yes. technically the batsmen can score a run if the wicket keeper is slow enough and/or he is far away from the wickets and the batsmen are quick.
so if the batsmen misses the ball and he doesnt get bowled and he doesnt hit it and the wicket keeper catches it cleanly the batsmen can run and if in the extremely rare case that they make it, it will be classed as a 'bye'.
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When the batsman attempts a shot, he may step outside of his batting crease. If he misses the ball, and the wicketkeeper removes the bails before the batsman returns to his ground, the batsman is out stumped.Stumpings usually occur off spin bowling, as the wicketkeeper needs to be standing up to the stumps in order to affect a stumping. On rare occasions, however, the 'keeper manages to tump a batsman out off a fast bowler.
it depends.if ... the bowler bowls it and the batsman misses the ball and the keeper also misses it and the batsman make a run then they (the runs) are called byes.
it is clean bowled.it means when the batsman misses the ball and it hits the stumps
with out bouncing a six but if bouncing 4
Not out. See Law 32.3e (a fair catch). If the ball hits a fielder's protective helmet this is not a fair catch and the batsman is not out, although the ball remains in play. MCC Laws of cricket: http://www.lords.org/laws-and-spirit/laws-of-cricket/laws/law-32-caught,58,AR.html However, if the helmet was on the ground and not his head, then the fielding team is penalised 5 runs and the ball is declared dead - he is not out.
You can't be stumped off a no-ball, but you can be run out, be out obstructing the field, handled the ball, and hit the ball twice. A batsman can be stumped if he steps out of the crease to take a ball, misses it, and the wicket keeper catches it and removes the bails of the wicket before the batsman or his bat re-enters the crease exception is no bAll.
Misses is correct.
Yes according to the present rules it will be wide ball. However taking into consideration the "switch shot" invented by English batsmen Kevin Petersen the ICC would be taking some steps for this. But ultimately it would be the decision of the ground umpire whether to call a deliverey wide or not by seeing the action of the batsman.
takes wickets of course. by bowling the batsman out, stumping him, running him out, lbw, batsman can hit the wicket himself and knock the bails off, timed out and lastly, by the batsman handling the ball
The Misses....(Jones etc)
The plural form of "misses" is "misses," so it remains the same whether referring to Mrs. Puno and Mrs. Salvador or multiple women who are married or "misses."
Thug Misses was created in 2001.