|
Online edition of India's National Newspaper Saturday, March 10, 2001 |
|
Front Page |
National |
Southern States |
Other States |
International |
Opinion |
Business |
Sport |
Miscellaneous |
Features |
Classifieds |
Employment |
Index |
Home |
|
Sport
| Previous
| Next
Umpiring ruckus clouds lively game
By Ted Corbett
KANDY, MARCH 9. It was the best of days; it was the worst of
days.
England built a lead of 90, and then tore the second Test from
Sri Lanka with a fine burst of new ball pace. The rest of the
third day was a new shambles of bad umpiring from the local man
B.C. Cooray, made worse by a newspaper headline ``Cooray bats for
England,'' shouts of ``Cooray is a cheat'' from the crowd and
abuse from the players of his national side.
There are two views of this demonstration of Z-grade umpiring.
The old-fashioned view is that the players have created this
monster by their constant appealing, their refusal to walk and
their disinclination to give any umpire the sort of help that
made county cricket a by-word for honesty.
The modern thinking is that we must go for more technology, make
greater use of the third umpire and even consider abolish their
role altogether. I go with the 21st century opinion but before
there are major changes in umpiring there will be a prolonged
debate. Let it begin now.
Before lunch Alec Stewart and Craig White attacked with care
until White was stumped going after Jayasuriya's first ball at
373. Stewart had already been allowed to carry on batting by
Cooray when there was a clear catch at short leg. Soon after
lunch he was given out even though the television pictures showed
the ball had touched the ground as Jayawardene caught it.
Ashley Giles and Andrew Caddick gave Muttiah Muralitharan his
third and fourth wickets, both bowled playing a big shot, but for
the next hour Robert Croft and Darren Gough added 41 runs that
must have irritated Sri Lanka until Chaminda Vaas had Gough
plainly lbw.
A lead of 90 was more than Sri Lanka could shrug off and when
Marvan Atapattu was caught behind the wicket in the first Gough
over it was a bad blow to their hopes of winning. With only half
the time consumed a draw was out of the question and in the next
two overs, when two more batsmen were out, an England victory
looked certain. But once again there was a storm of protest at
the decisions.
Jayasuriya stretched out for Caddick's opening delivery and sent
the ball screaming into the slips where Graham Thorpe leapt
sideways to take an astounding left-handed catch. Cooray moved
across to square leg to ask Rudi Koertzen, the South African if
the ball had been taken cleanly and received a nod. Jayasuriya
went slowly but when he heard the crowd calling that he had hit
the ball hard into the ground he slowed and when he reached the
pavilion threw his helmet into the wall. Mike Atherton and Kumar
Sangakkara, the other batsman, both addressed heated words to
umpire Koertzen. The game cannot afford any more such nightmarish
scenes.
In Gough's second over Aravinda de Silva aimed a hook at a rising
ball and was ruled - by Koertzen - to have touched it with his
glove. So three wickets were down for three runs in 14 balls and
the game inevitably set for an England victory.
White bowled Jayawardene with his off break in the tenth over,
Sangakkara and Russel Arnold put on 39 before Croft trapped
Arnold lbw, Tillekaratne Dilshan was caught at slip for nought
and with just two overs to bowl Sri Lanka went into the lead. The
game cannot last long tomorrow when Sri Lanka restart eight ahead
and only four wickets standing.
This infamous match will not be remembered for the batsmanship,
which has been courageous and inspired, nor the bowling in which
Murali's marathon performance has been wonderful, nor the
catching of White, nor Thorpe.
Cricket has been sullied by the controversy surrounding ten or
more decisions wrongly given by both umpires which have produced
a bitterness closely resembling that in the 1992 series between
England and Pakistan when ball tampering caused chaos.
There have also been allegations that Jayasuriya made a racist
remark but the Sri Lanka board explained tonight that there had
been an error in translation.
These two Tests have produced the umpire's equivalent of the
Bodyline series which forced major changes in the laws and the
series may have ruined the careers of officials from the world
list. ICC must send a delegation to watch the last match so that
they can judge how desperately the game needs a wash and brush-
up.
Send this article to Friends by E-Mail
|
|
Section : Sport Previous : One match suspension for Slater Next : Good start by Windies | |
|
Front Page |
National |
Southern States |
Other States |
International |
Opinion |
Business |
Sport |
Miscellaneous |
Features |
Classifieds |
Employment |
Index |
Home | |
|
Copyrights © 2001 The Hindu Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu |
|