London: Mankad, one of the most controversial modes of dismissal in cricket, has been moved from the "unfair play" section of the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC)'s laws of the game to "run out" to avoid any negative connotation over what is a legal play.
The act of a bowler stopping to run out a non-striker who moves out of its crease has long been a debate whether it is in the spirit of the game.
However, now referred to in the laws of the game as "running out the non-striker" should serve to remove any debate around it.
"Since the publication of the 2017 Code of the Laws of Cricket, the game has changed in numerous ways. The 2nd edition of that Code, published in 2019, was mostly clarification and minor amendments, but the 2022 Code makes some rather bigger changes, from the way we talk about cricket to the way it's played," said Fraser Stewart, the Laws Manager of MCC, the cricket club which is the guardian of the laws of cricket.
Whilst the amendments are being announced now, they will not come into force until October.
The changes are intended to shape the game of cricket as it should be played.
Moreover, using saliva on a ball will be considered tampering and has been banned by the MCC.
The use of saliva to polish a ball was outlawed amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
But MCC's research found that "this had little or no impact on the amount of swing the bowlers were getting", with sweat deemed equally effective.
The new law will remove any grey areas of fielders eating sugary sweets to alter their saliva to apply to the ball.
Using saliva will be treated the same way as any other unfair methods of changing the condition of the ball.
In other changes, a new batter coming to the crease will face the next ball regardless of whether the previous pair had crossed while the ball was in the air before being caught.
Unfair movement by the fielding side will see the batting side awarded five penalty runs.
Any ball which would have passed wide of the striking batsman in a normal batting position will be called wide irrespective of the position of the batter since the beginning of the bowler's run up.
From a pitch invader to a dog running onto the field, sometimes there is outside interference – if this is the case, and it has a material impact on the game, the umpires will call and signal dead ball.
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