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Of course yes. Without seeing the ball, the batsman cannot hit it with his bat and score runs for his team. The longer a batsman stays on the pitch, his visibility of the cricket ball improves.
a run conceded without being hit by a batsman. i.e either by a) a wide ball b) a no ball ( bowlers end) c) a no ball (above batsman waist high) d) deflected through the pad
You may be thinking of being caught. If a fielder catches the ball after it has been hit by the batsman from a valid ball, within the field of play and before it hits the ground then the batsman is out - caught.
They aren't, most are scored from open play.
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.
Sangakkara is a classical player. He is the best batsman for srilanka. He is using a ss bat for play.
that is easy for people that know how to play they have scored 52
6 ... the play is called a touchdown.
no
Damon Buford
Andres Iniesta
Rooney has scored two goals, both were from penalties, he last scored a goal from open play in the month of march.