ICC trials instant replays for third umpire
David Richardson,
the ICC chief executive, has revealed a trial is underway during the
current Ashes series to enhance the role of the third umpire by feeding
him direct pictures that would avert controversial incidents like Stuart
Broad getting away with a thick edge in the first Investec Test last
week. Broad stood his ground having edged a ball from Ashton Agar,
after the on-field umpire Aleem Dar failed to spot the deflection off
the bat. Having spent all their reviews, Michael Clarke's Australia were
left high and dry.
Speaking on the BBC's Test Match Special, Richardson admitted it
was frustrating that, in the age of technology, Broad managed to escape.
"It is, of course," Richardson said. "For that reason, up to the third
Test, we have a trial going on, independent of what is happening on the
field, to allow the third umpire to have a bank of televisions where he
can actually choose and get access to the technology much quicker than
he would if he simply relies on the director or producer sending him the
pictures up to him. If we progress along these lines ... there is an
opportunity for the third umpire to have the say and to overrule where
he thinks an obvious mistake has been made."
Richardson stressed it was a long-term process but the ICC remained
optimistic. "I don't think people should think it is going to be
introduced for the next series," Richardson said. "It is at a very basic
phase and we need to progress a lot further before we get it on board
in a match."
Speaking on the unusual move by the ICC to reveal the assessment of the
three umpires (Aleem Dar, Kumar Dharmasena and Marais Erasmus) and the
various decisions they made during the Trent Bridge Test, Richardson
reiterated that it was necessary bring the numbers out into open to
erase certain doubts. However, he indicated that the ICC would not make
it a norm to make the umpires assessment public.
"We will take on a case-by-case basis," Richardson said. "In this case
we had put everything in perspective because it was an unusual Test
match. There were so many decisions to be made, almost 75% more than
normal." The ICC release had stated that the on-field umpires made a
total of seven errors, three of which were uncorrected.
Not included in that list was a controversial ruling in favour of
Australia debutant Ashton Agar, who was given not out when England
appealed for a tight stumping. Richardson reasoned why it was not
considered a mistake. "We have got a team of three who look at it," he
said. "First of all the match referee. Then if there is a bit of doubt
then it goes to Vince van der Bijl, our umpires' manager and then it
goes to Geoff Allardice [the ICC's manager of cricket]. They all felt
there was just that element of doubt: was his foot in the air, maybe
there was a spike on the ground? So there was just not enough for the
third umpire to give actually give the decision against the batsman."
Asked if there was scope for benefit of doubt in favour of the player
Richardson said primarily the ICC was looking for definitive proof to
make a decision, "as far as it is possible". He cited the example of
the England of Joe Root, who was adjudged lbw at Lord's on Thursday
morning. "Anyone other than maybe an English supporter would
acknowledge that it was fractionally pad first. In which case the
correct decision, unfortunately, is out," Richardson said.
Richardson followed that by revealing an aspect of how the umpires'
assessment worked. "Let us say the on-field umpire had got it wrong, and
he thought it was bat first," Richardson said. "Then we will mark that
technically incorrect because we say, look, there must have been some
doubt in your mind so you have actually made a good cricket decision. So
we don't mark him in his personal records as having made a mistake. But
technically it was an incorrect decision and we get it changed."
On Wednesday, the MCC's World Cricket Committee, restated its backing
for the DRS while pointing out that to make the system much more
streamlined, the ICC needed to take control of it. But Richardson was
defensive about such a step.
"People say ICC should take complete control of technology," he said.
"Today we have two Hot Spot cameras, some ball tracking cameras and a
couple of slow-motions cameras. But next year there will be something
else … there will be real-time Snickometer. Then next year there is
something else. So in a way we don't want to hamper development. But it
is going progress and it is going to become even more difficult to
resist taking full advantage of the technology that gets developed. Our
strategy has been: let us introduce technology but not on the basis they
are just ball counters and coat hangers."
Richardson said that introducing various technologies into the game was
never to make the role of the umpires obsolete. "We want them to be
part of the game, the on-field umpires in particular, and that is why
one of the reasons why we like the idea of them making the decision and
then the players, if they really disagree, asking for it to be
reviewed," Richardson said.
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