silentstriker
The Wheel is Forever
But what's wrong with that? Bad decisions tend to affect everyone relatively equally, while this situation is unique to one (or a small minority) of people. So obviously the response is going to be different.The first point you raise is fair enough & I did actually qualify what I said to accepted (in the sense that an umpire's probity isn't called into question if he makes an incorrect shout on an LBW), but does rather miss my point, which was that if the technology is available why isn't it used? My question was rhetorical in case that wasn't initially clear. The obvious answer is that there isn't the political will behind it to force the change through. Murali's action (& by extension chucking) is a cause celeb in a way the use of Hawkeye isn't.
No, but seeing a law that isn't working because most people are already in violation of it is certainly a compelling reason to change it. Or enforce it equally for everyone who is violating it (all the fast bowlers, most of the slow bowlers).BoyBrumby said:The second point (whilst appreciating you may just be playing devil's advocate) is rather easier to counter. Not enforcing a law because it might ruin a transgressor’s career doesn't seem a very compelling reason not to enforce it.
Who is saying the transgressors shouldn't be punished? The problem was that the laws weren't enforced equally since it was proven a lot of bowlers had a worse bend than Murali and weren't reprimanded (like McGrath, Lee, etc). The point is that of several pages ago change the law to say that people should be banned if they look like they are throwing, than that's another story. But that was never the law. We just came upon the technology recently that proved that the law did not work.BoyBrumby said:Chucking is a serious accusation, but let's get some perspective here, sportspeople constantly bend & breaks laws in an attempt to gain an advantage in any way they can. Why should chucking be seen as somehow the exception that no-one would possibly ever countenance? Could it just possibly be that some bowlers bend (ha!) the laws on flexion to gain an edge over the opposition on occasion?* If so, shouldn't they be punished?
No one is saying that this replacement is perfect either. Unless someone can prove the explanation of the optical illusion wrong, or show me that even guys with perfect actions like McGrath didn't chuck under the old rules but Murali did...I don't see why we should continue to live under a delusional law.
I just want the law, whatever it is, enforced equally. That's not too much to ask in sport, surely?