Exactly...I don't understand why we even need Hawkeye to determine those things like pitched in line, hit in line etc. Surely a simple frame-by-frame replay with a standard stump-to-stump overlay would suffice - hopefully that will actually be the way it happens in practice and people are just being a bit tunnel-visioned.
It hit him miles offside off stump and even a real time replay let alone a slow motion would have sufficed for that.Wasn't the whole controversy about Simon Taufel giving Sachin out LBW in England last time based on a Hawkeye projection which showed the ball missing the stumps?
My one grouse with UDRS + Hawkeye is that when the ball is shown to be fractionally pitching/hitting in line, or fractionally hitting the stumps in the Hawkeye predictor, batsman should be given the benefit of doubt regardless of the original decision. I wouldn't want a batsman to be hanged on that evidence, but I'm OK with a bowler being denied a wicket in those cases.Think 54% pitching in line was considered to be overturned under the UDRS + Hawkeye system.
That was 6 years ago so obviously the technology would have improved significantly since. It's also worth noting it's not every day a ball goes at what seems like right angles after pitching...It hit him miles offside off stump and even a real time replay let alone a slow motion would have sufficed for that.
Besides didn't Shane Warne beat the Hawkeye system in 2005 ,where the ball was shown missing the stumps when the bails were in fact lying comfortably on the ground ,with regards to the dismissal of Andrew strauss?
Are you a Batsman yourself?My one grouse with UDRS + Hawkeye is that when the ball is shown to be fractionally pitching/hitting in line, or fractionally hitting the stumps in the Hawkeye predictor, batsman should be given the benefit of doubt regardless of the original decision. I wouldn't want a batsman to be hanged on that evidence, but I'm OK with a bowler being denied a wicket in those cases.
nah, I'm for anything that is in favour of the bowlersMy one grouse with UDRS + Hawkeye is that when the ball is shown to be fractionally pitching/hitting in line, or fractionally hitting the stumps in the Hawkeye predictor, batsman should be given the benefit of doubt regardless of the original decision. I wouldn't want a batsman to be hanged on that evidence, but I'm OK with a bowler being denied a wicket in those cases.
Not a very good one.Are you a Batsman yourself?
Haha, I think the technology's accuracy itself shouldn't be in much doubt, at least not in the cases you cited such as doosra, spin, inconsistent bounce etc. which I think are pretty irrelevant if the cameras have collected enough data after the ball has pitched.That is pretty much my grouss as well(though i don't agree about your verdict),as i don't think Hawkeye can be relied upon to make marginal calls as it's accuracy is still in question for me and the makers accept it to a certain extent too.
So until the parameters to remove that margin in terms of implementation of Hawkeye is ascertained ,i am fine with not using it.
So what were you debating with me about in the other thread?
DWTA, the basic nature of the game (i.e. it takes only one good ball/bad shot for a batsman to get out) remains the same.nah, I'm for anything that is in favour of the bowlers
batsman have it far too easy nowadays
No...I'd say Hawkeye is the most important element. LBWs are the ones a human is most likely to get wrong, surely.
+1I don't understand why we even need Hawkeye to determine those things like pitched in line, hit in line etc. Surely a simple frame-by-frame replay with a standard stump-to-stump overlay would suffice - hopefully that will actually be the way it happens in practice and people are just being a bit tunnel-visioned.
Not really; it is a clear compromise.BCCI 1 - RoW 0