Commentator erupts over Sri Lanka’s world first dismissal

Sri Lanka’s Angelo Mathews has made unlucky cricketing historical past, turning into the primary participant to be timed out on the worldwide degree.

Mathews was coming into bat with Sri Lanka 135-4 after 24.2 overs in opposition to Bangladesh, however resulting from a helmet concern was gradual to take the crease.

While the twelfth man ran to retrieve a brand new helmet, time continued to tick by – and effectively over three minutes after the earlier wicket, Mathews and the umpires had been nonetheless in discussions.

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But Bangladesh had appealed and, with the talks dragging on longer than the interval Mathews really needed to make it to the crease, the umpires needed to time him out – with Mathews dropping his wicket with out dealing with a ball.

“Oh dear, oh dear,” one of many commentators mentioned.

“Given out without facing a ball! Timed out!”

After an extended interval of uncertainty, one of many commentators took it a step additional as soon as everybody realised what had occurred, stating captain Shakib Al Hasan shouldn’t have appealed.

“That’s against the spirit of the game, that’s what I feel about this,” he mentioned.

“They shouldn’t have been appealing because he was on the field. If something goes wrong with the helmet, he should be allowed to change it or be allowed to fix it.

“This is the first time we’ve seen this in the history of the game.

“It’s not good, it’s not good scenes, I must say that.”

MCC Rule 40.1.1 states: “After the fall of a wicket or the retirement of a batter, the incoming batter must, unless Time has been called, be ready to receive the ball, or for the other batter to be ready to receive the next ball within 3 minutes of the dismissal or retirement.

“If this requirement is not met, the incoming batter will be out, Timed out.”

The rule has been in place since 1980, when batters got two minutes to “step on to the field of play”, although the very first printed legal guidelines of cricket made reference to gamers being given two minutes “to come in when one is out”.

Six gamers are recognized to have been timed out in first-class cricket, most not too long ago Zimbabwe’s Charles Kunje for Matabeleland Tuskers in opposition to Mountaineers at Bulawayo in 2017-18.

While neither Sri Lanka or Bangladesh are in lifelike rivalry to make the semi-finals of the World Cup, a win for Bangladesh might guarantee England misses out on the Champions Trophy.

The prime eight World Cup group stage finishers will qualify for the occasion. Bangladesh and England are at the moment ninth and tenth with 1-6 data, cut up by internet run fee, with Sri Lanka and the Netherlands seventh and eighth with 2-5 data.

Originally printed as Bizarre historical past made as Sri Lanka star timed out in World Cup drama

Source: www.news.com.au