Daemon
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Agree with all this.This is essentially the crucial point.
Players, captains and managers whinging about match officials is endemic in all team sports I pay even the vaguest notice of; in any given Premiership weekend some manager will bemoan how a penalty, a non-award of the same or a mildly contentious offside has cost his team, etc. After the 2003 rugby union world cup final (which his team won) Sir Clive Woodward (correctly) suggested weak refereeing of the scrum by Andre Watson had nearly cost his team the win.
However, what unites most who complain about the standard of officiating is that they want more help for the chaps who make the on-field calls, not less. In Dhoni's case there is a system that can be used to correct some of the errors the standing umpires make, but his board, for their own reasons, oppose(d) it. If you willingly choose to blindfold your keeper is it fair to complain that he can't see the ball?
Any obfuscating comparisons to Stuart "His Dad's a Match Referre, You Know" Broad's massively irriating refusal to appeal for LBWs or Ricky Ponting's serial umpire abusing (both of which are/were, frankly, disgraceful) are from the "two wrongs make a right" school.
About that highlighted part though, opting for no UDRS does not mean handicapping the umpires (blindfolding the keeper), it just means that they're not given an additional tool (which they never had anyways for ages) and for that reason I believe Harper shouldn't be immune from criticism. In this case however, the criticism came in the wrong form and via the wrong means.