Wtf does that have to do with the UDRS?Remember, how Stuart Broad and James Anderson cheated in South Africa 2010 by placing their shoe over the ball as an attempt to tamper the ball?
Makes me wonder which coward nation introduced the 2 bouncer per over rule?BCCI's latest strategy to avoid a repeat of the England and Australia tour drubbings:
ICC news : India threaten pull-out over DRS | Cricket News | Cricinfo ICC Site | ESPN Cricinfo
On a more serious note please GTFO of cricket.
I mentioned the word MANIPULATION. Hosts can manipulate mintue things to bring results in their favour, and DRS is not alone here.Wtf does that have to do with the UDRS?
Oh boy this is going to get so nasty.
It doesn't have to. Can we not feed the troll everyone? Please?Wtf does that have to do with the UDRS?
Oh boy this is going to get so nasty.
Couple of decades? More like the last decade or so.India acts exactly as they have done for the last, nearly, couple of decades - acting the bully
thats a good point. i read somehwere that india used to rule the world in hockey but then people in power slowly changed everything about the gameCouple of decades? More like the last decade or so.
Before that other boards were the bullies for the longest time. Happens in every sport where those that hold the money power act as a bully. See Hockey and astro turf being brought in and how offside rule was removed.
If they articulated their objections then it would be a formality to address them and get on with the proper implementation of UDRS.Thought the initial concerns were about the accuracy and opaqueness of the Hawkeye after impact, which hadn't been fully tested and was unverified with big concerns on whether it was even more accurate than umpires. The working equipment was also not given access too by the technology provider as per terms of the contract.
But now they are just being shunts for the sake of being shunts. Dunno, what Srinivasan wants? It's weird as they don't even articulate what problem exactly they have and how it can be solved?
Jailtey takes over as president in 2014 and hopefully he won't do a Srinivasan. Seems a more balanced person.
Apologies for talking about other sports on CW, but then since we've been going on about politics for some time, I figured we already burnt that bridge. Astroturfs were introduced in Hockey in the 70s, and have led to increase in player safety, a faster, more precise game, and low maintenance costs. That is the official stand. What it also led to was the dethroning of then champions, India and Pakistan. With astroturf, the major skill-set required to excel was that of the European style of play, i.e. endurance and strength, and precise passing. The Indians and Pakistanis relied much more on the dribbling and ball trapping skills, and know-how of playing on the field. Moreover, at that point of time, the Indian and Pakistani board weren't rich enough to be able to implement the astroturf on their home grounds, and thus were not able to compete at the international level.thats a good point. i read somehwere that india used to rule the world in hockey but then people in power slowly changed everything about the game
Yes astro turf was brought. But many other countries just went ahead and started using astro-turf in all their major centres. India just refused and except for Delhi, they did not have astro-turf anywhere in the country. Everytime the team had to go out of the country to play, the players had to be brought to Delhi for a quick camp and getting used to astro-turf.thats a good point. i read somehwere that india used to rule the world in hockey but then people in power slowly changed everything about the game
You didn't get the point. Yes, the world has to adapt but decisions in every sport are forced by those holding money power. Especially, in sports with smaller number of nations.Yes astro turf was brought. But many other countries just went ahead and started using astro-turf in all their major centres. India just refused and except for Delhi, they did not have astro-turf anywhere in the country. Everytime the team had to go out of the country to play, the players had to be brought to Delhi for a quick camp and getting used to astro-turf.
Of course, that wasn't enough.
The rough and uneven grounds of the past were ideal for the short pass and the ball control of the Indian and Pakistani players where as the smooth, consistent astro-turf meant players with less than the fabulous stickwork of the sub-continental players could now resort to trapping and hard hitting, long passes and suddenly from field goal artists, the penalty corner specialists became the stars. The game changed. But the same had happened when tennis started moving away from grass courts. The world just adapted.
Indians refused to do so for a couple of decades and by the time they got astroturf all over the country, they had lost an entire generation of players and the country's rankings in the sport had hit rock bottom.
What's the point in talking of conspiracy theories?
wow. what a story. little wonder then that hockey isn't really a global sport.Apologies for talking about other sports on CW, but then since we've been going on about politics for some time, I figured we already burnt that bridge. Astroturfs were introduced in Hockey in the 70s, and have led to increase in player safety, a faster, more precise game, and low maintenance costs. That is the official stand. What it also led to was the dethroning of then champions, India and Pakistan. With astroturf, the major skill-set required to excel was that of the European style of play, i.e. endurance and strength, and precise passing. The Indians and Pakistanis relied much more on the dribbling and ball trapping skills, and know-how of playing on the field. Moreover, at that point of time, the Indian and Pakistani board weren't rich enough to be able to implement the astroturf on their home grounds, and thus were not able to compete at the international level.
Administrators failed to realize that players who have spent a great part of their lives developing skills on natural turf cannot just change their game overnight and perform on synthetic turf. The kind of adjustments required in speed, endurance, anticipation, and more importantly, ball distribution skills were significant enough to render the Indian teams largely ineffective in most situations. Natural turf with its uneven bounce requires players to watch the ball closely till the last second to control the ball. Astro turf with its predictable bounce and speed requires players to commit to the ball as early as possible. Also, shouldn't the administrators have at least made sure that the two champion teams from their era would be given enough funds to become competitive in this format, or at least made the change very gradually as to not render them incompetent.
The transformation of the game in the 70s resulted in a "product" that was definitely a faster brand of field hockey with swift crisp passes – a perfect stage to showcase pure athletic skills. One can say that field hockey now resembles a crude version of ice hockey. The European and American audiences haven't fall for this bait – ice hockey continues to dominate their mind space and field hockey has never really taken off there. At the same time, Indian audiences have increasingly lost interest in the game as their teams could never adapt to synthetic turf. Not only has the new game of hockey failed to attract world-wide audiences, it has blatantly ignored the biggest sport market for hockey in the world.