Why? Other sports do it. I'd like to see a cap of two incorrect referrals per innings per team. It can only be referred in cases where a player's status in terms of being out or not out is at stake and can be initiated by the fielding captain or the batsman. The third umpire cannot use any predictive technology, but can use snickometer, hotspot and any other tools he has, including hawkeye, but only to see where the ball pitched and hit the batsman and not where it might have gone. The third umpire will uphold whatever decision the umpire on the field has made (whether out or not out) unless he sees compelling evidence that leads to the conclusion that the decision rendered on the field is wrong beyond reasonable doubt. In case of doubt, the decision made by the umpires on the field will stand.It's good to see an increased use of Technology. Although I'm not sure that putting option of when & where to use it in the players hands is a good thing...
Slightly different then in that the umpires referred decisions - in this case the teams can ask the umpires to refer.um...they did this like 2 or 3 years ago in the Aus vs World XI matches, which btw we dominated.
um...they did this like 2 or 3 years ago in the Aus vs World XI matches, which btw we dominated.
From what I can remember, not a huge amount was referred. Would've been better if the proposal was extended for a larger period of time back then IMO (would've been more worthwhile than the useless Super Sub rule) to actually determine if it'd be relatively successful.um...they did this like 2 or 3 years ago in the Aus vs World XI matches, which btw we dominated.
Naah, it's absolutely rubbish. Two groups of 7 and top four go through to quarter-finals? The group stages basically won't matter at all except maybe for England and West Indies, and the winner is the one who has luck in three successive games.Interesting also that the World Cup will be reduced to 14 sides. As much as the non-associate followers will be disappointed, I think its a better format than four groups of 16. However I still think three groups of 5, with a Super 6, would be the way to go.
Without wanting to sidetrack too far from the main topic, I think two groups of 7 will work better than 4 of 4 (as in the event of an upset a side is stuffed, i.e. in the case of Pakistan at the 2007 WC). I do tend to agree that it goes a bit far the other way, in that group matches lose a bit of their meaning. Though as I suggested earlier, three groups of five provides a good balance IMO.Naah, it's absolutely rubbish. Two groups of 7 and top four go through to quarter-finals? The group stages basically won't matter at all except maybe for England and West Indies, and the winner is the one who has luck in three successive games.
Referrals might work though.
Actually. I was at the World XI test in Sydney, and "Rudi the Referrer" sent nearly everything upstairs. it got a bitmuch, actually.From what I can remember, not a huge amount was referred. Would've been better if the proposal was extended for a larger period of time back then IMO (would've been more worthwhile than the useless Super Sub rule) to actually determine if it'd be relatively successful.
Haha, yea. I can't stand that line of reasoning.I just hope we don't end up with the usual morons leaping in afterwards saying such stuff as only 99.9% decisions were right so it's a waste of time.