End of an innings

http://dbpedia.org/resource/End_of_an_innings an entity of type: WikicatCricketLawsAndRegulations

In cricket, a team's innings ends in one of the following ways. In cases 1 and 2, the team are said to be all out, because they do not have two players available to bat. 1. * All but one of the batsmen are out. 2. * The batting side only has one not-out batsman who is still able to bat (the others are incapacitated through injury, illness or absence; see retirement). 3. * The team batting last scores the required number of runs to win. 4. * The game runs out of time for either side to win, and so finishes as a draw. 5. * The set number of overs (sets of 6 deliveries) have been bowled (in limited overs cricket). 6. * The team's captain declares the innings closed. 7. * The Match Referee decides that one team has forfeited the game. rdf:langString
rdf:langString End of an innings
xsd:integer 900483
xsd:integer 1062176179
rdf:langString In cricket, a team's innings ends in one of the following ways. In cases 1 and 2, the team are said to be all out, because they do not have two players available to bat. 1. * All but one of the batsmen are out. 2. * The batting side only has one not-out batsman who is still able to bat (the others are incapacitated through injury, illness or absence; see retirement). 3. * The team batting last scores the required number of runs to win. 4. * The game runs out of time for either side to win, and so finishes as a draw. 5. * The set number of overs (sets of 6 deliveries) have been bowled (in limited overs cricket). 6. * The team's captain declares the innings closed. 7. * The Match Referee decides that one team has forfeited the game. Law 13 covers the end of the innings.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 4400

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