This is the problem expressed in as few words as possible. It's kind of farcical that Bell would have been given out if he was say, only 2.49 metres down the crease. Assuming that the reason they have set this arbitrary number is that they don't have faith in Hawkeye's accuracy, it only puts further doubt into the viewer's mind as to whether the technology is reliable.why is it not 2.4 or 2? Who decides this arbitrary number?
India v England: MS Dhoni angered by UDRS ruling | Cricket News | ICC Cricket World Cup 2011 | ESPN CricinfoThe 2.5m rule has been put into place because it is from that point onwards that the precision of the ball tracking technology begins to reduce.
You have to? The only source of imprecision can be determining position and velocity of the ball (and since cricket ball is a massive object, Heisenberg's uncertainty principle need not bother us ). Larger the distance the ball has to travel, more is the imprecision magnified. You draw a line to account for that? No. Leave it to the engineers to determine a confidence region for a certain level of acceptable probability.You have to draw the line somewhere.
That is a good idea. But what we have is still better than having howlers.You have to? The only source of imprecision can be determining position and velocity of the ball (and since cricket ball is a massive object, Heisenberg's uncertainty principle need not bother us ). Larger the distance the ball has to travel, more is the imprecision magnified. You draw a line to account for that? No. Leave it to the engineers to determine a confidence region for a certain level of acceptable probability.
Problem is when you mix technology and human judgement, that too of those who possibly aren't trained in basics of physics or statistics. This is when you get arbitrary rules like 2.49 m is acceptable even if the ball is hitting the top of the off stump, but 2.5 m is not even if the ball is hitting middle of middle stump. Leave it to engineers once it goes upstairs, just give them a probability level you are happy to accept (95% or whatever). Give them a specification, they will make a tool.
The technology is fine. The problem in this instance was Billy Bowden, who after looking at the review decided that Ian Bell being more than 2.5m down the pitch introduced enough doubt to reprieve him despite being hit in line and HawkEye predicting that the ball would have gone on to hit middle stump halfway up.This is the problem expressed in as few words as possible. It's kind of farcical that Bell would have been given out if he was say, only 2.49 metres down the crease. Assuming that the reason they have set this arbitrary number is that they don't have faith in Hawkeye's accuracy, it only puts further doubt into the viewer's mind as to whether the technology is reliable.
Yeah, I agree with you. Complete lack of common sense from Bowden there. I'd be inclined to go along with Ankit's suggestion of removing the arbitrary 2.5m down the pitch thing and leave it to someone to design a program that outputs "out" or "not out" based on whether the margin of impact of the ball with the stumps is within an acceptable confidence interval or not.The technology is fine. The problem in this instance was Billy Bowden, who after looking at the review decided that Ian Bell being more than 2.5m down the pitch introduced enough doubt to reprieve him despite being hit in line and HawkEye predicting that the ball would have gone on to hit middle stump halfway up.
That's not a flaw in the UDRS system, it's a serious flaw in Bowden's decision making process.
I can't agree it's a rubbish article, as it explained to me what, not having been able to watch the game, I didn't fully appreciate about the situation until I read it (sadly I was visiting a BSkyB less elderly relative yesterday afternoon) but I agree entirely that Bowden was at fault, and that UDRS cannot be expected to cope with irrational decision making by the human beings involvedAbsolutely rubbish article.
The flaw isn't in the system. The fault here lies with Billy Bowden.
This is a brilliant idea.Yeah, I agree with you. Complete lack of common sense from Bowden there. I'd be inclined to go along with Ankit's suggestion of removing the arbitrary 2.5m down the pitch thing and leave it to someone to design a program that outputs "out" or "not out" based on whether the margin of impact of the ball with the stumps is within an acceptable confidence interval or not.
No. you missed the premise of the piece but you have stated that in your comment. I bolded that part. The broader picture we are looking at is the system having to depend on Billy Bowden and not trusting the system itself.The technology is fine. The problem in this instance was Billy Bowden, who after looking at the review decided that Ian Bell being more than 2.5m down the pitch introduced enough doubt to reprieve him despite being hit in line and HawkEye predicting that the ball would have gone on to hit middle stump halfway up.
That's not a flaw in the UDRS system, it's a serious flaw in Bowden's decision making process.
Thanks for this Kind comment.Absolutely rubbish article.
The flaw isn't in the system. The fault here lies with Billy Bowden.
Bingo Sir.I can't agree it's a rubbish article, as it explained to me what, not having been able to watch the game, I didn't fully appreciate about the situation until I read it (sadly I was visiting a BSkyB less elderly relative yesterday afternoon) but I agree entirely that Bowden was at fault, and that UDRS cannot be expected to cope with irrational decision making by the human beings involved
The sad part is the human beings being invovled as part of the system.UDRS cannot be expected to cope with irrational decision making by the human beings involved
From what I read yesterday that is already in place - it has to be hitting the middle of middle to be within the accepted limit when the impact is that far away though. Bell's was actually hitting middle and off.Yeah, I agree with you. Complete lack of common sense from Bowden there. I'd be inclined to go along with Ankit's suggestion of removing the arbitrary 2.5m down the pitch thing and leave it to someone to design a program that outputs "out" or "not out" based on whether the margin of impact of the ball with the stumps is within an acceptable confidence interval or not.
Sounds dodgy. It has to be hitting middle of middle if impact is 2.5m away, but can be hitting only one stump, or the top of the stumps from, say, 2.25m? Doesn't make any sense at all.From what I read yesterday that is already in place - it has to be hitting the middle of middle to be within the accepted limit when the impact is that far away though. Bell's was actually hitting middle and off.
I can only guess that there's something about the 2.5m distance that means there's too much extrapolation involved - may be something to do with what is a normal length of delivery so there's sufficient information to get a more reliable prediction?Sounds dodgy. It has to be hitting middle of middle if impact is 2.5m away, but can be hitting only one stump, or the top of the stumps from, say, 2.25m? Doesn't make any sense at all.
Thats just a cop out.I can only guess that there's something about the 2.5m distance that means there's too much extrapolation involved - may be something to do with what is a normal length of delivery so there's sufficient information to get a more reliable prediction?
Of course on many occasions if it's just hitting one stump then it's deemed not conclusive anyway.
Either way, the key thing to remember in this case is that if UDRS weren't in place, it wouldn't have changed the outcome so this cannot be used as a reason to not employ the UDRS.