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Appalling.
People still remember Courtney Walsh for the 1987 World Cup when he could have Mankaded Abdul Qadir to win the game but he just warned him instead.
And they also remember Sarfarz Nawaz eight years earlier showing what kind of "man" he was by successfully appealing to have Andrew Hilditch of Australia dismissed Handled The Ball when he kindly picked it up and gave it back to the bowler.
The young West Indians are a disgrace. But what do you expect when they take the likes of Chris Gayle as a role model instead of Frank Worrell?
IIRC Kapil gave Kirsten a warning before he mankaded him.
Even if the Zimbo batsman was careless, it was his fault. We are talking about a QF spot. Not a sunday league game here.
I imagine Younis Khan and Brendon McCullum and Adam Gilchrist as latter-day Shackleton's, behaving (on the pitch) in a positive and honourable way and inspiring young boys to behave like them instead of like Steve Waugh or other win-at-all-costs barbarians.
Last week, privately-educated British men like me were inspired and saddened by the death of Henry Worsley on his trans-Antarctic trek.
In my fantasy world, cricket is a civilising force for the only countries I care about. I don't care what games Americans or French people play, or what their attitudes are.
But I look at Afghanistan adopting cricket and I marvel at the leap from the Taliban to playing the gentlemen's game.
Steve Waugh was a cricket player who played tough and by the rules, to call him a barbarian is very disrespectful and any point you make thereafter is deemed useless.
He didn't everything within the rules to win and that only enchances many people's opinions of him.
Does your private education give you a higher status in society or make your opinion more valuable than the rest of us? We are after all discussing an element of cricket, not quantum physics.
So you only care about certain countries? Is that how narrow minded you are, earlier you commented on how cricket was a global community but here you are saying you don't care about certain country's interests in sport.
Finally, lol [MENTION=2099]Cricket[/MENTION] being a gentleman's game.
You've missed my point.
I think of all the cricketing countries as civilised - even Pakistan.
As for Steve Waugh, sorry, but I don't like him. Mark Taylor and Michael Clarke were generally positive, sporting captains. Steve Waugh was a nasty, bullying, boorish oaf on the pitch.
[MENTION=732]Gilly[/MENTION], Tubby Taylor murdered us his entire career.
But it wasn't the sort of snarling, obnoxious behaviour that Steve Waugh specialised in.
I don't mean Gentleman as in English amateur.
I mean gentleman in the sense of worthy team-mate or adversary, whom it is a pleasure to play with or against.
Mike Gatting and Keith Fletcher weren't amateurs, but they are fondly remembered by both team-mates and opponents.
I guess, [MENTION=135134]CricketAnalyst[/MENTION] and [MENTION=137677]Thivagar[/MENTION], I must be living in a fantasy world.
I imagine Younis Khan and Brendon McCullum and Adam Gilchrist as latter-day Shackleton's, behaving (on the pitch) in a positive and honourable way and inspiring young boys to behave like them instead of like Steve Waugh or other win-at-all-costs barbarians.
I think of that as a positive legacy of Empire, and goodness knows there aren't many of those.
Last week, privately-educated British men like me were inspired and saddened by the death of Henry Worsley on his trans-Antarctic trek. It reminded us of people like Captain Scott.
Captain Scott was a foolish amateur who lost the race to the South Pole and died with his men. But we cherish and value Scott and Shackleton a million times more than we would "a winner".
In my fantasy world, cricket is a civilising force for the only countries I care about. I don't care what games Americans or French people play, or what their attitudes are.
But I look at Afghanistan adopting cricket and I marvel at the leap from the Taliban to playing the gentlemen's game.
[MENTION=732]Gilly[/MENTION], it's only a game. Where is the fun in being abused by your opponent? And what life lessons do kids get from watching that?
Pretty low behaviour but hey at this Windies team actually wants to win
Pretty low behaviour but hey at this Windies team actually wants to win
Mate, this is not a sunday league game. In fact, I would be against mankading in such a manner (no warning) in a test match or a bilateral ODI. But this is the WC. Imagine being in a similar position in a WC final.
A significant number of these cricketers will turn professional, though for a few representing WI in U19 might remain their only national experience.
[MENTION=732]Gilly[/MENTION], it's only a game. Where is the fun in being abused by your opponent? And what life lessons do kids get from watching that?
You've missed my point.
I think of all the cricketing countries as civilised - even Pakistan.
As for Steve Waugh, sorry, but I don't like him. Mark Taylor and Michael Clarke were generally positive, sporting captains. Steve Waugh was a nasty, bullying, boorish oaf on the pitch.
They seems to have no problem with it.
Just two of them look unhappy out there.
If it is legal why complain? WI did the right thing. If the rule is there, team will take advantage.
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I guess, [MENTION=135134]CricketAnalyst[/MENTION] and [MENTION=137677]Thivagar[/MENTION], I must be living in a fantasy world.
I imagine Younis Khan and Brendon McCullum and Adam Gilchrist as latter-day Shackleton's, behaving (on the pitch) in a positive and honourable way and inspiring young boys to behave like them instead of like Steve Waugh or other win-at-all-costs barbarians.
I think of that as a positive legacy of Empire, and goodness knows there aren't many of those.
Last week, privately-educated British men like me were inspired and saddened by the death of Henry Worsley on his trans-Antarctic trek. It reminded us of people like Captain Scott.
Captain Scott was a foolish amateur who lost the race to the South Pole and died with his men. But we cherish and value Scott and Shackleton a million times more than we would "a winner".
In my fantasy world, cricket is a civilising force for the only countries I care about. I don't care what games Americans or French people play, or what their attitudes are.
But I look at Afghanistan adopting cricket and I marvel at the leap from the Taliban to playing the gentlemen's game.
I blame Zimbabwe batsman for being careless
If the bowler had carried on with his usual run up and action then the batsman would most probably have been gaining no advantage at all. It was only the bowler by slowing down and failing to enter his action therefore having the intention to cheat as soon as he started running in who is in the wrong here.
A) Let's put the "most probably" to one side, if he would have gained no advantage then why not stay in his crease?
B) How is it cheating when the laws explicitly state his actions are permissible?
Dictionary definition of 'a cheat' : "A person who behaves dishonestly in order to gain an advantage."
For me slowing down your run up intentionally and then failing to enter your bowling action is acting dishonestly and to do so in order to take a wicket to get your team a win is clearly getting you an advantage. He wouldn't of stayed in his crease because he wouldn't expect the bowler to carry out this 'dishonest' practice.
It's one thing when the batsman is running 3-4 strides down the pitch already. But the batsman here barely had his bat infront of the line. In that kind of situation, it was a huge let down for anybody watching the match.
Good stuff by the West Indies player. WHy should players get a head start witha run?
Acting dishonestly in order to gain an advantage? Hmmmm, you mean like a batsman at the non-striker's end leaving his crease before the bowler had entered his delivery stride?![]()
Also, you really need to look at that last line. Chris Gayle has the most famous warning of all time, when he could have Mankaded a batsman who was miles down.
Pretty low behaviour but hey at this Windies team actually wants to win
He was only an inch out of his crease, should have just warned him. Just like when a batsman is stumped when he's an inch out of his ground the bowling team always withdraws the appeal and allows him to continue his inning or when a batsman only gets a very faint nick to the keeper the bowler never appeals because it's not like the batsman got any advantage from it.
At least I presume that's what happens, got to uphold this spirit of cricket thing after all.
That inch out of the crease gives him a big advantage. Because he would reach the other end an inch earlier.
I think the warning rule is stupid, and tired of this spirit of Cricket BS. In the recent years, i have noticed that Spirit of cricket means over looking rules......
Care to show where the bowler entered his delivery stride here (so when the back foot landed in the position it will be in his action)? As far as I can see he ran straight through the crease with no intention rather than to manipulate the batsman. Comparatively the batsman didn't appear to have the intention of gaining any advantage as it was only present once the bowler slowed down his runup (fully with the intention of cheating).
For those likening this to a stumping, I'd liken it more to the bowler never having the ball but the keeper having it instead. Batsman charges down the pitch to hit the ball that is apparently about to be bowled to them only to be stumped by the keeper behind him.
May sound like a silly analogy but on close inspection I don't see it as that different to this situation other than it being 'within the rules'. Intentionally manipulating what the batsman thinks is going to happen in order to get a wicket with no cricketing ability present.
There is no value for winning that. Ask the Bangladeshis. Besides what did they do to win hearts apart from being "cheated" on ?
Errr being graceful about it.
Let's consider two points here:-
1.)Mankading someone would have been okay if -
1.1 batsman was using unfair advantage by backing up on the crease far too early which he wasn't and all this without even warned once.
1.2 If bowler was having any intent to bowl in First place which he didn't.
2.) Many would say they are just following the rule and shouldn't be criticized but this is not following the rule but twisting the rule and it's obvious loophole to jail-break here.
If the batsman was gaining no advantage then he should have stayed in his crease.
End of story.
You are taught these things when learning cricket in school, no excuses.
Okay with it since it was clear that was his intention from the start, you can't have batsman backing up so much these days without the risk of repercussion
Errr being graceful about it.
Let's consider two points here:-
1.)Mankading someone would have been okay if -
1.1 batsman was using unfair advantage by backing up on the crease far too early which he wasn't and all this without even warned once.
1.2 If bowler was having any intent to bowl in First place which he didn't.
2.) Many would say they are just following the rule and shouldn't be criticized but this is not following the rule but twisting the rule and it's obvious loophole to jail-break here.
Cricketers don't walk when they edge the ball, keepers appeal when they know that the batsman hadn't hit it, bowlers bowl 2 bouncers to finish the over, batsmen walk in with gigantic bast in flat pitches with 60metre boundaries. Are these not "twisting the rule" ? Every sport from Ice hockey, to Tennis, to Badminton to Fencing has rules on how big their primary equipment should be, but in cricket there are no rules on how thick a bat can be apart from its length and height which is pretty stupid. No one sees this as loop holes. Rule is a rule, just stay inside the damn crease, whether a batsmen makes it to the crease or not is determined by mili seconds. The batsmen tried to get a head start and that is why he wasn't in the crease. Imagine a batsman getting stumped moaning " I didn't come down to hit the ball for six, my foot accidentally came passed the batting crease". Like Big Mac said, the runner should have stayed inside the crease, why did he need to step outside ?
The batsman didn't try and get a headstart. The bowler purposely slowed down to trick him into getting a headstart so he could stump him.
Cricketers don't walk when they edge the ball, keepers appeal when they know that the batsman hadn't hit it, bowlers bowl 2 bouncers to finish the over, batsmen walk in with gigantic bast in flat pitches with 60metre boundaries. Are these not "twisting the rule" ? Every sport from Ice hockey, to Tennis, to Badminton to Fencing has rules on how big their primary equipment should be, but in cricket there are no rules on how thick a bat can be apart from its length and height which is pretty stupid. No one sees this as loop holes. Rule is a rule, just stay inside the damn crease, whether a batsmen makes it to the crease or not is determined by mili seconds. The batsmen tried to get a head start and that is why he wasn't in the crease. Imagine a batsman getting stumped moaning " I didn't come down to hit the ball for six, my foot accidentally came passed the batting crease". Like Big Mac said, the runner should have stayed inside the crease, why did he need to step outside ?
Pathetic and cowardly stuff. Hope we thrash them in the QF
More cowardly than a team skipping a series to ensure their qualification for Champions trophy??
Must be heartbreaking for Zimbabwe. 3 runs required off the last over and the batsman is mankaded. This rule imo needs a revisit. The batsman was not looking for an unfair advantage, for that to be ruled out.
On the flip-side he should have been paid attention to where his bat was as WI are entitled to mankad. With only 3 runs to go. This will be a good lesson for them on how competitive cricket can get.
Overall poor stuff from West Indies for needing such tactics to beat Zimbabwe to get through.
View attachment 64189
Video here: https://twitter.com/sportingindex/status/694476225033674752/video/1
ICC Playing Condition Rule 42.11: The bowler is permitted, before releasing the ball and provided he has not completed his usual delivery swing, to attempt to run out the non-striker. Whether the attempt is successful or not, the ball shall not count as one of the over. If the bowler fails in an attempt to run out the non-striker, the umpire shall call and signal dead ball as soon as possible.
Yes, what you said is correct about other things.
It comes down to general perception about things we have in cricket.
1. Almost every keepers appeal when they know that the batsman hadn't hit it and it isn't uncommon. Hence it's alright.
2. Every batsmen walk in with gigantic bat in flat pitches with 60metre boundaries. Hence no questioning for this(although you will see someone criticising it here and there).
But in international cricket everybody finds it disgraceful and against sportsmanship to mankaded someone hence you will see everyone unsupportive of it. How many cases we have seen in cricket that a bowler could have mankad someone but he didn't and even if someone did, captain calling him back(like sehwag did).
Again nothing wrong with utilizing the law and even misusing it as there are plenty of other examples of misusing it but General perception of things takes time to adjust as we(majority) still don't find it ethical(although legal) mode for dismissing a batsman and to many it will be seen as disgraceful even if it's within the law to do so.
Taylor was from Wagga Wagga, Clarke's no private school boy, Ponting and Smith didn't complete high school and Border was from one of Australia's most elite schools.
What does it matter?
Also I find your characterisation of Clarke and Waugh really weird. I have no doubts whatsoever that Clarke would have acted in exactly the same manner as Waugh if he had the team.
Junaids is feeling nostalgic for a Britain that never existed outside the imagination of Daily Mail/Telegraph readers who miss the good old days when landlords could place signs in their windows that said "No blacks, no Irish".
The claim that rugby is a dignified, gentleman's sport seals the deal.
What exactly is the 'spirit of the game' and why does it exist? Cricket is the only sport in which someone can be criticised for legitimately playing by the laws of the game.
If mankading is wrong, make it clear in the laws. As it stands, the laws state that the batsman can be run out if he's out of his crease before the bowler enters his delivery stride.
No doubt it feels harsh on Zimbabwe but the fact is that the batsman should not have been out of his crease.