Spur of the moment
Frederic Kanoute
Was watching live. The commentators said the Indian team spent a lot of time practising precisely that catching manouevre to ensure they complied with the rules about keeping their feet from touching the boundary or anywhere beyond whilst in contact with the ball.Thats amazing, but the dive at the end, if her feet are grounded on other side of the barrier when she catches it does that make a difference?
If so, the presence of mind to process that act on it is incredible.
They also pondered how much the catcher was helped by the fact the boundary 'toblerone' was missing at that point. However the video replay suggests the catch would still have been perfectly fine.
I've seen some breathtaking catches in my time, going all the way back to Tony Lock for Surrey and England in the 1950s, but that one tops the lot.
Last edited: