Flem274*
123/5
You are so going to cop it.They were. I challenge you to bring in a non-ridiculous law that stops mints from being sucked on the cricket field. Or anything else being consumed through the course of the day that might help. Something you eat is completely different to an implement which you use to deform a ball, such as a knife or bottle-top.
In any case, I've always (as most people on CW know) been wholly dubious about how ball-tampering is defined - there's no way IMO to differentiate between "shining" and "tampering". Personally I'm more than happy for pretty much anything to be used on the ball, if it helps the bowlers swing it - I myself find suncream mixed with sweat gets a far better shine than sweat alone, so I use that. And I challenge any sane lawmaker to be able to find a way to stop me. The same applies to mints - there's no way on Earth you can define mint-influenced saliva as being different to saliva without said influence. Saliva - and sweat too - are not substances that can be "un-tampered". What if someone finds eating lettuce before taking the field causes better saliva for shining - are you going to ban that too?
The whole "ball-tampering" thing is ridiculous. And if I bend or break a few silly rules, and it helps the ball swing more, frankly I don't give a &%$£. More swing = higher calibre cricket.
As a bowler I agree.