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New ICC Rules (June 2025): Stop Clock in Tests, One Ball in ODIs, and More

BouncerGuy

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The ICC recently approved several changes to its playing conditions for men's international cricket including the updated Boundary Law and operating with just one ball in ODIs from the 35th over. While some of these new rules have already come into play in the new cycle of the World Test Championship (WTC) (2025-27), those pertaining to white-ball cricket will be effective from July 2.

Having accessed the playing conditions the ICC shared with the member countries recently, ESPNcricinfo looks at the noteworthy changes across the three formats.

Stop clock in Test cricket

A year after introducing a stop clock in white-ball formats, the ICC has decided to introduce it in Test cricket as well because slow over rates have been a long-standing problem in the format. According to the rule, the fielding side must be ready to start an over within a minute of the previous one ending. They will receive two warnings from the umpires if they fail to do so. After those warnings, the umpires will impose a five-run penalty on the bowling team. Warnings will be reset to zero after each block of 80 overs. Also, the clock will be counted upwards from 0 to 60. The rule has already been in play since the beginning of the 2025-27 WTC cycle.

No mandatory ball change for deliberate use of saliva

While the ban on use of saliva on the ball continues, the ICC has said it is no longer mandatory for the umpires to change the ball as soon as saliva is found on it. This change comes to avoid a scenario where teams trying to force a ball change deliberately apply saliva on it. So going forward, the umpires will only change the ball if its condition has been drastically changed - like if it appears too wet or there is more shine. This has been left entirely to discretion of the umpires. Also, if the ball starts doing things after the umpires have said the application of saliva has not changed its condition, it cannot be replaced. The batting team, though, will be awarded five runs.

DRS protocol for secondary review after an out decision

Imagine this - a batter has been given out caught behind and he asks for a review. UltraEdge shows the ball has actually brushed the pads without any contact with the bat. With the catch ruled out, the TV umpire now checks for the second mode of dismissal, and, asks to verify via ball-tracking whether the batter is lbw. So far, the protocol during such a review was, once it was determined the batter was not out caught, the default decision for the second mode of dismissal - lbw - would be not out. That means if ball-tracking led to an "umpire's call" verdict, the batter would remain not out. But in the updated rule, when the ball-tracking graphic for lbw is displayed, the "original decision" label on it will read "out". And if the review yields an umpire's call verdict, then the batter would be ruled out.

Combined reviews - decision will be chronological

The ICC has also decided to modify the process of adjudication during a combined review involving both umpire and player referrals by conducting them in a chronological order, or their order of occurrence. Till now, during a combined review the process involved the TV umpire taking up the umpire review before moving on to the player's review. "If the conclusion from the first incident is that a batter is dismissed, then the ball would be deemed to have become dead at that point, rendering investigation of the second incident unnecessary," rule 3.9 in the revised ICC playing conditions says. So if there is an appeal for an lbw as well as a run out, the TV umpire would now first take up the leg-before review as that occurred first. In case the batter is out, then the ball would be declared dead.

There will continue to be a five-run penalty if saliva is applied on the ball.

Fairness of catch to be reviewed for no-ball

Say there is a case where both on-field officials are not certain if a catch has been taken cleanly, but even as they are deliberating, the TV umpire informs them it was a no-ball. In the previous version of the playing conditions, once the no-ball was signaled, the TV umpire would not need to adjudicate on the fairness of the catch. But in the updated playing conditions, the third umpire will now review the catch and if it is a fair catch then the batting team will only get an extra run for the no-ball. However, if the catch is not clean, the batting team would get the runs the batters have taken.

Deliberate short run

So far, in case one of the batters had been caught taking a short run, the batting team would suffer a five-run penalty. But in the updated rules if one of the batters is found to have not made their ground deliberately in order to steal an extra run, then the umpires will ask the fielding team to decide which batter they want on strike. Also, the five-run penalty will continue to be part of the sanction.

"A deliberate short run is an attempt for batters to appear to run more than one run, while at least one batter deliberately does not make good their ground at one end," Rule 18.5.1 of the playing conditions says. "Batters may choose to abort a run, provided the umpire believes that there was no intention by the batter concerned to deceive the umpires or to score the run in which they didn't make their ground."

Full-time playing replacement in domestic first-class cricket

To offset the loss of a player who has suffered serious external injury, the ICC has asked boards to trial in their domestic first-class cricket fielding a full-time replacement player who can come in and perform the role of a team participant. The replacement player will have to be like for like, as is the case for a concussion sub. The injury will need to be evident and visible to the match officials before they allow a full-time replacement. This would not apply for players suffering hamstring pulls or niggles.

This rule will be on a trial basis and is entirely up to the member countries to implement in their domestic first-class circuit.

SOURCE AS REFERENCE FROM ICC: https://images.icc-cricket.com/imag...=1*w3rt9n*_gcl_au*MjYxMTYwMTg4LjE3NTA5MzQ5NDc
 
Misbah ideology fans will love the One ODI ball rule

But that’s not clear here in OP
 
Rubbish rule, Either have one ball for 50 overs or 2 new balls for 50 overs.

What's with these half measures?
I think Rizwan lobby was crying too much

They didn’t want to adapt and were desperate to bring it back to when bowlers found it a lot easier, giving batsman like Rizwan/Misbah the excuse to play selfishly
 
the third umpire will now review the catch and if it is a fair catch then the batting team will only get an extra run for the no-ball. However, if the catch is not clean, the batting team would get the runs the batters have taken.
this is good one actually... You gotta limit the batters taking freebies.
 
It’s one ball after 25 overs

You’ve got to bowl well for 25 overs first otherwise most teams will target 180-200 in that period.
Could be a role created for a specialist new ball bowler - can bowl 7/8 of his quota on the trot at the start.
 
It’s one ball after 25 overs

You’ve got to bowl well for 25 overs first otherwise most teams will target 180-200 in that period.
No one ball after 35 which makes the rule even more ludicrous? So overall the ball gets 32.5 overs old and the other ball remains 17.5 overs old?

Nonsense decison 🤣. It doesnt change a famn thing until the absolute back end.

Meaning up until over 44-45, itll still be standard new ball era, only last 5 overs will be tougher.

But then what's the point? Why on earth would you want to make the final overs tougher when the whole planet loves dearh overs in odi and from a marketing standpoint want bashing? Stupid logic.

Either go with the one ball and settle on the fact that we are going back to the 250-280 competitive total where the upside is that the game is balanced between bat and ball but risk the marketing value of odi's, or stick with 2 new balls.

This just turns it into a 45 over game with the last 5 overs being dil khush rakhnei kei lyei :rizwan
 
:rizwanYeah that kind of spells bad news for RizBar

You have to go hard for a longer period to make sure you haven’t left runs out there at the top of the order
Babar and rizwan: We batted for 45 overs. We did our job :rizwan
 
No one ball after 35 which makes the rule even more ludicrous? So overall the ball gets 32.5 overs old and the other ball remains 17.5 overs old?

Nonsense decison 🤣. It doesnt change a famn thing until the absolute back end.

Meaning up until over 44-45, itll still be standard new ball era, only last 5 overs will be tougher.

But then what's the point? Why on earth would you want to make the final overs tougher when the whole planet loves dearh overs in odi and from a marketing standpoint want bashing? Stupid logic.

Either go with the one ball and settle on the fact that we are going back to the 250-280 competitive total where the upside is that the game is balanced between bat and ball but risk the marketing value of odi's, or stick with 2 new balls.

This just turns it into a 45 over game with the last 5 overs being dil khush rakhnei kei lyei :rizwan
280 days were the best bro and best way to market ODI too. Those that want constant smash bang wallop have t20
 
No one ball after 35 which makes the rule even more ludicrous? So overall the ball gets 32.5 overs old and the other ball remains 17.5 overs old?

Nonsense decison 🤣. It doesnt change a famn thing until the absolute back end.

Meaning up until over 44-45, itll still be standard new ball era, only last 5 overs will be tougher.

But then what's the point? Why on earth would you want to make the final overs tougher when the whole planet loves dearh overs in odi and from a marketing standpoint want bashing? Stupid logic.

Either go with the one ball and settle on the fact that we are going back to the 250-280 competitive total where the upside is that the game is balanced between bat and ball but risk the marketing value of odi's, or stick with 2 new balls.

This just turns it into a 45 over game with the last 5 overs being dil khush rakhnei kei lyei :rizwan
The ICC+Broadcasters know what sells:

-Time= more exposure for sponsors
-Runs= entertainment
-length of the day= more bar revenue

They won’t risk teams being bowled out cheaply and viewers losing interest with batters struggling to play freely
 
The ICC+Broadcasters know what sells:

-Time= more exposure for sponsors
-Runs= entertainment
-length of the day= more bar revenue

They won’t risk teams being bowled out cheaply and viewers losing interest with batters struggling to play freely
It's basically a 42-45 over game now. My guess is their opting for the return of reverse swing at the back end and a more spicy contest in the last 5 to keep viewers engaged.
 
280 days were the best bro and best way to market ODI too. Those that want constant smash bang wallop have t20
Agreed. This seems more like a ploy to eventually convert odi into a 40 over format then an actual attempt to revive odi cricket.

If they were serious about the one ball they'd make an effort to schedule more odi's.

How many odi's does Pakistan even play in the 2nd half of 2025? 3 to 6?

At one point it was extremely common to play 20 odi's 10 tests and 12 t20's a year. Now it seems the trend has shifted to a 20+ t20's a year with zero focus on odi.
 
It's basically a 42-45 over game now. My guess is their opting for the return of reverse swing at the back end and a more spicy contest in the last 5 to keep viewers engaged.
Still depends bro

I think most wickets around the world are pretty flat now as compared to what they used to be 15-20 years ago. Plus batters are a lot more braver with ramps/innovative stroke play

You can almost guarantee teams like Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh will become even weaker going forward as the top teams have already ingrained a strong, positive batting mindset to adapt.
 
Still depends bro

I think most wickets around the world are pretty flat now as compared to what they used to be 15-20 years ago. Plus batters are a lot more braver with ramps/innovative stroke play

You can almost guarantee teams like Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh will become even weaker going forward as the top teams have already ingrained a strong, positive batting mindset to adapt.
Only Sena batters. Asian batters dont try unorthodox strokes.

The game has definitely been made slightly harder for Asian cricketers including India.

I've noticed in recent times, Icc seems to be putting its foot down vs India.

They rejected their demands for wtc to be hosted out of england, umpires are much harder in games now against indian cricketers especially in test. They also removed asia cup from india and Pakistan despite bcci requesting a hybrid model for india and Sri Lanka

I'm not sure why this is happening as Jay shah is still icc chairman but something must have occurred behind the scenes.

These new rules dont favour Asian batters at all.
 
Rubbish rule, Either have one ball for 50 overs or 2 new balls for 50 overs.

What's with these half measures?
One white ball simply doesn't last 50 overs. Visibility is pathetic as it loses colour.

Ideally, kookaburra should manufacture a ball that lasts but when they can sell twice the number of balls , they have no incentives to create such a ball.

Also, ICC doesn't seem to care enough about it to insist on it.

This will reduce the scoring rates , provided we have these 2021 kookaburras continuing for a while.

You will get enough swing for the first 8 overs or so and then you will get a touch of reverse at the death to keep batters in check.
 
I like the Full-time playing replacement in domestic first-class cricket.

This will give ICC and the world an opportunity to see the replacement play out differently in various countries domestically. ICC can then introduce a replacement rule thoroughly after trials in international cricket.
 
One white ball simply doesn't last 50 overs. Visibility is pathetic as it loses colour.

Ideally, kookaburra should manufacture a ball that lasts but when they can sell twice the number of balls , they have no incentives to create such a ball.

Also, ICC doesn't seem to care enough about it to insist on it.

This will reduce the scoring rates , provided we have these 2021 kookaburras continuing for a while.

You will get enough swing for the first 8 overs or so and then you will get a touch of reverse at the death to keep batters in check.
I agree. And dw i got you bro.

I will manufacture these new balls :vk2
 
this is good one actually... You gotta limit the batters taking freebies.
How?? You can literally run if the ball hit the wicket or ball is caught on free hit, then no ball shouldn't be any different. Or if the batsman is out caught or bowled on free hit then dont allow them to run
 
Misbah ideology fans will love the One ODI ball rule

But that’s not clear here in OP
Rubbish rule, Either have one ball for 50 overs or 2 new balls for 50 overs.

What's with these half measures?

I think you need to read the fine print again and more clearly. According to the new measures the bowling side can choose what ball they want to use from over 35+ onwards. And then that ball will be used from over 35 onwards.

One 40+ over ball will still encourage reverse-swing.
 
I think you need to read the fine print again and more clearly. According to the new measures the bowling side can choose what ball they want to use from over 35+ onwards. And then that ball will be used from over 35 onwards.

One 40+ over ball will still encourage reverse-swing.
It’s not 40 overs old, it will be 25 overs old max
 
someone breakdown and provided analysis of the effect this one ball after 35th oer wil have plz
 
So the ball will be 18 overs old at the 35th over. Teams will always choose that ball and work on it instead of the 17-year-old one.

15 + 18 = 33 overs with one ball

In the days when they used one ball, it would start reversing after the 25th-30th over.

So under this rule, the ball will be 25 overs old by the 42nd over.

This means they're adding around 7-8 overs of reverse swing (best-case scenario) in the right conditions at the end of the innings with this rule change. Although teams will be incentivized to work on the ball and might be able to get it to reverse a bit earlier.
 
It’s not 40 overs old, it will be 25 overs old max
  • Overs 1–34: Two new balls (one from each end) are used as before.
  • Between Overs 34 and 35: The fielding team chooses one of the two balls to continue with from overs 35 to 50. That single chosen ball is used at both ends for the remainder of the innings, unless it is replaced through normal ball-replacement protocols
 
  • Overs 1–34: Two new balls (one from each end) are used as before.
  • Between Overs 34 and 35: The fielding team chooses one of the two balls to continue with from overs 35 to 50. That single chosen ball is used at both ends for the remainder of the innings, unless it is replaced through normal ball-replacement protocols
Right, so overs 1-34= both balls have been used 17 overs

Plus 16 overs to the end. The single ball is 33 overs old maximum.

That’s around the time the ball only starts to reverse
 
Right, so overs 1-34= both balls have been used 17 overs

Plus 16 overs to the end. The single ball is 33 overs old maximum.

That’s around the time the ball only starts to reverse
Yeah but its something. You never know sometimes it begins to reverse before too depending on the nature of the pitch
 
  • Overs 1–34: Two new balls (one from each end) are used as before.
  • Between Overs 34 and 35: The fielding team chooses one of the two balls to continue with from overs 35 to 50. That single chosen ball is used at both ends for the remainder of the innings, unless it is replaced through normal ball-replacement protocols

Wow! That's not good. I thought they would play with 1 ball for the whole game (like the good old days).

Anyway, it is better than having 2 balls for 50 overs.
 
Ahh I see it's from the end of the 34th over.

So both balls will be 17 overs old.

Should reverse for 6-7 overs at the end of the innings based on how things used to be in the past.
 
Ahh I see it's from the end of the 34th over.

So both balls will be 17 overs old.

Should reverse for 6-7 overs at the end of the innings based on how things used to be in the past.
This is still better than having 2 balls. Some advantage will go back in favor of Bowlers now. Batters were given too much advantage with those new balls. It stays harder for a long time, so sometimes it becomes very easy for batters to hit it out.
 
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