Under current system, the umpires select the worst looking deliveries and ask the bowlers to reproduce THAT delivery at testing. As you see it is a problem. If every one agrees on the move on consensus, once again, even if a player has a single delivery over 15 degrees, he will be banned. So you see that under these circumstances, no one can be legal, because how ever minute, everyone has a chance of bowling a delivery >15 degrees, and it only needs one delivery for the ban. This is why I call the definition of chucking has to change.
I think you are talking trash. Random testing is not for remedial action. It is to keep the process honest. If at all they are illegal, it will ive a chance for them to correct themselves.
Without a proper definition of chucking, everyone is a cheat.
No it is not. The issue is a player with unconventional action has higher chance of being reported, despite having the same extension as a classical action. Some one argued that random testing is unfair on players, and if it is the case this is also downright unfair. Problem is we don't know is it only the guys with dodgy actions go beyond 15. There is no scientific evidence to prove all clean looking actions stay within 15 degrees of extension. If such evidence is there, random testing is not needed at all, and I will retract my argument.
Only puss ies will resort to this kind of tactics.