Stop Clock Introduced in Test Cricket
The ICC has expanded its stop clock rule to Test cricket to address slow over rates, a long-standing issue in the format. According to the revised rule, the fielding side must begin a new over within 60 seconds of the previous one ending. Failure to do so will result in two warnings, followed by a five-run penalty if the offense is repeated. The warnings reset after every 80-over block.
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Saliva Ban Maintains, but Ball Change Now Discretionary
Though the ban on using saliva to shine the ball remains in place, umpires are no longer required to change the ball immediately if saliva is used. Instead, they may assess whether the ballβs condition has been significantly altered. If not, play can continue without change. However, if deliberate tampering is detected, the batting side will be awarded five runs.
DRS Protocol Adjusted for Sequential Decisions
Under the new DRS rules, when a batter reviews an out decision like caught behind and UltraEdge shows no bat contact, the TV umpire will then proceed to assess lbw using the original “out” decision context. If ball-tracking results in “umpire’s call,” the batter will remain out, as the decision was initially given.
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Combined Reviews to Follow Chronological Order
The ICC has now clarified that in cases involving both umpire and player reviews, decisions will be assessed in the order they occurred. For example, if both lbw and run out are under review, the third umpire will first adjudicate the earlier incident. If a dismissal is confirmed, the ball is deemed dead, and subsequent incidents will not be evaluated.
Fairness of Catch to Be Reviewed Even After No-Ball
In cases where a catch is disputed but the TV umpire simultaneously identifies a no-ball, the new rule mandates that the catch’s validity be reviewed regardless. If itβs a fair catch, the batting side only gets the no-ball run. If not, additional runs taken will be credited.
Deliberate Short Run Rule Strengthened
Deliberate short runs now carry more consequences. In addition to the five-run penalty, the fielding side can choose which batter stays on strike. This addresses scenarios where batters may attempt to manipulate strike rotation or deceive umpires.
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Full-Time Playing Substitutes on Trial in Domestic Cricket
To mitigate the loss of players with serious external injuries (not minor strains), the ICC has introduced a trial allowing full-time replacements in domestic first-class matches. These substitutes must be like-for-like and approved by match officials upon visible confirmation of injury. This will be optional for member boards to implement.
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