Afraid I can't help but see some of the arguments defending it as stupid.
Do people expect the umpire to enforce the batsman doesn't leave the crease until the ball is bowled?
You'd need eyes like Ozil to make sure the bowler doesn't overstep and the batsman doesn't leave the crease at the same time
My personal thought: change the law that if a bowler wants to do it, he must complete his action and not release the ball before breaking the stumps.
Unless I've missed it, I've noticed that anyone defending this mankad hasn't replied to the hypothetical situation:
The batting side need to 5 runs in 10 overs, but light is drawing in. The bowler keeps running up but attempting to mankad before entering his delivery stride for the next 15 minutes until the light gets bad and the game is called a draw.
At amateur level this would be within the laws so perfectly acceptable right?
@brokenbat Only thing I could thing against it would be over rate, which we don't have in our league.
The Windies didn't do this because the batsman was trying to steal a quick single. They did this because they had accepted they had lost the game of skill & ability vs skill & ability and found the lowest winning means available. I don't doubt for a second if the batsman blocked one in that over and picked the ball up and gave it to a fielder WI would've appealed for handled ball.