No Ball Cricket Rule and Example

No Ball explains the cricket law, playing condition, or match situation that determines how no ball is judged during a game.

Quick Definition

No Ball

No Ball explains the cricket law, playing condition, or match situation that determines how no ball is judged during a game.

Key Points

  • The match situation meets the basic conditions for no ball.
  • The umpire, scorecard, or playing conditions support the decision.
  • A required condition for no ball is missing.

Understand the rule in simple English

No Ball is a specific cricket rule or match situation that can affect umpire decisions, batter survival, scoring, or fielding outcomes. That is why the page starts with a direct English answer.

The practical point is that clear match conditions must be met. This page breaks those conditions into simple bullets, including The match situation meets the basic conditions for no ball., The umpire, scorecard, or playing conditions support the decision..

Like many rules, this topic can create confusion. The not-out or not-applicable side is also important, including A required condition for no ball is missing..

To understand this topic more clearly Free Hit and Free Hit is useful when similar cricket law terms create confusion.

When does no ball apply?

  • The match situation meets the basic conditions for no ball.
  • The umpire, scorecard, or playing conditions support the decision.
  • The ball remains live unless another law or playing condition overrides the outcome.

When does no ball not apply?

  • A required condition for no ball is missing.
  • Another cricket law changes the decision or makes the outcome invalid.

Example

Example: No Ball becomes relevant when a real match situation needs this rule to decide the scoring, dismissal, or umpire signal correctly.

Simple Diagram

The simple pitch-style diagram below explains crease, stumps, and player position visually.

Bowler EndStriker EndCreaseStumpsBatter / RunnerBall / Keeper Line

No Ball vs Free Hit

no ball and free hit are often confused. The simple difference below makes the topic easier to understand.

No Ball

No Ball explains the cricket law, playing condition, or match situation that determines how no ball is judged during a game.

Free Hit

Free Hit explains the cricket law, playing condition, or match situation that determines how free hit is judged during a game.

FAQ

What is a no ball in cricket?

No Ball explains the cricket law, playing condition, or match situation that determines how no ball is judged during a game.

Can you be out bowled on a no ball?

Nahin. No ball par bowled, caught, LBW, stumped aur hit wicket valid nahi hote. Aam tor par sirf run out, hit the ball twice aur obstructing the field jaisi dismissals rehti hain.

Do you get a free hit after every no ball?

Har no ball ke baad free hit nahi milti. Limited-overs cricket mein aam tor par front-foot no ball ke baad free hit milti hai, jab ke baqi no-ball categories competition rules par depend karti hain.

Does a no ball count as a ball in the over?

Nahin. No ball six legal deliveries mein count nahi hoti, is liye bowler ko ek extra ball karni parti hai.

What types of no balls are there in cricket?

Common no-ball types mein front-foot overstep, back-foot return crease breach, dangerous short ball ya high full toss, illegal bowling action, aur kuch fielding restriction violations shamil hoti hain.

Related Rules

Continue Exploring