Slow Love™
International Captain
Fair enough.FaaipDeOiad said:Well, legitimate is the key point. Certainly, if umpires policed it, people might concievably be called for bowling with flexion under 15 degrees (although I doubt it personally), and if you believe that 15 degrees is the level at which someone is throwing the ball, then yes. However, we have no particular reason to believe that Ian Meckiff bowled with flexion of over 15 degrees. He might have, but maybe he bowled at 13 or 14 some of the time too, ot at least would have in lab conditions. That doesn't alter the fact that every major official of his time as well as most players believed that it was right to ban him and that he did indeed throw the ball.
If someone pitched it baseball style of course it would be a very different matter, although personally I would be rather pleased if it happened as it would simply show up how ridiculous the current system of combating throwing is. Either way, what is more likely and indeed more dangerous than someone pitching it in a test match is bowlers being encouraged to "throw it a bit" in order to gain some sort of advantage, and thereby completely altering what is considered "bowling" in the traditional sense. I'm not exactly a rabid traditionalist, but I am genuinely bothered by the idea of young cricketers being taught that instead of keeping your arm as straight as possible when bowling, they could straighten it a bit to get a bit of extra pace of turn it a bit more. There's already been plenty of talk from coaches and cricketers at various levels about encouraging bowlers to push the new limits and see how much advantage they could get from it, and I think it's a real problem.
I'm also a lot more annoyed with the ICC for losing the ability to handle this issue because of how sensitive it is than, say, giving Bangladesh test status too early.
I won't speculate as to what Meckiff's degree of straightening was - but IMO, finding out that so many bowlers were breaking the previous rules meant that we had no choice but to find some degree at which we didn't have the majority of international bowlers transgressing.
And it's more than possible that there were already cases where legitimate deliveries were called for throws. We don't know for sure, because (to my knowledge at least), we haven't seen any of them analyzed. I'm really not confident in the umpire's ability to discern it, given the evidence we've seen - particularly considering bowlers that never get called that may well be perilously close to exceeding the limits (or actually exceeding them). And I still think there's a huge perceptual issue with regards to unorthodox actions and bent arms.
But I agree with the concept that we must at some stage have in-game calls possible for this issue to be handled properly. IMO what we have now is a choice between quite imperfect solutions, and in that context I take the "let's not punish an innocent" approach.