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Yes, if you strike the ball twice you can be called out. The official scoresheet will read: "Hit the ball twice." However, there is one exception to this rule. You are allowed to hit the ball twice if the second hit is an effort to knock the ball away from the wicket after it had already made contact with you, but not your bat. So, if the ball hits your hand and continues towards the wicket you are allowed to use your bat to knock it away.
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The Hop-to-hop delivery is also called the node-to-node delivery and it is the delivery between two nodes connected to the same network by a link and this jib is carried out by the data link layer....
Manish Bansal
brandon m'cullam
The batsman has to hit the ball with his bat and make the ball run off into the ground. Before the fielding team collects the ball and returns it either to the keeper or the bowler, the two batsmen at the two stumps must exchange their position. The batsman has to reach the runners end and the runner would become the batsman. This is one run.
The batsman has to hit the ball with his bat and make the ball run off into the ground. Before the fielding team collects the ball and returns it either to the keeper or the bowler, the two batsmen at the two stumps must exchange their position. The batsman has to reach the runners end and the runner would become the batsman. This is one run.
Chris Gayle
Chris Gayle
No. There is no rule for it.because it is a law of bcci or the team will be discolify
M.l.jaisimha, ravi shastri
When a batsman has scored no runs, a zero is written in the scorebook against his/her name. This zero resembles the look of a duck's egg hence the term "out for a duck". When a batsman is out for a duck in both innings of a match, the batsman is said to be "out for a pair". This is not because he has a pair of ducks but because the two zeroes side by side look like a pair of spectacles hence "out for a pair".