Was Akash Deep's delivery to Joe Root legal? MCC clarifies
08 Jul 2025
The Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC), the final authority on cricket laws, has confirmed that Akash Deep's delivery which bowled out Joe Root in the recently concluded Edgbaston Test was perfectly legal.
The confirmation comes amid widespread debate over the legitimacy of the dismissal after some critics claimed it was a backfoot no-ball.
Here are further details.
Explanation of the law
Legal clarification
The MCC has clarified its interpretation of the law, emphasizing that it always highlights the importance of the first moment any part of a foot touches the ground.
Even if some part later goes over the line, as long as it was inside at first contact, it's considered legal.
This clarification comes in response to criticism over Deep's back foot landing wide off the crease during his delivery to Root.
The root dismissal and on-air debate
Match details
Deep had bowled out Root with his second delivery of the 10th over, leaving the veteran English batsman completely bamboozled.
However, footage later showed Deep's back foot landing wide off the crease, sparking a debate in some media circles that it was a backfoot no-ball and hence illegal.
Despite this controversy, Ravi Shastri (on-air at that time) stood firm on his belief that it was indeed a legal delivery.
What the MCC spokesperson said
Official statement
An MCC spokesperson said, "On Day four of India's Test against England last week, there were questions raised about the delivery from Akash Deep which bowled Joe Root, with some fans and commentators believing it to be a no ball."
The spokesperson added that while Deep landed unusually wide on the crease and some of his back foot appeared to touch the ground outside the return crease, "the third umpire did not call a no ball."
Law quoted by MCC
Law interpretation
The MCC quoted Law 21.5.1, which states that "for a delivery to be fair in respect of the feet, in the delivery stride the bowler's back foot must land within and not touching the return crease appertaining to his/her stated mode of delivery."
The club clarified its stance by saying, "Clearly, at the point Deep's foot first touched the ground, the back foot was within and not touching the return crease."
'That is not relevant to this law'
Controversy resolved
The MCC's clarification has put the controversy surrounding Deep's delivery to rest.
The club stressed that "some of his foot may have touched the ground outside the crease subsequently - that is not relevant to this Law."
This explanation comes after Root's wicket proved a major breakthrough for India in their second Test match against England, reducing the latter to 50/3 in the third session of Day 4.
Akash's performance secures India's win
Match impact
Meanwhile, Akash's relentless effort across both innings at Edgbaston powered India over the line on Day 5.
He took four wickets in the first innings and six in the second, including the last wicket of Brydon Carse.
His match figures read 10/187 from 41.1 overs, the best for an Indian bowler on England soil, as per ESPNcricinfo.
Akash was particularly brilliant with the new ball as England lost five wickets under 100 runs in both innings.