Borges
International Regular
Now a days, no one walks; but there was a time when 'never walking' was a unique Australian trait.
To be fair to the Australians, their argument for 'not walking' did have merit. It went something like this:
if the umpire makes a mistake and rules me out, I have to walk; so it is only fair that I don't walk on my own and forfeit the chance of a compensatory mistake by which I'm ruled not out.
This was long ago; before the rules of cricket was bastardised by substituting 'in the opinion of DRS' for 'in the opinion of the umpire'.
To be fair to the Australians, their argument for 'not walking' did have merit. It went something like this:
if the umpire makes a mistake and rules me out, I have to walk; so it is only fair that I don't walk on my own and forfeit the chance of a compensatory mistake by which I'm ruled not out.
This was long ago; before the rules of cricket was bastardised by substituting 'in the opinion of DRS' for 'in the opinion of the umpire'.