honestbharani
Whatever it takes!!!
Yes.. 6 cameras and hundreds of data points. I read that. But it still does get it wrong, which is the crux. It can assume the ball will go the same way of how it was going on impact but will never provide for the exaggerated seam/swing/spin that many bowlers get, that umpires try to provide for. And by giving the tracking upto impact, you are empowering the umpire with the same data you provide to hawkeye to make that prediction. And if that is taken care of, I always trust an experienced umpire to make a better prediction of where the ball would have gone than technology, which, while it has all the data is generally dumb when it comes to judgements.Do you actually know what UDRS does?
It tracks the ball. Using the real data, it can form a prediction of what the ball will do after it hits the pad. Not that it matters when you refer to the rules outlined before.
And yes it most certainly can. UDRS has hundreds, if not thousands, of data points plotted to know how the ball has already moved, meaning it can plot the rest of the trend reasonably accurately. The human eye gets less than a second to process everything it sees, and no replays.