Friday 15 January 2010

Double jeopardy

The moon landings faked, Lady Di offed by Prince Philip the 12-foot Lizard, 9/11 as an inside job... now add Graeme Smith given not out caught behind off Ryan Sidebottom at the Wanderers, 15 January 2010. Remember where you were when it happened.

TMS were first with the information that Daryl Harper, the third umpire, was not given the sound feed by host broadcasters SABC, and thus failed to hear what the rest of the world was hearing via many replays - the beefy nick from the beefy edge of the beefy Saffer skipper's bat.

Boycott was on air at the time and was instantly engaging, pointing out that most systems take time to settle, and that the ICC's Dave Richardson had done a good job in progressing the UDRS from its shambolic beginnings. He added too, that its advance is as inevitable as its mistakes.

All is true, but equally, like the slightly shifty enquiries so beloved of the Brown Government, the reliance on broadcasters for the decision-making equipment does open a gap in which conspiracies, however unlikely, can prosper. Long before the UDRS, when technology was just a TV toy, there were whispers that producers were adjusting pitch maps inwards when home sides were facing leg before shouts.

It's a point made here several times - the game must provide and pay for the equipment. And if an umpire like Harper is told the sound feed or anything else isn't available, he should be able to ask why not.

Smith got away with one, as players have been doing since the dawn of the game. But somehow the injustice is compounded when a player gets away with it twice. Buy a lotto ticket this weekend, Graeme, because your luck's in...

NB: Boycott is on rambunctious form at the moment. As well as his duties for TMS, he occasionally provides a pre-play report for the breakfast show on Radio Five Live, where he's generally interrogated by Sheila Fogerty. There were some hair-raising moments when he started, usually due to his dismissive references to Fogerty as 'luv'. But lately they've become quite a double act, to the point that this morning Fogerty felt emboldened enough to ask Geoffrey if the rumour they'd just heard that he has 'Sir Geoffrey Boycott' printed on his cheques was true. 'Oo told you that?' The great man asked. 'A South African journalist did...? he must be a double agent...'

Update from the Grassy Knoll: 'Just hearing that third umpire Daryl Harper had his volume dial set on four out of 10 when Smith's caught behind appeal was referred to him this morning. This just gets more ludicrous by the hour. Expect statements from the South African Broadcasting Corporation and the International Cricket Council in an attempt to mollify this debacle' [BBC, thanks to Brit for the spot...]

7 comments:

Brit said...

As far as I can tell, the whole business of referrals is driven by the problem that TV knows more about what's happening than the officials do, which constantly makes the officials look bad.

Therefore, surely the first thing they should sort out is that the 3rd umpire has exactly the same technology as Sky?

(On the whole though the referral system has been less bad than I expected it to be).

Brian Carpenter said...

Seems Harper didn't have the volume turned up high enough. Perhaps a system that 'goes up to eleven' is the answer, although. knowing Harper, he'd probably forget to plug it in or something.

Seriously, though, Hotspot should be available and the ICC should pay.

Brit said...

Tom Fordyce on the BBC feed:

Just hearing that third umpire Daryl Harper had his volume dial set on four out of 10 when Smith's caught behind appeal was referred to him this morning. This just gets more ludicrous by the hour. Expect statements from the South African Broadcasting Corporation and the International Cricket Council in an attempt to mollify this debacle.

Ahem. Not the best series for Daryl, this one.

The Old Batsman said...

Thanks Brit, have updated the post. You would have thought that even at four out of ten he might have heard that one...

Tim Newman said...

Whether or not Smith should have walked, 180 all out is a far more disturbing story. Perhaps this is why the English press wants to keep the Smith story running?

Brit said...

Oh dear, just seen Harper's active overturning of the de Villiers caught behind. "Volumegate" was embarrassing, that one was inexcusable.

Mark said...

"You would have thought that even at four out of ten he might have heard that one..."

Not with his fingers in his ears he woudn't.