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A New Way Of Getting Out In Cricket

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drmorgans | 12:32 Mon 05th Dec 2022 | Sport
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In England's first Test against Pakistan in Rawalpindi, Pakistan were 9 wickets down with maybe half an hour to go. One of the Pakistan batsmen walked off the pitch for a couple of minutes, presumably to "attend to a call of nature". I don't think he'd told the umpires as they seemed puzzled about what was going on.

Could / should he have been given out? If an incoming batsman takes too long to get to the crease they can be "timed out".
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There's nothing in Law 25 to cover it but if, say, a batsman decides to simply pack up and go home, it's likely that the umpires would instruct the scorers to record the batsman as having retired.

The Regulations specifically applying to any particular type of cricket match (whether that be Test cricket or just a schoolboy competition), which are separate to the Laws that apply across the game as a whole, could however allow for some form of penalty to be imposed upon a team if a batsman were deliberately so seek to frustrate the fielding side by absenting himself from the field of play for an excessive period of time.
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One of the umpires was from Pakistan, the other the West Indies.

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A New Way Of Getting Out In Cricket

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