BBL 2022/23 | Twitter gets divided over ‘genius’ Michael Neser’s exceptional catch after juggling it over boundary line
Cricket’s rules and regulations come into the spotlight whenever players pull off something unusual on the field. Such an incident occurred on Sunday in 🍌the Big Bash League (BBL) when Michael Neser ensured Jordan Silk’s dismissal by taking an excellent catch after juggling it pastꩲ the boundary line.
Match 25 of the ongoing Big Bash League between Brisbane Heat and Sydney Sixers was a high-scoring affair at The Gabba. The Heat, riding on Nathan McSweeney’s 51-ball 84 and Josh Brown’s breezy 23-ball 62ཧ, piled 224/5 batting first. In reply, the Sixers produced a spirited performance, but the tar💫get was always too big for them to see off. As a result, they closed on 209, enduring a 15-run win.
The match was well in the balance until the 19th over of the Sixers’ innings, when they reached 192/7, with Jordan Silk batting on 35 off 21 balls. The batter made 41 off 22 by smashing Mark Steketee’s first ball of the 19th over for six to reduce the equation. Then the drama happened after Silk smashed the next ball, which was full and wide outside off stump, to loft it over the extra cover. Michael Neser first made the contact with the ball inside the boundary line, and th🎶en went past the ropes. After that, he flicked it back to the play arena from outside the ropes, but by jumping, he made sure his feet were not grounded.
The replay showed Neser did not do anything wrong during the attempt, and it was a legal catch as per the MCC, which states under Law 19.5.2: "A fielder who is not in contact with the ground is considered to be grounded beyond the boundary if his/her final contact with the ground, before his/her first contact with the ball after it has been delivered by the bowler, was not ✨entirely within the boundary."
Juggling act
Michael Neser's juggling act ends Silk's stay!
— cricket.com.au (@cricketcomau)
Cue the debate about the Laws of Cricket...
Questions emerged
👏 Quite a few questions have emerged following this outstanding bit of fielding in the . provides expert commentary as to why this indeed was Out.
— Marylebone Cricket Club (@MCCOfficial)
See here for the Law:
Threw the ball
Cam Green took a gully catch (Bl🍨ackwood) in Adelaide and immediately threw the ball away. Out! No question asked. So what if Michael Neser, hav♋ing completed an outfield catch well inside the rope, simply flicked the ball back? He’d completed the catch just as Green had.
— Tim Lane (@TimLaneSport)
Make sense
will be shrouded under the covers of rules of the game but no way that should be out. He touched the ground and that should have before putting the ball back in. So he was out of the playing field after the first act itself. Doesn't 🔯make sense at all.
— Chirag Gupta (@ChiragG14)
Can't be right
Jordan Silk on Michael Neser catch:
— The Run Home with Joel & Fletch (@JoelFletchSEN)
“I had to ap🃏ologise to the umpires… This can’t be right… I understand the ruling but I don’t a🀅gree with it.”
Much debate
Big Bash should be shouting Michael Neser a bucket of KFC at the very least.
— Adam Hawse (@AdamHawse)
Comp hasn't had this much debate in years
Significant player
Paul Rieffel was a🌄 significant player in successful Ashes tours in the UK. I feel that Michael Neser could do the same. Will add depth to batting, good fielder and UK pitches should be his 🎀playground.
— Rob Beattie (@Bunderbeats)
Out of bounds
I think it is a simple fix to the Mi𝓡chael Neser catch. When you make contact with ball, if your last step was out of bounds, it is a six.
— Simon Rachy (@SimonRachy9)
Beyond boundaries
Michael Neser's autobiography should be called "Beyond a boundary ♊- part 2"
— Ramesh (@rmshnt27)
Brilliant
Michael Nꦡeser’s catch was legal, but more than that, it was BRILLIANT.
— Abhishek Mukherjee (@ovshake42)
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