cricinfo.com About cricinfoblogs
Beyond The Blues Beyond The Test World Different Strokes From the Editor Girls Aloud Iain O'Brien Inbox
It Figures Pak Spin Shot Selection The Buzz The Confectionery Stall The Surfer Tour Diaries

Cricinfo Blogs Home

« Bigotry at silly point | | Did England trigger the ball row? »

Waugh and Aussie media back Hair

Posted on 08/21/2006 in Umpires



Steve Waugh: 'The laws are there for a reason' © Getty Images

Steve Waugh, the former Australian captain, has come out strongly in favour of Darrell Hair's decision at The Oval, which received scathing criticism in the English and Pakistani media yesterday. Waugh's sentiment is echoed in the Australian papers as well, with most journalists and former cricketers backing Hair.

Waugh felt that Hair did the right thing by abandoning the Test. "I definitely agree with that [Pakistan forfeiting] - if they don't go back on the field the Test is over," Waugh said in News Ltd papers. "That's quite simple. Sunil Gavaskar tried that one on the umpires in Australia [in 1981]. No-one is bigger than the game. The laws are there for a reason."

Javed Miandad was one of the few Pakistani voices that came out against Inzamam-ul-Haq's decision. "Pakistan committed mistake after mistake and put themselves in a no-win situation," Miandad told AFP. "[Irrespective of] whoever has taken the decision but it's the skipper who will face the punishment. Either he should have taken the decision immediately or have played the match under protest. Pakistan has not only lost the match, but also lost the sympathy with the crowd, who came to see the game."

Mark Taylor, Waugh's predecessor as Australian Test captain, rejected claims that Hair was biased against Asian teams. "I'm sure he's just doing what he thinks is right," Taylor told Channel Nine television.

Hair also won praise for his decision from Robert Craddock in Queensland’s The Courier-Mail. "To his great credit Darrell Hair is prepared to poke his nose into grubby corners of the cricket world where most of his fellow umpires refuse to go. Over the years he's been called dictatorial and officious and both accusations have at times been correct. But they should never overshadow the one great strength of his decision-making - the courage to back his opinion even when the protesting millions disagree with it."

Malcolm Conn takes a similar stance in The Australian. "Cricket is once again on the verge of disgracing itself by failing to support an umpire who has the courage to uphold the laws of the game," he wrote. "Darrell Hair's decision to award the fourth Test at The Oval to England after Pakistan refused to take the field in protest could cost him his international career. That the Pakistan cricket community and the British media have turned on Hair comes as no surprise. Pakistan has always played its cricket that way, and the English press knows a soft target when it see one - it has been watching plenty play for England over much of the past two decades.

“Hair’s action in awarding the fourth Test to England at The Oval in London is unprecedented in Test cricket, and, predictably, for his courage he is facing the firing squad,” writes Phil Wilkins in the Sydney Morning Herald.

However, Ian Chappell, writing in Mumbai-based Mid-Day, comes down heavily on the ball-tampering law.

 
Feedback Feedback

Categories
2009 English domestic season (4) American Premier League (1) Ashes (325) Australia in India 2008-09 (101) Australia in South Africa 2008-09 (14) Australian cricket (784) Bangladesh cricket (26) Betting/Corruption (1) Bob Woolmer (8) Books (7) Bowling actions (3) Champions Trophy (55) Champions Twenty20 League (16) Charity (4) Commentary (65) Compaq Cup (1) Corruption (2) Cricinfo (3) Cricket (15) Cricket and war (1) Cricket books (8) DLF Cup (2) Drugs (2) England in India 2008-09 (66) England in South Africa 2009-10 (5) England in West Indies 2008-09 (72) English cricket (814) Falkland Islands (1) France (1) ICC (79) ICC World Twenty20 (58) ICC anti-doping policy (10) India in Australia, 2007-08 (65) India in New Zealand, 2008-09 (34) India in Pakistan 2008-09 (1) India in Sri Lanka 2008 (18) India in Sri Lanka 2008-09 (2) Indian Cricket League (27) Indian Premier League (204) Indian cricket (584) Interviews (6) Irish cricket (3) Kenyan cricket (2) Miscellaneous (205) Neutral venues (1) New Zealand cricket (247) New Zealand in Australia 2009 (4) New Zealand in Sri Lanka 2009 (4) Obituaries (15) Offbeat (130) Olympics (1) One-day cricket (10) Pakistan cricket (124) Pakistan in England (56) Pakistan in Sri Lanka 2009 (1) Racism (1) Security concerns (19) Shootout in Lahore (10) Sourav Ganguly (1) South Africa in Australia 2008-09 (36) South Africa in England 2008 (49) South African cricket (128) Sri Lankan cricket (83) Stanford 20/20 for 20 (24) Stats (3) T20 Canada (1) Technology (12) Television (20) Test Championship (2) Test rankings (2) The Delhi crisis (1) The Stanford saga (6) Twenty20 (59) UAE cricket (1) Umpires (48) West Indies cricket (124) West Indies in England 2009 (14) West Indies in New Zealand, 2008-09 (8) Women's cricket (27) World Cup 2007 (133) Zimbabwe cricket (46)
Recent Posts
Ashes hero and all-round good bloke 20 not out Player power Too many articles about volume of cricket? Pietersen has style of original Brylcreem Boy World Test Championship could reignite game Never another like Tendulkar Too much power for Vettori Players flogged for money Forgotten heroes of Harris Shield
Archives
November 2009October 2009September 2009August 2009July 2009June 2009May 2009April 2009March 2009February 2009January 2009December 2008November 2008October 2008September 2008August 2008July 2008June 2008May 2008April 2008March 2008February 2008January 2008December 2007November 2007October 2007September 2007August 2007July 2007June 2007May 2007April 2007March 2007February 2007January 2007December 2006November 2006October 2006September 2006August 2006July 2006June 2006May 2006April 2006March 2006February 2006January 2006December 2005November 2005October 2005September 2005
RSS Feeds RSS Feed
© Cricinfo 2009
website stats