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March 9 (Reuters) - Bowlers will not be allowed to use saliva to shine the ball and the rarely used "Mankad" method of dismissal will not be listed under unfair play in new laws approved by the ...
England's Charlie Dean said she would "never" run out an opposition player with the controversial 'Mankad' move that ended her innings and Saturday's one-day international against India.
'Mankad' dismissals will no longer be considered unfair play under a new set of laws announced by the MCC. The 'Mankad' - where a bowler runs out the non-striking batter in their delivery stride ...
Several English players have criticised the dismissal but Sharma said they had warned Dean before effecting the dismissal named after India's Vinoo Mankad who did it in a 1947 test match in Australia.
Mankad or Mankading has been part of the cricket vernacular ever since the Indian all-rounder famously ran out Australian Bill Brown at the non-striker’s end more than 75 years ago. Despite the ...
One of the smallest but most meaningful changes was to Law 41.16 – running out the non-striker, colloquially known as the “Mankad”. The Law has been moved from the “Unfair Play” section ...
A Mankad attempt set tempers alight at Adelaide Oval on New Years Eve as the Perth Scorchers claimed a seven-wicket victory over the Strikers. Whacked for 18 off his first over, England all ...
An Under-19 Cricket World Cup match between the West Indies and Zimbabwe in Bangladesh has exploded in controversy following a sensational Mankad dismissal at the death of a tight run-chase.
Rajasthan's cricketers set a new national record in the Vinoo Mankad One-Day Trophy, scoring 499/3 against Arunachal Pradesh, with Kartik Sharma and Mohd Anas hitting 225* and 247, respectively.