No one is asking you to imagine it. If it really bothers you that much then you should stick to watching the series where UDRS is being used.Having followed a team who have played their last 4 series with UDRS, I can't imagine Test cricket without it.
Yeah, you must have watched a different Ashes then, The one I watched had the Aussie Captain did a lot of song and dance.There were plenty of umpiring errors made in the Ashes. The reason there's been no song and dance about them is because there was a system in place to rectify those errors.
I presume for the away series the host broadcaster couldn't provide ir.Why not?
It kind of feels like you've seen the point and then deliberately went the other way here. Ponting acted like a tool, but that's nothing unusual. Check the fallout when there were bad decisions made from the previous Ashes series, on CW, the media and from the players. That isolated Ponting incident aside, which is more related to him being a tool than an issue with the system, there was pretty much nothing from either side because there was a system in place to reverse bad decisions.No one is asking you to imagine it. If it really bothers you that much then you should stick to watching the series where UDRS is being used.
Yeah, you must have watched a different Ashes then, The one I watched had the Aussie Captain did a lot of song and dance.
Which had nothing to do with the system and everything to do with Ponting being an idiot who didn't understand why Pietersen wasn't out.Yeah, you must have watched a different Ashes then, The one I watched had the Aussie Captain did a lot of song and dance.
Which one was a better series ? I resent the sentiment that Cricket is impossible to watch without UDRS and then the Ashes series is being brought up as some sort of model, which it clearly wasn't. No one is defending Ponting's behavior but on that day the technology could not and did not give a definitive answer.It kind of feels like you've seen the point and then deliberately went the other way here. Ponting acted like a tool, but that's nothing unusual. Check the fallout when there were bad decisions made from the previous Ashes series, on CW, the media and from the players. That isolated Ponting incident aside, which is more related to him being a tool than an issue with the system, there was pretty much nothing from either side because there was a system in place to reverse bad decisions.
It gave a pretty definitive not out.Which one was a better series ? I resent the sentiment that Cricket is impossible to watch without UDRS and then the Ashes series is being brought up as some sort of model, which it clearly wasn't. No one is defending Ponting's behavior but on that day the technology could not and did not give a definitive answer.
There is no need to make one understand, the technology should make the decision, out or not out. The fact that the umpires needed to explain the decision was proof enough that technology failed to convince.Which had nothing to do with the system and everything to do with Ponting being an idiot who didn't understand why Pietersen wasn't out.
I disagree, there was plenty of doubt. If some umpire had given out, there was no way technology would have reverted that decision.It gave a pretty definitive not out.
Do Indian conditions affect HawkEye now?How are UDRS or all these technologies designed to work in the Indian conditions ? Can someone explain ?
Was pretty clearly not out.Which one was a better series ? I resent the sentiment that Cricket is impossible to watch without UDRS and then the Ashes series is being brought up as some sort of model, which it clearly wasn't. No one is defending Ponting's behavior but on that day the technology could not and did not give a definitive answer.
You're right, apart from there being no mark on hotspot where the ball passed the bat, no noise, no deviation of the seam when looked at in ultramotion and no noise on snicko, there was plenty of doubt whether or not Pietersen had hit it.I disagree, there was plenty of doubt. If some umpire had given out, there was no way technology would have reverted that decision.
I'm not saying it's impossible to watch without UDRS, just that it's a much better game when obvious instances of umpiring error (such as the decisions to give Cook out caught off his shoulder at Adelaide, or Watson out off his arse at Perth I think) are able to be overturned and not potentially affect the outcome of the game.Which one was a better series ? I resent the sentiment that Cricket is impossible to watch without UDRS and then the Ashes series is being brought up as some sort of model, which it clearly wasn't. No one is defending Ponting's behavior but on that day the technology could not and did not give a definitive answer.
If you want people to accept technology, it is your job to convince them. Your behavior in explaining this less than satisfactory in fact it is rather condescending. If you took same attitude to implement technology in a real life business scenario , people will throw you out of their offices in no time.Do Indian conditions affect HawkEye now?
That's up to the BCCI. Good luck convincing them. They just barely started putting a TV camera at the domestic games.Have they implemented it in domestic cricket ?
You must have watched a different match then, to me it was not that clear and could have gone either way.Was pretty clearly not out.
Do they have data to back it up ? If it is that easy, I am sure it easy to produce the data.And HawkEye doesn't need to be adjusted for different conditions. I'm pretty sure it just tracks how the ball is bouncing and maps out it's future path, just as our eyes do. Except much better (hence the name).