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in the game of CRICKET,the tearm LBW is associated when the batsman takes his leg before the wicket,it is considered as LBW out.
LBW - meaning 'Leg Before Wicket' is used in Cricket.
Leg Before Wicket
If the ball hits the batsman's pad (on his leg) and is "hitting" the stumps (so if the batsman wasn't there, it would hit the stumps) then it is out.
Leg before wicket
yes, it's happened in cricket.
bowled, caught, lbw, hit wicket, run out
In test cricket, it is Anil Kumble, who has taken 156 wickets through lbw, while in odi it is Wasim Akram, who had taken 92.
LBW - leg before wicket no ball - when the bowler bowls it really high without it bouncing or steps over the crease have to bowl with a straight arm
If a batsman is clearly LBW and there is no doubt regarding the decision, then it is said that the batsman is 'plumb' leg before
In cricket a batsman can be out in 10 ways: 1. Bowled 2. Caught 3. Run Out 4. Stumped 5. LBW 6. Hit Wicket 7. Handling the ball 8. Hitting the ball twice 9. Obstructing the field 10. Timed out
LBW means 'leg before wicket', a fairly common way of getting out in cricket; 'plumb' means the ball is straight down the line of the wicket with no doubt as to whether it would travelled through the wicket, in reference to a plumb-bob being straight down a marked line when it is vertically square.