Prohibition of salivation for cricket artillery
Bollers are allowed to use saliva to shine the cricket ball in the Indian Premier League (IPL) in the future, reversing the ban imposed five years ago during the COVID-1
ESPNCRICIFO said the decision came after most of the captains supported the game during a meeting on Thursday.
In May 2020, a temporary ban on leakage was presented with medical advice during the epidemic, with the use of sweat that is still permissible. The International Cricket Council (ICC) in September
Players use saliva and sweat to police one side of the ball to revolve in the air.
The use of saliva was banned to reduce the possibility of transmission of infection with the virus.
Lacky helps quick players to keep the ball’s shine, creating an imbalance that helps swelling, a major element in the mechanics of the cricket for more than a century.
It also helps the boilers to make reverse swear, which the ball moves in the opposite direction of what is expected. This is especially important in a dry situation or with old balls.
Lacky is more effective than the red ball cricket, usually used in tests than white balls such as ODIS and T20s.
In the red ball cricket, the ball is used for longer time, allowing the boilers to shine one side and help make the reverse swearing.
It is unclear whether the International Council (ICC) will lift the ban on the red balloon salivation following the decision of the Indian Cricket Board to promote it to the richest T20 in the world. The International Criminal Court (ICC) is supervised by Jay Shah, former secretary of the Cricket Control Board (BCCI), the world’s richest cricket.
The change will come into force on Saturday when IPL 2025 – 18 is edition – with the defender of the defender Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) that faces Royal Challengering Bengalur (RCB) at Eden Gardens. The tournament will be played in two months in 13 cities.
Mohamed Siraj, a fast and Indian player who plays for Gujarat Titans, has welcomed the decision.
“This is a great news for Bollers, because when the ball does not do anything, the use of the ball increases the possibility of finding some reverse swearing,” Siraj told Press of India.
“Sometimes it helps the reverse transformation because shedding the ball with the shirt doesn’t help (to get the opposite). But the use of the ball on the ball helps protect (the decision on the one hand), and is important.
Mohammed al-Shami, another Indian fast player, had asked the International Court of Justice earlier this month to lift the ban.
“We will always be attractive that we need to be allowed to use saliva so that we can bring the reverse turn into the game and make it attractive,” he said after winning the semi-finals in Australia.
Shami’s request was supported by Vernon Fillander and former international players Tim South.
Recently, Gritte Inden-Spin Asoyn, who recently retired from the International Cricket, said he was confused because of the ban.
“ICC published some studies that Saliva had not helped the reverse transformation and did not make a big difference on the ball.
Sports writer Sharda Ugra says the lifting of salivation bans can help the race between Bat and the ball, “more even.
Many people believe that the possibilities were collected in the 20th league with a supplementary friend’s wick in front of the box. The highest number of IPL, set up in 2013 with 263 RCB players five-fold, has passed four times in 2024, with a total of 250 race in
But Ogre says it is unclear how much the lifting of the ban will affect Bouling.
“Saliva isn’t the only reason to make swearing – and the situations must be ideal, and a skilled key boller,” he told the BBC.
Some of the former quick players such as Venkat, Prassad, also had a cautious word about change.
“Freeding the use of saliva is also for hygiene. Today, anything can happen. We don’t know how much – and K-K-Ko virus will enter the air. So, I think you should be very careful to decide whether to lift the ban,” he told the Times of India earlier this month.