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Would be given a boundary and score added up. It would be considered Century for the batsman.
to work out an average you add all the final game scores together and then divide this number by the number of games you added together.
no,it is not added,it is leg byes.by Abdul razik
New crust is being added to the other edge of the boundary
You would add all the numbers or scores out and then divide by how many scores you added.
scores added together round by round
OK, I can only see one possible way this could happen: - First ball, Batsman A on strike (94*), 7 to win - the ball is struck (presumably to somewhere in the outfield) and the batsmen take three runs. However, on one of the runs, one of the batsmen accidentally fails to make his ground, so the umpire calls a short run and that run is disallowed (as per Law 18.4(a)). While the ball is still in play the fielder throws it to the wicket-keeper but overthrows it, and the ball goes to the boundary and so an additional four runs are awarded (as per Law 19.6). Thus, six runs (3 runs - 1 short run + 4 overthrows) are awarded to Batsman A for his century and according to Law 18.12(a), Batsman B would now be on strike. - Second ball, Batsman B on strike (94*), 1 to win - the ball is struck over the boundary for six. Batsman B scores his century and his team wins the match. If anyone knows of any other way this can be done, please let me know as I would be very interested to hear your solutions. However, according to the laws of cricket, that is definitely one way to solve the problem. PS - Just thought I'd correct some of the other suggestions. If the ball hits a helmet on the field, the batting side is awarded five penalty runs which would be added to the scorecard as Extras and not the batsman's score. If the last two balls of the innings were in different overs then Duckworth/Lewis would have to be applied and the target would almost certainly change. Any no-balls would again be added as Extras and would then make it impossible for both batsmen to score centuries.
Sundries (also called extras) are runs scored in cricket that have not come off the batsman's bat. Sundries are added to the teams score, but not the individual batsman. Examples of sundries are: Byes, leg byes, no balls, wides and penalty runs.
300 is the highest you can bowl. the only reason it would be higher is if the person has handicap which would be added to the scratch score
In boxing, depending on the category, several rounds are fought. The judges of the match assign a score to each boxer depending on how well they performed each round, which accumulate with the score from the previous rounds. If all rounds are fought (there wasn't a win by K.O.) the winner is decided by the player who got the highest score according the judges, this is called a count back.
Crust can disappear at the edge of a boundary through subduction, where one tectonic plate is pushed beneath another. This process causes the crust to be pulled into the mantle and reabsorbed, leading to the disappearance of crust at the boundary.
Usually it means the total from the normally 3 games bowled during league night, without any handicap added, ranked high to low.