The Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) has initiated a significant revision to Law 19.5.2, deeming “bunny‑hop” boundary catches illegal. Under this new rule, any fielder who leaps from outside the boundary rope, touches the ball mid‑air, and fails to land back inside will have the catch ruled as a boundary instead of a dismissal. This eliminates the multiple airborne touches previously allowed since 2010
The International Cricket Council (ICC) will start implementing this change in playing conditions from June 17, 2025, coinciding with the new World Test Championship cycle. MCC’s official Laws of Cricket will incorporate the change from October 2026
The bunny‑hop refers to the dramatic act where a fielder inside the boundary jumps, carries the momentum outside to tap the ball back in the air mid‑air, and then hops back in to complete the catch. Notable examples include efforts by Michael Neser (BBL 2023) and Matt Renshaw/Tom Banton (BBL 2020), which, though technically legal at the time, sparked debate over fairness
This rule update aims to reduce confusion and maintain natural competition levels. It ensures that spectacular athleticism doesn’t compromise fairness, converting some previously legal but controversial feats into boundaries under the new system.
This rule change ensures equity and clarity in boundary decisions, aligning spectacular fielding with principled gameplay. It avoids the feeling that fielders are gaining an unfair advantage by manipulating boundaries mid‑air .
Cricket laws must serve both spectacle and fairness. As the MCC memo warned, while current rules permitted spectacular feats, they sometimes resulted in “unusual-looking catches”—ones that fans and pundits felt went beyond the spirit of the game
For government exam aspirants in teaching, police, banking, railways, defence, and civil services (e.g., PSCs, IAS), this change exemplifies how regulatory bodies update rules and regulations to enhance fairness, transparency, and system integrity—key traits evaluated in current affairs sections.
Students can note how established institutions respond to public sentiment, align technical provisions with ethical excellence, and use phased implementation (mid‑2025 and late‑2026) to ease transitions. This reflects a general pattern across policy and law applicable to other governance scenarios.
Before 2010, cricket law specified that once a fielder left the field of play, they could not touch the ball again unless they first re-grounded inside the boundary. This was considered rigid but clear.
Law changed in 2010 to allow one airborne catch initiated from inside the boundary, enabling more athletic fielding. But it also inadvertently allowed “bunny‑hop” feats like those seen in 2020–2023
Catch showpieces by Michael Neser and Matt Renshaw drew mixed reactions. Technically legal, they stirred the feeling that the rules were being stretched, prompting action from the ICC and MCC
Responding to these events, ICC urged MCC to re-examine the rule. MCC’s solution: limit airborne boundary touches to one, and require landing fully inside the field thereafter. This was implemented in phased stages: ICC playing conditions (June 2025) and MCC laws (October 2026)
A “bunny-hop” boundary catch refers to an act where a fielder, often after jumping from inside the boundary, taps or catches the ball mid-air while airborne and crosses outside the boundary before returning or tapping it back in. It previously allowed multiple touches in the air, even if the fielder left the field of play.
The MCC banned bunny-hop boundary catches to bring clarity and fairness to fielding laws. The rule was perceived as giving an unfair advantage to fielders and led to visually confusing plays that challenged the spirit of the game.
The new rule will be enforced in ICC playing conditions starting June 17, 2025. It will also be included in MCC’s official Laws of Cricket from October 2026.
No, under the new rule, once a fielder has left the field of play, they cannot make contact with the ball unless they re-establish themselves inside the boundary before doing so.
This development illustrates how regulatory bodies evolve rules to ensure fair play and public trust. It is an excellent example of rule-making, implementation cycles, and governance — all topics frequently featured in current affairs questions for exams like IAS, SSC, and defence services.
National IED Data Management System launched by Amit Shah enhances India’s counter-terrorism capabilities using AI…
IREDA MoU rating 2025: Indian Renewable Energy Development Agency secures excellent rating for fifth consecutive…
New Delhi World Book Fair 2026 offers free entry for all visitors, highlighting Indian military…
PANKHUDI portal launch 2026 by Union Minister Annpurna Devi strengthens women and child welfare through…
Akasa Air joins IATA, becoming India’s fifth airline member. Learn about IATA membership, IOSA audit,…
Mission Sudarshan Chakra enhances India’s drone defence capabilities through CUAS Grid, AI-based systems, and indigenous…