return crease การใช้
- A rarer reason is when the bowler's back foot touches or lands outside the return crease.
- Ambrose was troubled bowling around the wicket, either over stepping or cutting the return crease with his back leg.
- To avoid a no ball, some part of the bowler's back foot in the delivery stride must land within and not touch the return crease.
- Each return crease terminates at one end at the popping crease but the other end is considered to be unlimited in length and must be marked to a minimum of from the popping crease.
- While there is no sharply defined " strike zone " in cricket as there is in baseball ( but there are lines known as the return crease perpendicular to the other crease lines which the umpires can use as a guide ), in both cases the umpire must judge whether the ball was delivered fairly.
- In the 1788 MCC code this became " The Bowler Shall deliver the Ball with one foot behind the Bowling Crease, and within the Return Crease . . . if the Bowler's foot is not behind the Bowling Crease, and within the return Crease, when he delivers the Ball, [ the Umpires ] must, unasked, call " No Ball " ."
- In the 1788 MCC code this became " The Bowler Shall deliver the Ball with one foot behind the Bowling Crease, and within the Return Crease . . . if the Bowler's foot is not behind the Bowling Crease, and within the return Crease, when he delivers the Ball, [ the Umpires ] must, unasked, call " No Ball " ."