If anyone can understand this could they translate into Kong's English please.
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It's got links to examples that have been outlawed now.If anyone can understand this could they translate into Kong's English please.
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Even in Kings English I’m not sure what it really meansIf anyone can understand this could they translate into Kong's English please.
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King's not Kong's EnglishIf anyone can understand this could they translate into Kong's English please.
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And how about this for further absurdity.This is just getting absurd. Just make it so it's six as soon as the ball crosses the rope, whether in the air or a fielder's hands.
This is just getting absurd. Just make it so it's six as soon as the ball crosses the rope, whether in the air or a fielder's hands.
That would be more absurd, not less.This is just getting absurd. Just make it so it's six as soon as the ball crosses the rope, whether in the air or a fielder's hands.
That would be more absurd, not less.
No worse than trying to judge if the fielder stepped on the rope or lobbed it back into play before he put his foot down outside the playing area. Both require a third umpire with video replay or the players to respect the umpires' decision. AI could work it out with a single camera if the ball and rope are standard diameter.The problem with that would be that it creates an unnecessary grey area, without multiple HD cameras at various points and angles across the boundary it would be near impossible to judge in many cases.
You think players taking catches outside the playing area (which is completely ungoverned by the laws of the game) as long as their feet are in the air isn't absurd and against the spirit of the game? It completely contradicts Law 19 of the game re: the boundary.That would be more absurd, not less.
chatgpt said:Yes — technology can and is already used to determine if a cricket ball has crossed the boundary rope in the air, though there is room for improvement.
Current Technologies in Use
1. Hawk-Eye / Ball-Tracking
- Primarily used for LBW and DRS, but can replay the trajectory of a ball.
- However, it’s not always used to determine if a ball has crossed the boundary in the air.
2. High-Speed Cameras
- Placed along the boundary and in third umpire review rooms.
- Can be used to slow down and zoom in on the moment when the ball passes over the rope.
- Helps decide:
- If the ball cleared the rope on the full (for a six),
- Or bounced or rolled over (for four).
3. Spidercam / Drone Views
- Overhead views can sometimes help if there’s a doubt about the flight path.
- Not always perfectly aligned or available for all deliveries.
4. Boundary Rope Sensors (experimental / rare)
- Some experimental setups have involved pressure-sensitive ropes or motion sensors, but these are not widely adopted due to cost and reliability concerns.
️Challenges
- Camera angles can be deceptive, especially when the rope is slightly raised or the ball is just marginally inside/outside.
- Shadows can confuse the issue (e.g., the ball’s shadow crosses the rope but the ball itself doesn’t).
- Player interference (fielder leaping or diving) may obstruct the view.
Could Technology Be Improved?
Yes — here are possible advancements that could help:
- Infrared or Laser Beams Along the Boundary
- Similar to tennis line-calling systems.
- Could detect when the ball crosses the boundary plane in the air.
- Ultra-High-Speed 360° Cameras
- Combined with AI to track the ball’s 3D position in real time.
- RFID or Smart Ball Technology
- Embedding chips in the ball to track its location relative to the field.
- Currently under development by some cricket bodies.
Summary
- Yes, technology is already used — especially high-speed replays and cameras — to determine if a ball has crossed the boundary in the air.
- More advanced solutions (like laser boundaries or smart balls) could make this more accurate and consistent in the future.
Let me know if you’d like a visual or example from a real match!
No worse than trying to judge if the fielder stepped on the rope or lobbed it back into play before he put his foot down outside the playing area. Both require a third umpire with video replay or the players to respect the umpires' decision. AI could work it out with a single camera if the ball and rope are standard diameter.
Yes I think it’s fine the way it is, and by far and away the easiest way to judge it.No worse than trying to judge if the fielder stepped on the rope or lobbed it back into play before he put his foot down outside the playing area. Both require a third umpire with video replay or the players to respect the umpires' decision. AI could work it out with a single camera if the ball and rope are standard diameter.
You think players taking catches outside the playing area (which is completely ungoverned by the laws of the game) as long as their feet are in the air isn't absurd and against the spirit of the game? It completely contradicts Law 19 of the game re: the boundary.
This is just getting absurd. Just make it so it's six as soon as the ball crosses the rope, whether in the air or a fielder's hands.