Though I would acknowledge that just any type of technology will occasionally create a false positive, I don't think I recall a number of examples of a small mark on the bat showing up when the ball hasn't hit it. Maybe I should watch more cricket....The no false positives thing is a blatant mistruth. I have seen a number of examples of a small mark on the bat showing up when the ball hasn't hit it. The reason why I know they haven't hit it is the mark shows up a little lower or higher than where the ball passes through, but that's just by pure luck.
Please stop trotting out the false positive thing, if you watch enough cricket you will realise it's just not true.
The only truly close-to-accurate measure is snicko.
Rookie mistake. But I'm sure the young man will learn from this whole sordid affair and come back even stronger.benchmark00 lives to regret taking his foot off the pedal: hotspot set to feature in the ashes afterall. also something to do with snicko.
i hope benchmark00 learns that even when it looks like you've won, you've still gotta apply pressure
Not much more that needs to be said. I hear the jabberings of those who disagree but they are irrelevant, unpersuasive and/or wrongthoughts on this:
1. It's ludicrous that the broadcaster has to pay for a component of an official system. Sure the costs are probably passed on to CA in terms of the broadcasting deals, but if it's an official system, the funds should come directly from the governing body.
2. Hot spot can be used effectively if it's a positive-only indicator - i.e. absence of an edge on hotspot is not enough to overturn a decision, but presence of an edge is. If the umpires understand these limitations, it's probably more comprehensive than any other component of the DRS in terms of unarguably overturning incorrect decisions.
3. The idea that ANY of these components is fool-proof is stupid. One has to use the technologies as components of a system and understand the strengths and weaknesses of each.
4. When hotspot fails, it hasn't overturned a decision. At the absolute worst, the on field decision stays - therefore, it simply cannot be worse than not having it there. But it can be better. It can overturn incorrect decisions. It's a net positive. The outrage against the DRS in the Ashes ignored the fact that the umpires had to make the decisions first and foremost. Even a failure is at worse equal to the status quo. I agree that hotspot in combination with snicko would be more effective than hotspot alone. Again, these technologies need to be used in concert with one another.
Hawkeye said "be there at the end" and it will bewhat a comeback from hotspot, a cinderella story
Quite.Think you just wrote your business card.