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« Replacement ball swings out Windies

Posted by Chris on 03/12/2006 in Miscellaneous

Replacement ball swings out Windies

Cricketers can be a canny lot, prone to using any means possible to eek out an advantage, however small. A well aimed sledge or a gnarly comment at a press conference are examples of cricketers flirting with the spirit of the game but staying faithful to its laws in the hope of inducing rash responses from the opposition. By and large these are tolerated if not exactly condoned tactics.

When a player oversteps the line though, such as Michael Atherton’s PocketGate affair in 1994, they tend to receive a public flogging. Ball tampering is a no fly zone with the cricket authorities.

What then do we make of a rather odd situation at Eden Park yesterday during the fourth days play of the opening Test between New Zealand and the West Indies. The ball was clearly and severely tampered with.

The moment in question happened before the inevitable Carribean capitulation when the West Indies were still odds-on to win the match. Openers Gayle and Ganga were cruising towards an opening stand of 148 with Gayle in particular playing some impressive shots. One of these shots in the 35th over was a launched six off Daniel Vettori that despatched the cricket ball beyond recovery.

A replacement ball was called for. A replacement ball was found. The replacement ball was 35 overs old, the exact state of the match at the time. Stephen Fleming waited anxiously for Daryl Harper to throw him the ball so that the New Zealanders could ‘get to work’ on the new ball and shine up one side.

Umpire Harper though, had clearly formed an opinion that the ball was too ‘new’ for his liking, and set about a game of bounce and catch with the ball and a piece of concrete floor. The purpose of this exercise was clearly to attempt to recreate the condition of the original match ball by intentionally damaging the replacement.

When bouncing the ball appeared not to be making much of a dent in proceedings, umpire Harper, after a brief chat with one of the observing West Indians, started to scuff up the ball by rubbing and grating it against the concrete surface. Eventually umpire Harper finished his “damage-imitation” exercise and handed the ball over to a bemused and somewhat anxious looking Fleming.

The question I have is; where in the laws of the game was umpire Harper permitted to alter the condition of the ball?

Law 5.5 of the Laws of Cricket, permits the umpire to replace a ball with one of comparable wear, however Law 42.3 specifically prohibits tampering with the ball’s condition. Nowhere in the rules of cricket could I find where an umpire is even implicitly permitted to scuff up the replacement ball to approximate his opinion of the condition of the original one.

Even if the practise is permitted, it is questionable that rubbing a ball against concrete is an accurate method of approximating the natural wear of a ball during the course of play. If such experiments have been carried out, and training provided to umpires on how to ball-scuff correctly then I am unaware of either.

The replacement of the ball was a significant moment of the match, not least because the second ball appeared to reverse swing significantly more than the original one and it was the use of reverse swing by Shane Bond in particular that contributed to New Zealand securing the match. Reverse swing is generally considered a phenomenon of an aging ball.

Umpire Harper I am sure, was acting with good intentions in a genuine effort to ensure that a replacement ball provided consistent conditions for both teams. Was he though, acting within the laws of the game and did his efforts unintentionally provide an advantage to the New Zealanders?

Were a bowler, looking to get the ball to reverse, to perform the kind of destructive actions on the ball that Harper did yesterday, he would likely be facing serious, indeed career threatening consequences.

Comments

Horrific idea that (to scruff up a replacement ball to approximate natural wear and tear on the original).

Posted by: angshuman at March 13, 2006 4:23 AM

Absolutely superb post by the author. I did not know of this since the game was not carried in my country. Can you imagine the cheshire cat smiles on the faces of Waqar and Wasim after Harper had tossed the ball to them?
He had done the job that all bowlers dream of being done to a ball. Can you imagine Shepherd or Bucknor or Venkat doing such a thing? Not the sharpest knife in the box, that Harper..

Posted by: Feroz Faisal Dawson at March 15, 2006 8:53 AM

Harper again in the limelight in the 2nd Test - giving Chanderpaul out caught behind when the ball came off his thigh. Don't remember who gave Bravo out lbw above the knee roll but these are decisions that more often than not fall in the West Indies lot. Lara has been subject to the most horrible decisions ever made against one batsman. A slight appearance of disagreement and they call you before the match referee. Who do these umpires account to? They determine the outcome of matches with critical decisions that are irreparably, painfully and destructively wrong. You cannot even speak about the decisions afterwards. Something needs to be done.

Enough is said about the stress they are under, with having to count up to six, ninety times a day, hearing appeals from players, rationalising decisions, watching the game more closely than any spectator, holding players caps etc.
They need no emotional challenges - not from players who are under physical fatigue, who are emotionally charged, who are giving their utmost, concentrating every moment - that is inexcusable.

Cricket must be played fairly from all approaches. Spectators who pay their fees need to derive some form of satisfaction, some form of closure, to these jarring mistakes. In short justice must prevail.

Umpires should apologise publicly / face fines / be allowed to recall batsmen /for wrong decisions made during the course of a match.

Only then perhaps we would experience the game as it should be played

Posted by: Pradeep at March 17, 2006 12:19 PM

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