Adders
Cricketer Of The Year
I think you've been hacked by Lokomotive.Your thoughts please...
I think you've been hacked by Lokomotive.Your thoughts please...
No, too slow, and it might create problems if management think it's too close to call.Two ideas from baseball's proposed DRS that may be of utility to cricket
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1. Teams will be allowed to view a replay before instigating a referral -- implicit to this, the coach/manager is in control of the decision to refer rather than on-field players. This measure is even easier to implement in cricket since team management sit in-front of tv screens for the duration of the game. Incidentally teams are only given 1 referral plus a bonus referral if the first one is correct. That's it. Honestly you don't need more if you have the opportunity to view it on a replay.
The DRS is meant to take the really poor decisions out of cricket, and it's up to the players to use implement it in a way that achieves this, if you run out of reviews and you get a howler go against you it's your own team's fault for abusing the system by using it on closer calls or you have poor judgement. In any case there will never be a clear line drawn between 'indisputable evidence' and not enough evidence2. In circumstances where teams don't have any referrals remaining after the 7th inning, the video umpire may still review decisions provided there is "indisputable video evidence" --- this implies a higher standard. This is trickier to interpret in a cricket context - presumably this would apply only to "Stuart Broad" situations and perhaps blatant edges in LBW decisions. However, i'm not sure what is equivalent to "after the 7th inning" in cricket. Something arbitrary like 5 or less wickets or 120 runs to win, 4th innings only?
" Too slow" is just a lame excuse for refusal to use technology. Period.No, too slow, and it might create problems if management think it's too close to call.
No, the DRS should not be just to get rid of howlers, it should be to correct every single incorrect decision. However, the basic criticism of DRS technology not being foolproof, is the most obvious stumbling block to the whole DRS argument. BCCI does have a point on it being misleading and counter-productive to treat imperfect outcomes as perfect from the technology provided. Football does not suffer from this (as in football, all techology used pertains to camera footage and camera angles) but cricket does. Hotspot, snicko, etc. are not foolproof and if they are, it hasn't been tested independently to come to such conclusions.The DRS is meant to take the really poor decisions out of cricket, and it's up to the players to use implement it in a way that achieves this, if you run out of reviews and you get a howler go against you it's your own team's fault for abusing the system by using it on closer calls or you have poor judgement. In any case there will never be a clear line drawn between 'indisputable evidence' and not enough evidence
Taking 2-3 hours to get through 1 hour of playtime is whats fundamentally wrong with American Sport" Too slow" is just a lame excuse for refusal to use technology. Period.
Take NFL for example. Its a game of 1 hour playtime, that is extended to 2.5 to 3 hours with all the breaks, referrals and getting to the line of scrimmage.
Yet, the use of technology has not made the game 'too long', it has made the game the single greatest team sport in the world on the basis of the best officiating & real time ruling made for a game. In this regard, it is not even a contest. Football is orders of magnitude ahead of every team sport in terms of getting correct decisions made, especially when you factor in that it is a contact sport, requiring regulating 'illegal modes of contact' between 20+ players in real time, yet it gets over 99% of its decisions right.
Whatever playtime lost or 'total game-time bloating' that is caused by the use of technology is sacrificial to the altar of near-perfect rulings that affect a game's outcome.
No, the DRS should not be just to get rid of howlers, it should be to correct every single incorrect decision. However, the basic criticism of DRS technology not being foolproof, is the most obvious stumbling block to the whole DRS argument. BCCI does have a point on it being misleading and counter-productive to treat imperfect outcomes as perfect from the technology provided. Football does not suffer from this (as in football, all techology used pertains to camera footage and camera angles) but cricket does. Hotspot, snicko, etc. are not foolproof and if they are, it hasn't been tested independently to come to such conclusions.
So the justification for anti-DRS stance should be on the basis of its technology not being open to scrutiny, not whether it slows the game down or not.
but it makes teh moniez so it must be perfect rightBecause what Test cricket really needs to do is get even longer.
The NFL is an absolute joke from that perspective, not a shining beacon of sporting efficiency.
How is it a joke ? The NFL satisfies the most basic requirement to being a successful sport: picture-perfect near-100% correct decision making, where less than 5 decisions for the whole season ( when each game has 100+ decisions and over 25 teams partake. Do the math!) are wrong.Because what Test cricket really needs to do is get even longer.
The NFL is an absolute joke from that perspective, not a shining beacon of sporting efficiency.
err no, that is a consequence of having sports that are far, far more legitimately officiated, leading to greater spectator participation. Though it is not true for ice hockey (another broken game, even more so than cricket due to erroneous and sub-standard officiating).Taking 2-3 hours to get through 1 hour of playtime is whats fundamentally wrong with American Sport
They are not mutually exclusive,neither does the word 'fundamental' imply singularity.weren't you saying the other week the fundamental yadda yadda of sport was to entertain?
Now you're harping on about it being about fairest contest. Make your mind up.
Cricket is quite different from gridiron.How is it a joke ? The NFL satisfies the most basic requirement to being a successful sport: picture-perfect near-100% correct decision making, where less than 5 decisions for the whole season ( when each game has 100+ decisions and over 25 teams partake. Do the math!) are wrong.
The greatest team sport is the one that has the least amount of ambiguity to the decision-making of the game. That would be football.So let me get this right. The latest weird theory is that the greatest team sport in the world is only actually seriously played in one country in the world. What total and utter bollocks.
WTF?? Did you seriously post that??The greatest team sport is the one that has the least amount of ambiguity to the decision-making of the game. That would be football.