reaching
the batsman. The umpire will not laugh, but will call "No
Ball, Dead Ball" and the batsman will receive 2 runs.
-
A
wicket falls, excluding a mankad.
-
The
umpire calls "Over".
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The
captain of the fielding team or the batmen are permitted to
request a "Dead Ball" under the following conditions:
Player injury (where you were too insensitive to call it prior
to the request); ruling or score clarification; clothing adjustment
(their own preferably). Until the umpire acknowledges the request
and calls Dead Ball, the ball is live.
Note:
If the umpire is required to intervene (verbally only, please) during
an argument or dispute ... or fight ... between players, the ball is
automatically dead from the time of the umpire's intervention until
"Play" is called. The ball is dead whether the umpire calls
"Dead Ball" or not ... in the heat of such events it is easy
for an umpire to forget. No runs can be scored or wickets taken during
the intervention. However, any score completed up until the intervention
must stand.
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©
2000 Indoor Cricket World (formerly the Australian Indoor Cricket Page)
shel@iinet.net.au .
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