England: Tardy batsmen to be timed out (18 April 1998)
THE THREAT of "timing out" batsmen has been issued to all counties by the England Cricket Board to reduce time-wasting in one-day cricket this summer, and umpires have been armed with stop-watches to enforce a new regulation
18-Apr-1998
18 April 1998
Tardy batsmen to be timed out
By Charles Randall
THE THREAT of "timing out" batsmen has been issued to all
counties by the England Cricket Board to reduce time-wasting in
one-day cricket this summer, and umpires have been armed with
stop-watches to enforce a new regulation.
With the one-day season starting at six venues tomorrow,
incoming batsmen will be given three minutes to reach the crease
- instead of two minutes to reach the boundary's edge, as laid
down by the laws still applying in first-class games.
The fielding side will have the option of appealing for timed
out, knowing that the seconds have been officially recorded by
the umpires. They could even question the batsmen for mitigating
circumstances.
County batsmen have been increasingly less inclined to cross on
the field, the incoming player sometimes waiting several seconds
after his dismissed colleague enters the pavilion area.
Though this can be annoying enough for spectators, it has
serious implications for the fielding side, who could have their
own allocation of overs reduced for a slow over-rate which was
not of their making.
John Carr, an ECB official, said yesterday: "Gamesmanship seems
to have been creeping in, with batsmen taking their time in
order to get overs docked off the opposition. We have had
reports on this and we were a bit concerned."
He added: "We have contacted every county, stressing why this
new rule has come into play, and we're hoping common sense will
prevail."
At Lord's, Middlesex are to set aside a downstairs room for
their waiting batsman this season, because flights of steps and
sheer distance would make them vulnerable to the three-minute
rule.
Timed out, as a dismissal, used to happen occasionally in
first-class cricket, usually when resuming batsmen were too late
reaching the ground, but it is unknown in professional
limited-overs games.
Incoming county batsmen seem to be delaying their entrance as a
matter of course in many cases, perhaps following the example of
Test cricket, where delayed entries have become endemic.
John Major is to become the president of Surrey County Cricket
Club next year.
The former Prime Minister - who will be deputy president this
year to the former England manager, Micky Stewart - said: "I
have been an avid follower of Surrey cricket for 45 years and am
delighted to have the opportunity to put something back into the
county that has given me such pleasure for so long."
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)