more of this. That was hittingYes but the predicted path did have the ball hitting. Basically the predicted path just visibly didn't really look like what the ball was doing (to me). Maybe a combination of a bit of an optical illusion plus my own bias.
I reckon he hasn't even really looked properly at that Latham lbw, he's just seen it was a generally in-swinging ball and has decided it's "just clipping leg" when he has the technology right in front of him showing the ball hitting the entire leg stump and even further inside. It's just poor trolling.Yup, Smith embarrassing himself in the box. What's new?
Plus as umpire when you see a guy collapsing into a pull and still having the ball go under the bat you're naturally going to assume it's kept low. You'd have to hate on spinners pretty bad to not give that one in real time.Yeah you get a surprising amount of LBWs given on the pull, which you'd think wouldn't happen at all, simply because it looks so awful when you fall to your knees. Makes it look like it hit way lower than it really did, and it's always going to hit well back in the crease.
Smith was utterly unbearable when we took those early wickets at Lords earlier in the year. He's immeasurably worse as an "away" commentator, not that I'm much of a fan of his work at home either.I reckon he hasn't even really looked properly at that Latham lbw, he's just seen it was a generally in-swinging ball and has decided it's "just clipping leg" when he has the technology right in front of him showing the ball hitting the entire leg stump and even further inside. It's just poor trolling.
I always switch to radio when Smith is on. I assumed most real cricket fans did the same ...Yup, Smith embarrassing himself in the box. What's new?
I have the radio commentary on regardless of who's on c9, the coverage is consistently excellent and the delay for me is actually almost non-existent.I always switch to radio when Smith is on. I assumed most real cricket fans did the same ...
Has been some excellent radio today. Jim Maxwell is always good, but have been impressed by co-commentators Rogers and Nannes.
Different strokes for different folks I suppose, Personally I'm enjoying the rain.Anyway, as irritating as it was to see Lyon get worked repeatedly to square leg, that entire passage of play was great to watch.
This literally makes no sense. "Well it's technically out but we're going to overturn the decision anyway because we're not sure about it?"I dunno...it's probably bias as Thierry said but there's something that ****s me to tears about DRS. Umpires call is this massive circle jerk amongst officials to make their mates feel better about themselves. If it's hitting the stumps, it's out. If it's clipping, there's too much doubt associated with a system that is not 100% accurate and it's not out.
If you're going to use technology it shouldn't be governed at all by what a human thought in a split second on-field.
Benefit of the doubt to the batsman arguably as logical as it being determined by the initial decision, no?This literally makes no sense. "Well it's technically out but we're going to overturn the decision anyway because we're not sure about it?"
The reason umpire's call exists is so we don't suddenly overturn 120 years of umpiring convention by suddenly determining that really borderline decisions which would never be given out at any other level of cricket are suddenly given out.
Dunno about the "importance" of umpiring convention tbh. Doesn't umpiring convention exist because we didn't have the technology to know whether LBWs were hitting or not?The reason umpire's call exists is so we don't suddenly overturn 120 years of umpiring convention by suddenly determining that really borderline decisions which would never be given out at any other level of cricket are suddenly given out.
Mm, yeah, but benefit of the doubt to the batsman only applies when there's that sort of doubt in the human mind. It's hard to convince people about doubt when you have the ball actually predicted to hit the stumps.Benefit of the doubt to the batsman arguably as logical as it being determined by the initial decision, no?
I'd go the other way personally. Clipping = out
Umpiring convention is important so it retains at least some level of continuity between Test cricket and literally every other form of cricket. Batsmen shouldn't have to radically redesign their techniques - which they would if the stumps were effectively made way larger - just because they have to deal with Hawkeye.Dunno about the "importance" of umpiring convention tbh. Doesn't umpiring convention exist because we didn't have the technology to know whether LBWs were hitting or not?
It would definitely change the game but I wouldn't mind a system for LBWs where the umpire's call was irrelevant and it was simply out if it was hitting (with- comparative to the current system- a tiny margin of error where if it really was just faintly clipping, it was not-out) and not out if it wasn't.
Umpiring convention due to a former lack of technology is not the same as saying that the rule is that "it isn't out if it's only just hitting". If it's hitting, it's out.
Yeah I do essentially agree. What we've discovered since HawkEye us that the umpires had been getting a bunch of decisions wrong that no-one actually felt aggrieved about. This is problematic when devising a system to overturn poor umpiring decisions as you either end up changing the game significantly or just trying to find some sort of middle ground that amounts to "we want to overturn the random poor decisions that most umpires wouldn't get wrong without over-turning the ones that most umpires wouldn't have got right in the first place".Dunno about the "importance" of umpiring convention tbh. Doesn't umpiring convention exist because we didn't have the technology to know whether LBWs were hitting or not?
It would definitely change the game but I wouldn't mind a system for LBWs where the umpire's call was irrelevant and it was simply out if it was hitting (with- comparative to the current system- a tiny margin of error where if it really was just faintly clipping, it was not-out) and not out if it wasn't.
Umpiring convention due to a former lack of technology is not the same as saying that the rule is that "it isn't out if it's only just hitting". If it's hitting, it's out.