Richard
Cricket Web Staff Member
We can't, of course we can't, else that's a very slippery slope. What I've always hated are silly laws, however, and especially when some are disproportionately criticised for breaking these. The ball-tampering law is impossible to define - what is a "foreign" substance? How do you define legal saliva and illegal saliva? If mints can help, so easily could lettuce. There's no way to ban players from eating this or that. Similarly there's no way to ban certain other substances (like suncream) being used to enhance natural products like sweat and saliva.I understand your point mate, but I don't see how we can pick and choose which laws we abide by and which we choose to ignore.
I've said it before - I'd be only happy for ANYTHING to be used to shine the ball. Vaseline, polish, whatever. Balls are manufactured using such substances - why should rules change between manufacture an in-use? Not de-shine it, but shine it. I'm not suggesting people should be allowed to take knives out onto the field and gouge chunks out of the ball, though I do think putting a bit of soil dust on the thing is also fine. That's perfectly "natural", every bit as natural as sweat or saliva.