Richard
Cricket Web Staff Member
You know, on first glance I thought that said "MSN banned", was likeMNS banned hey, itstl
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You know, on first glance I thought that said "MSN banned", was likeMNS banned hey, itstl
Aye, that'll be it.I think its simple.
Maybe just make it simple.
One's not enough because freak decisions and situations do come up - definitely should allow two unsuccessful referrals per innings.Manee said:I think teams should have just one unsuccessful referral per innings with all technology available used (snikometer, the predictive measure of hawkeye*, hotspot). This way, batsmen would be insane to refer a decision which is out and we can get the best possible decision without clogging up the game any more than necessary.
...Richard said:The undermining of the authority of the Umpire already mentioned before the damn thing was trialled - which some people seem to like the idea of doing but which is a) useless and b) counter-productive
If something isn't working, you figure out what's wrong and fix it. You don't just throw it away, not unless the alternative is good enough (given the number of pathetic decisions made by on-field umpires, it certainly isn't).Richard said:It patently isn't helping a great deal
Interesting idea. How about both - something like official reviews and challenges in the NFL? Obviously, the umpires would have to be smart about when to use official reviews (they already do it for questionable catches and run outs, but when else?).SJS said:I think the only referal system that is worth having is where the onfield umpires refer to the third umpire for clarification in case of doubt (regarding pitching of ball outside leg stump, point of contact, clean catch, bat pad etc). Let him get the feedback from the off field umpire with the help of TV, replays etc and if it makes his doubt disappear - good, if not the 'benefit of doubt to batsman' remains.
It should be possible for ICC to instruct the ump[ires not to hesitate to refer and that a referal would not be considered as signs of a less competent umpire while a wrong decision where a referal might have helped might be.
Exactly.silentstriker said:Fire the morons who willfully refuse to follow the rules. You only overturn if you're sure. They don't do that. Start fining them for such obvious mistakes. ICC is very fond of fining players their match fees - time to do that to the umpires.
If you see three replays from two angles, and with the hotspot, snicko, hawkeye, and you can't decide, then the onfield decision stands. That's it. If its not obvious, you don't change it. The whole point of the system is to get rid of the crazy obvious calls, not nitpick 50/50 decisions.
This pisses me off so much - I will bet ICC will blame the system and not their implementation of it, and use it as an excuse to abandon the whole thing.
The system is flawed in some regards but it really isn't that complicated. I don't usually complain about on-field umpiring (even though I'm sure there are far better umpires that aren't in the "elite" panel) because I know how difficult it can be, but the majority of posters on CW could use the current referral system correctly every time IMO.It's not remotely surprising that people can't implement a system that makes things so ridiculously needlessly overcomplicated.
If you make the information available BEFORE THE DECISION IS MADE rather than after, it will be infinitely less convoluted with possibilities than it is now.
What's the point in using a complicated system when a simpler one would do a better job?
All of this should've been thought about before. This diabolical system should never, ever have been used.
Disagree. Because then you'll get lost in the 50-50 decisions, which aren't the point of the system.The 3rd Ump should be able to make a decision independent of the on-field umpire's decision, not start with the premise that the on-field umpire's decision must be obviously wrong in order to be overruled.
The alternative is not using on-field Umpires only, but using a system that uses maximum replay-and-technology available. I hated the referrals system idea before it was used and hate it even more now, and hope it's scrapped. If it takes a bit of time to put in the ideal system, I'm happy - I prefer the on-field-only one to the current nonsense.If something isn't working, you figure out what's wrong and fix it. You don't just throw it away, not unless the alternative is good enough (given the number of pathetic decisions made by on-field umpires, it certainly isn't).