A real scenario that happened today in the SA v Windies Test match currently being played, and this question was posed by Robin Jackman, but wasnt answered...
Batsman calls for a run, the non-striker runs to the other end , however, after almost reaching the crease he slips and his bat comes out of his hand and hits the wicket (and takes off one bail) at the same time that the ball is coming in from the fielder ( and in this instance justs misses the wicket ,whilst the batsman was just short of his crease,batless).
The question is.... if the ball from the fielder had hit the stump that contained the bail that had been removed by the bat...would he have been out?
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So the answer is yes if the stump was knocked out of the ground but no if it wasn't.
The batsman can only be deemed to be obstructing the field if intentional. If it is an accident then he would be given not out
'Ask the umpire' is a great series of articles if you can find them online. Pose all sorts of great questions
In this scenario because the ball hits the stump without a bail and is not in the grasp of a fielder the only way the wicket can be broken is if the stump is knocked out of the ground. If the ball just glanced the stump without knocking it out of the ground then he is not out.
regardless of how the bail or bails came to be seperated from the stumps the ball is in play (not an instance where the bowler has broken same in delivery stride or wind has blown bails off during run up /broken by keeper by accident)
if the wicket is already broken (it is considered broken if 1 bail is missing) then the only way a run out could be effected would be to grab a stump
would be out obstructing the field if bat broke wicket deliberately
a similar situation could occur if batter broke wicket whilst turning for a 2nd or 3rd run
no specific law to cover this ...calling dead ball would be a get out
i havent got the laws infront of me but it would be covered by the law that governs the calling of dead ball
a good bar question
My partner had a big swing but duffed it and the ball trickled into the offside just a few feet from him, so we both set off for the game tying run. The fielder came in from point and threw the stumps down at the non-strikers end, removing both bails, but my teammate was just about in. The ball ended up about 4 or 5 yards from the stumps, so I ran back for the second knowing I would be run-out, but couldn't not do it.
The bowler picked the ball up, stood next to the stumps and did a gentle underarm throw to hit the stumps. Knowing the rules, I ran through comfortably, and he couldn't understand why I was celebrating, and all his teammates were shaking their heads
I still can't believe that this 20/21 year old decent standard cricketer didn't know the rule about removing the stump with the ball.
But the fielding side have not broken the wicket.
To be honest I dont know the laws of the game inside out and you do sound like you know bit more than i do and i've been drinking so, I'm prepared to stand corrected.
Smith hit Sharma in the air back towards the bowler in his follow-through - who then stuck out a hand and deflected it straight onto the Umpires arm and *almost* straight back to Sharma still without bouncing. Would he have been out if Sharma had caught the ball?.