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New MCC Rule Changes

brandon

Striker
New batsman to be on strike following a wicket (caught) even if the batsmen cross.

No more saliva on the ball.

Mankad to be added to run out law from previously being in the section of ‘unfair dismissals’.

More leeway for wides when batsmen move around in the crease.

 

Hope a huge game is won or lost via a mankad. Like an Ashes test or India V Pakistan.

The fallout, particularly on social media, would be tremendous
 
In my opinion the away side should always be given the choice to bat or field rather than a coin toss.

It’s ridiculously hard to win away from home as it is.
 
In my opinion the away side should always be given the choice to bat or field rather than a coin toss.

It’s ridiculously hard to win away from home as it is.

I’m sure there was talk of this on the table a couple of years ago, was it just in domestic cricket?
 
Will surely be a huge advantage to the bowling side in limited overs games where the chasing side have a batsman who is 'in' who could effectively be stranded at the non-striker's end while his team-mates try in vain to get him on strike.

Although it could also be argued that it evens the playing field a little as it's probably gone too far towards the batsmen in recent years what with the new bats and boundaries being brought in etc.
 
Bizarre the one about being caught in the deep mind. Not sure I can ever remember people discussing the problems with cricket and being outraged that if the batsman swap ends the other takes striker :lol:
Fiddling for the sake of it
Yep, makes run chases more interesting as well.
 
In my opinion the away side should always be given the choice to bat or field rather than a coin toss.

It’s ridiculously hard to win away from home as it is.

In Test cricket? Or all cricket?

Problem with that one is that it was an awful addition to the County Championship when it came about.
 
Bizarre the one about being caught in the deep mind. Not sure I can ever remember people discussing the problems with cricket and being outraged that if the batsman swap ends the other takes striker :lol:
Fiddling for the sake of it

More to do with run chases, but Jarod Kimber made an excellent point tonight on Talksport about it - even if he unwittingly got the wording wrong.

He spoke of a ‘sacrifice bunt’ to describe the act of a tailender (with an ‘in batsman’ at the non strikers end) taking a wild swing at a ball during a run chase which they consider a freebie in the sense that aslong as they make contact, they’ll get a desired outcome of either a boundary, a single OR caught but with the benefit of the batsmen crossing.

What he should’ve called it was a ‘sacrifice fly’

They’re baseball terms, but a bunt goes along the ground and runners already on base can advance whilst the ball is fielded, whereas a ‘fly’ is a ball which hangs in the air and is caught in the deep whilst the runners on the bases can advance whilst the ball is fielded.

With the new rules, I predict that we’ll simply get a load of sacrifice bunts to replace the sacrifice fly. The non striking batsman will just start running as the ball is bowled and so any contact with the bat will be enough to see him make his ground, it won’t necessarily matter if the tailender gets ran out.

Which segways nicely into the mankad rule really. Which I’m really not a fan of at all. It just doesn’t sit right with me. However, I get that bowlers/fielders want to restrict the batsman from gaining an unfair advantage - my proposal would simply be that if a batsman leaves their ground before a ball is bowled, the umpire should call ‘one-short’ if any runs are taken.
No need to bring new batsman always on strike rule in. Strange decision

It’s come from the 16.4, the guy who proposed the idea is the same bloke who brought in some radical rules for the Big Bash. I’m not a fan of the change, I don’t see the point, there will be plenty of times where it actually has a detrimental effect in my view but in the grand scheme of things it probably won’t make a massive difference. It certainly isn’t as controversial as some of the changes that have been made recently.
 
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More to do with run chases, but Jarod Kimber made an excellent point tonight on Talksport about it - even if he unwittingly got the wording wrong.

He spoke of a ‘sacrifice bunt’ to describe the act of a tailender (with an ‘in batsman’ at the non strikers end) taking a wild swing at a ball during a run chase which they consider a freebie in the sense that aslong as they make contact, they’ll get a desired outcome of either a boundary, a single OR caught but with the benefit of the batsmen crossing.

What he should’ve called it was a ‘sacrifice fly’

They’re baseball terms, but a bunt goes along the ground and runners already on base can advance whilst the ball is fielded, whereas a ‘fly’ is a ball which hangs in the air and is caught in the deep whilst the runners on the bases can advance whilst the ball is fielded.

With the new rules, I predict that we’ll simply get a load of sacrifice bunts to replace the sacrifice fly. The non striking batsman will just start running as the ball is bowled and so any contact with the bat will be enough to see him make his ground, it won’t necessarily matter if the tailender gets ran out.

Which segways nicely into the mankad rule really. Which I’m really not a fan of at all. It just doesn’t sit right with me. However, I get that bowlers/fielders want to restrict the batsman from gaining an unfair advantage - my proposal would simply be that if a batsman leaves their ground before a ball is bowled, the umpire should call ‘one-short’ if any runs are taken.


It’s come from the 16.4, the guy who proposed the idea is the same bloke who brought in some radical rules for the Big Bash. I’m not a fan of the change, I don’t see the point, there will be plenty of times where it actually has a detrimental effect in my view but in the grand scheme of things it probably won’t make a massive difference. It certainly isn’t as controversial as some of the changes that have been made recently.
It's not a controversial change, it's just an utterly bizarre one that no-one has called for:lol:
 
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