no,it is not added,it is leg byes.
by Abdul razik
it was added in 1978
its 5 runs and 1st time these 5 runs awarded to saeed anwar of Pakistan when he was playing against a spin blower and a top edge from his bat went over the keepers head and hit vid an unused helmet, by sohail its rule 41.3 protective helmet belonging to the fielding side from Law 41 Fielder
yeahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
Would be given a boundary and score added up. It would be considered Century for the batsman.
If you know that it was made in 1948 and he was in the greenbay packers and you know it was on his helmet u should know the answer
Sundries (also called extras) are runs scored in cricket that have not come off the batsman's bat. Sundries are added to the teams score, but not the individual batsman. Examples of sundries are: Byes, leg byes, no balls, wides and penalty runs.
OK, I can only see one possible way this could happen: - First ball, Batsman A on strike (94*), 7 to win - the ball is struck (presumably to somewhere in the outfield) and the batsmen take three runs. However, on one of the runs, one of the batsmen accidentally fails to make his ground, so the umpire calls a short run and that run is disallowed (as per Law 18.4(a)). While the ball is still in play the fielder throws it to the wicket-keeper but overthrows it, and the ball goes to the boundary and so an additional four runs are awarded (as per Law 19.6). Thus, six runs (3 runs - 1 short run + 4 overthrows) are awarded to Batsman A for his century and according to Law 18.12(a), Batsman B would now be on strike. - Second ball, Batsman B on strike (94*), 1 to win - the ball is struck over the boundary for six. Batsman B scores his century and his team wins the match. If anyone knows of any other way this can be done, please let me know as I would be very interested to hear your solutions. However, according to the laws of cricket, that is definitely one way to solve the problem. PS - Just thought I'd correct some of the other suggestions. If the ball hits a helmet on the field, the batting side is awarded five penalty runs which would be added to the scorecard as Extras and not the batsman's score. If the last two balls of the innings were in different overs then Duckworth/Lewis would have to be applied and the target would almost certainly change. Any no-balls would again be added as Extras and would then make it impossible for both batsmen to score centuries.
Ground almonds is normally just almonds ground into a course flour with no extra ingredients added and no salt.
Aerodynamics mainly, but the added length on the helmet also protects the back of the head and neck better in an impact.
Ground Water is pure meaning that it dosent have no added stuff and has lots of purities.However tap water is water with added chemicals
The coal scuttle helmet was used in both World Wars. The difference being no lug nuts for the added machinegunner's extra steel plate at the helmet's forehead for the M35, M42, etc. WWII German helmets. Lowered crown, and shortened back neck shield for the WWII headgear.
This score will be added tothe team only.