Nah you can't let bowlers like Giles be successful in Tests ffs. Good law IMO.The LBW thing I really don't get is why balls that pitch outside leg can't be out LBW but balls that pitch outside off can be.
Racist against legspinners imo
I'm just reminded of Paul Harris trying (and failing) to control Sehwag by bowling outside leg all day. It was so satisfying everytime Sehwag moved down leg and smashed him through the covers.The LBW thing I really don't get is why balls that pitch outside leg can't be out LBW but balls that pitch outside off can be.
Racist against legspinners imo
Leg spin is attacking bowling many times. Wouldn't this rule lead to leg theory for the leg spinner a lot?The LBW thing I really don't get is why balls that pitch outside leg can't be out LBW but balls that pitch outside off can be.
Racist against legspinners imo
This doesn't make sense tho. The amount of ball that needs to hit the stump is decided by the error margin of hawkeye. It's not an arbitrary figure.I would prefer to see batsman with the benefit but the "amount" of ball needing to hit to trigger the doubt be lowered, maybe to 1/4 of the edge of the stump instead of 1/2 of the centre.
This is just not correct. It is an arbitrary figure.This doesn't make sense tho. The amount of ball that needs to hit the stump is decided by the error margin of hawkeye. It's not an arbitrary figure.
The hawkeye prediction is correct to within half the width of the ball. Therefore when only half the ball is hitting the stump, this means that it is possible that, had the ball been allowed to continue it's path, it may not have hit the stumps at all, or it may have hit the stump on the full. We cannot predict which would have happen. Therefore we let the on-field decision stand.
Just because it was originally introduced to overrule really bad decisions is no reason it can't be used to improve other bad decisions too.DRS is to overrule obviously bad decision, not to help us be 100% correct on marginal calls.
And that's pretty much what it's doing in a rising tide lifts all boats sorta way. Standards have increased, there are far fewer howlers than ever and even the definition of what constitutes a howler has changed.Just because it was originally introduced to overrule really bad decisions is no reason it can't be used to improve other bad decisions too.
I once played in a match and I was out plumb lbw and the umpire didn't fire me because the other team were being jerks and were suing the league and he wanted us to win.Just because it was originally introduced to overrule really bad decisions is no reason it can't be used to improve other bad decisions too.
The lbw rule states that umpires must assume the ball wouldn't change path after impact.I once played in a match and I was out plumb lbw and the umpire didn't fire me because the other team were being jerks and were suing the league and he wanted us to win.
Later in the inning I was standing at the non strikers end and the ball went through the gate and should have clean bowled the batsman but at the last second it swung and missed the stumps.
"That is why I didn't give you out hurricane"
Which was bs. I knew why he didn't give me out.
But the delivery has been etched in my mind since. I won't give an lbw unless it is plumb and you are caught on the crease.
The cricket ball path is impossible to project with certainty due to the unpredictability of it (as I saw that day)
Using hawkeye for too great a role would be errant. My humble opinion only.
Hadn't thought of this one, don't mind it.tbh I think the system is almost perfect the way it is. I believe "benefit of the doubt going with the umpire" is how it should be, however I feel that the margin of "Umpires call" is too big. You can have balls demolishing off-stump but still remaining not out because less than half the ball is going to be hitting. The Margin needs to be reduced. Margin of error of hawkeye isn't that big.
And imagine how pissed you'd be as a bowling side if you used your referral because batsman was given not out when ball was hitting off stump, and not only does the decision remain not out because only 49.9% of the ball is hitting but you lose your review when technically the decision should have been out.
Another change that could be made is for the review to only be lost by the challenging team if it is genuinely a bad review. And No loss of review for an "Umpires call" decision.
I am comfortable with some thing on these lines as well..Yeah I wouldn't mind the guideline for Umpire's Call changing. I mean, when the middle of the ball is impacting 1mm away from the centre of leg stump, Umpire's Call is taking the piss a bit. Should be any part of the ball impacts with the middle of leg stump, or the middle of the ball impacts with any part of the stump. Apply the arbitrary 'margin of error-slash-we don't want to fundamentally change the game' rule in a slightly more simple fashion.