Sunday 31 July 2011

Return of bell after being run out

The contentious run-out of Ian
Bell at the stroke of tea on the
third day, which threatened to
erupt into the biggest
controversy of the series, was
overturned during the break after MS Dhoni withdrew the
appeal. At the stroke of tea, Bell's run-
out on 137, after having left the
crease before the ball was dead,
was on the verge of becoming a
major point of dispute between
the two sides. During the break, England captain Andrew Strauss
and coach Andy Flower went to
the Indian dressing room to ask
MS Dhoni if the run-out decision
could be overturned. The Indians
agreed to withdraw the appeal. At the resumption after tea, Bell
and Eoin Morgan walked out to
cheers from a surprised and
appreciative crowd, which just a
few minutes earlier had booed
the two umpires - a small section of the crowd even chanting, the
word 'cheat' - and then the
Indian team as it made its way
out, with Strauss and his men
standing on the balcony of their
pavilion clapping the Indians onto the field. It all began when Morgan flicked
the last ball of the 66th over,
from Ishant Sharma, to deep
square leg where Praveen Kumar
tumbled over trying to field. The
batsmen, having taken the third, appeared to be unsure whether
the ball had reached the
boundary. Morgan held up his
arm to Bell, who jogged halfway
down the pitch and then
continued walking down. The throw from Praveen eventually
came in to Abhinav Mukund, who
took off the bails and appealed
for a run-out. By that time, Bell
had punched gloves with his
partner and was heading towards the pavilion. The umpires checked again with
the Indians as to whether they
had appealed. When the Indians
said they had, the third umpire
was asked to establish whether
the ball had crossed the boundary. The two batsmen, who
had reached the edge of the
field, were asked not to leave
the ground. There was a delay of eight
minutes as the third umpire
reviewed the replay and decided
that the ball had not crossed
the boundary. The decision of
"out" flashed up on the screen, and the Indians left the field to
heavy booing from the crowd.
The Sky TV coverage showed
during the incident as well on its
nightly news, a clipping of Bell
walking towards fourth umpire Tim Robinson and saying what
sounded like, "He called over." In
his media conference, however
Bell said he did not hear any
umpire calling 'over.' The Sky TV
audio track also has no sound of the umpire calling over. The only
time the word "over" is heard on
that piece of video tape, comes
from Ishant who, after the bails
are dislodged, is heard asking in
Hindi if the over had ended and whether it was time for tea. Just over an hour after the
incident, an announcement was
made on the stadium's public
address system, explaining the
incident to the full house at
Trent Bridge. The crowd heard that after Strauss and Flower
asked Dhoni to withdraw the
appeal, he went across to his
team-mates and sought their
view. The team agreed to recall
Bell to the crease and the decision was made known to the
England camp. The announcement
stated that the ECB thanked the
Indian team's gesture to
withdraw the appeal against Bell
and asked the crowd to show its appreciation. Once the
announcement ended, applause
rang out all around Trent Bridge. Speaking after the day's play,
Bell was appreciative of India's
decision to reinstate him, and
admitted that it was naive on his
part to leave the crease with
the ball still in play. "From Praveen's body language, it
looked like that had gone for
four," Bell told the Star Cricket
channel. "Probably naïve on my
behalf, but taking into account
the spirit of cricket and everything, this was probably
the right decision. It wasn't until
we [Bell and Morgan] reached
the boundary rope, when the
umpires asked us to wait, that I
knew something was on. It's fantastic the way India have
gone about this. The captains
and coaches got together, and
were asked if the decision would
stand. Duncan Fletcher and MS
Dhoni went back to discuss it with the team and came back to
us, and I got the nod." Rahul Dravid said the Indian team
was in unanimous agreement
that the decision had to be
reversed. "In the laws of the
game, if you follow them strictly,
that was out, but it didn't feel right in the spirit of the game,"
he said. "There was a team
discussion during the tea
interval, Dhoni and Fletcher
convened the meeting, and Dhoni
led it. There was a feeling of unanimity that we should
reinstate Bell because the spirit
of the game was important, and
that getting him out in that way
would contravened the spirit ... If
this had happened to our guys we would not have been happy
about it. So all of that was
discussed." There was appreciation from the
ECB chief executive David Collier
and the ICC chief executive
Haroon Lorgat, both of whom
acknowledged the appeal for the
run-out was a valid one. "The withdrawal of a valid appeal at
the tea interval was made in the
spirit of cricket by the India
team and demonstrates the true
spirit in which the game of
cricket should be played and the excellent relationship between
the ECB and BCCI," Collier said in
a statement. "On behalf of the
ECB I wish to express the
England and Wales Cricket
Board's grateful thanks the BCCI and the India team." Lorgat said the withdrawal of
the appeal showed great
maturity on the part of India.
"The initial appeal and umpire
decision may have been
acceptable to the letter of the law, the decision by India captain
M S Dhoni and his team -as well
as the Team India coaching staff
- to withdraw the appeal shows
great maturity. To see players
and officials uphold the Great Spirit of cricket, which has
underpinned the game for more
than a century, is very special."t

Hotspot and Drs future in doubt

The company behind Hot Spot will
undertake tests to see whether
the cameras can be tricked by
the use of artificial substances
on the edge of the bat. There is
a belief among players that Vaseline can reduce the chances
of a thin nick showing up,
although it has only ever been
rumoured that such tactics are
used. Concerns about the
effectiveness of Hot Spot came
to the fore when VVS Laxman
survived a caught-behind appeal
on the second day at Trent
Bridge. England were convinced there was an edge but Laxman
was equally convinced he hadn't
hit it. The third umpire said
there was a noise but it wasn't
clear from where. Michael
Vaughan, the former England captain, sparked controversy by
tweeting the suggestion of
Vaseline and Stuart Broad was
later asked and admitted
checking the edge of Laxman's
bat but finding nothing. Warren Brennan, the owner of
Hot Spot, has previously said the
device's accuracy is around
90-95% and can be impacted by
such things as bright sunshine
and the speed of the bat in the shot. He now says that it is
possible that a substance like
Vaseline could reduce the
technology's effectiveness and
tests will be conducted to try to
find conclusive results. "I would imagine that Vaseline
would restrict the friction of the
ball hitting the bat so if you
reduce the friction you are going
to reduce the Hot Spot,"
Brennan told cricket "That is pure and simple physics. From
what I can remember, quite
often the outside of the bat has
a layer of some sort of coating. "Now if you put extra layers on
the bat that might do the same
thing. As long as it is a harder
type of surface then you will get
the Hot Spot. But if it is a soft,
absorbant type of material then that will probably reduce the
friction. It might take us a week
or even longer to test all
possibilities." The other theory is that bat
stickers on the edge of a blade
can also help reduce the chances
of a Hot Spot showing up - by
showing one, long heat signature
down the side of the bat - but Brennan said it is likely to work
the opposite way and actually
increase the visibility of individual
marks. "What I noticed last week when I
was at Lord's was these stickers
down the side of certain players'
bats," he said. "When I looked at
it through the cameras it
actually looked like a Hot Spot, four or five little white spots.
That was quite unusual so it
must have be some sort of logo
or the sticker. Through the
infra-red I could see those spots. "I just don't know why a
manufacturer would put it on
the side of the bat that would
make it look like a Hot Spot. I
had this conversation with the
ICC less than a month ago and told them that we are noticing
some of these stickers tend to
reflect heat a bit like a mirror.
The ICC said if that is the case
they might have to look
changing the regulations so that the side of the bat does not
have any advertising, no stickers
and no logos. But that is still a
work in progress." There have been a number of
occasions when Hot Spot has
proved inconclusive in caught-
behind decisions. During the
Ashes Kevin Pietersen survived
at Melbourne, which incensed Ricky Ponting, while at Sydney
Ian Bell survived an appeal which
Snicko - which isn't used with
the DRS - later suggested was
out. Hot Spot has been made a
mandatory piece of technology
for the DRS system following the
ICC's meetings in Hong Kong last
month, where it was also decided
to make Hawk-Eye optional. The infra-red cameras have shown
themselves to be especially
effective at proving bat-pad
catches and whether a batsman
has been hit pad first in an lbw
appeal, although in this series DRS is not being used for any
leg-before decision

Pakistan has anounced its squard for zimbaba tour

Pakistan have rewarded some of
their consistent performers in
domestic cricket by including
three uncapped players - top-
order batsman Rameez Raja,
legspinner Yasir Shah and seamer Aizaz Cheema - as well as
fast bowler Sohail Khan, who has
played only one Test, in the
squad for the tour of Zimbabwe
that starts on August 28. There
are also recalls for opening batsman Imran Farhat, who
hasn't played for Pakistan since
the one-day series against
South Africa in the UAE in
October 2010, and left-arm fast
bowler Sohail Tanvir, who was last included for the New Zealand
tour earlier in the year. The squad seems to be an
experimental one, with the
bowling attack in particular
featuring several new names and
missing some of the senior
players. Umar Gul, Tanvir Ahmed and Wahab Riaz, who have been
Pakistan's three premier fast
bowlers in recent times, have all
been rested, with Sohail Khan,
Sohail Tanvir, Cheema and Junaid
Khan making up the pace attack. There is also a change in the
spin department with Abdur
Rehman being rested and Yasir
being given an opportunity. Pakistan's chief selector Mohsin
Khan explained that the fresh
look to the squad was an effort
to blood youngsters. "We have
to bring in young players along
with seniors so that they could be groomed," he said. "Because
it's a short tour we have
selected only one squad for all
three formats of the game and
have rested Riaz and Gul in a
hope to try out some youngsters." Adnan Akmal has reclaimed the
wicketkeeper's spot in the
squad, meaning Mohammad
Salman, who failed to impress
with the bat in the West Indies
and Ireland, makes way. Allrounder Hammad Azam also
failed to have an impact on
those tours and has been kept
in the standbys to make place
for Raja. Ahmed Shehzad, who
was dropped after the tour of the West Indies, has been left
out again. Another development is the
inclusion of Shoaib Malik, the
former Pakistan captain, in the
list of standbys. Malik has been
involved in a battle with the PCB,
whose integrity committee has not cleared him for selection
since the controversial tour of
England last year. Mohsin said
Malik would only be included if he
managed to obtain clearance
from the PCB. Meanwhile, legspinner Danish Kaneria, who
has taken his fight to get
clearance to the Sindh High
Court, continues to be ignored. Raja's call-up comes on the back
of consistent domestic
performance in all formats. He
was the leading run-getter in
the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy Division
One last season, and was top of the run charts again during the
recent Faysal Bank Super Eight
Twenty20 Cup. His performances
in the T20 competition, which
included a 97 in the semi-final
and a half-century in the final, led to calls for his inclusion in the
national side. Sohail Khan, Sohail Tanvir and
Cheema were all recently part of
an emerging players camp at the
National Cricket Academy in
Lahore, where they received tips
from former Pakistan fast bowler Sarfraz Nawaz. Sohail
Khan and Sohail Tanvir both
brought themselves back into
the limelight during the Super
Eight Twenty20 competition; the
former took 14 wickets in Karachi Dolphins' road to the
finals, while the latter captained
Rawalpindi Rams to the title.
Cheema, 31, earned his call-up
through another strong first-
class season in which he took 57 wickets in eight games in the
Quaid-e-Azam Trophy. Yasir impressed with his 16
wickets in four games during the
Faysal Bank Pentangular Cup at
the beginning of this year, and
then took 3 for 29 for Pakistan
A against Afghanistan in a one- dayer. Farhat also did well in the
Pentangular, hitting a century
and two fifties, and was leading
run-getter in the domestic one-
day competition before that. Pakistan squad: Misbah-ul-Haq
(capt), Mohammad Hafeez, Taufiq
Umar, Imran Farhat, Azhar Ali,
Younis Khan, Asad Shafiq, Umar
Akmal, Rameez Raja junior, Adnan
Akmal (wk), Saeed Ajmal, Yasir Shah, Sohail Tanvir, Sohail Khan,
Junaid Khan, Aizaz Cheema. Standbys: Sarfraz Ahmed (wk),
Khurram Manzoor, Sharjeel Khan,
Mohammad Talha, Hammad Azam,
Shoaib Malik subject to
clearance