Haha. For most of those 100 years and most of those occasions, there has been an absence of appropriate technology and atleast an appearance of sportsmanship.By the precise letter of the law, no. By common sense and precedents that have been set over 100 years of cricket from park to international, yes.
Not out I reckon.
I think this one is different to the Ponting one in the Sydney test, where he's controlled it and then the ball has touched the ground.
Here I don't think you can say he had complete control when the ball hit the ground. The ball hitting the ground allowed him to have control.
But that's again an assumption that Ponting had the control of the ball and Symonds didn't. I for one think that both of them had complete control of the ball but technically both were not outs. Only Ponting and Symonds knew for sure whether or not they had the complete control of the ball. Someone else might assume otherwise and hence the inconsistency in the decisions. And I think same thing happened, Ponting's catch was ruled not out and Symonds' was ruled out.Has been more than workable for many years. Now that video footage is putting things under the microscope more I think the rules should be modified to reflect this.
But yeah, agree with Jono, this case is slightly different from the Ponting one because here it looks like he may not have even had control of it before touching the ground at all.
Exactly. Either you police the law, or amend it. Having to apply an opinion to something like this issue is fairly dangerous.In order to get the consistency, I guess either we follow the current law to the T or ammend the law to allow the ball to touch the ground after the catch is taken (although that IMO will open a whole new pandora's box of issues)
What's the 'ground'? Is it the grass or a firm enough push into the ground so that he could feel the ground underneath the grass? If his finger separates and one blade of grass touches the ball, is it 'grassed'? Would you expect anyone to hand themselves up in that manner?Yes, much easier and less subjective to simply decide whether the ball hit the ground, rather than whether he had 'control'. It hit the ground, and so it was out.
Personally I think that it should come down to an umpire's interpretation of a replay simply being accepted as the benchmark for whether or not control was maintained. Catches shouldn't be nullified simply because the ball happened to brush the ground on your way up, and 99% of video replays you can tell with fair degree of accuracy if control was maintained.Yes, much easier and less subjective to simply decide whether the ball hit the ground, rather than whether he had 'control'. It hit the ground, and so it was out.
Yeah, agree, great post.I think the laws are being mis-read on this one. The relevant law;
A catch shall be considered to have been fairly made if
(c) the ball does not touch the ground, even though the hand holding it does so in effecting the catch.
It's not saying that the hand holding the ball can't touch the ground whilst the ball is in hand otherwise every slips catch where the catcher takes the ball two-handed but is touching the ground as it lands in the hand would be not-out too and there are plenty of those. The law allows, for example, for one to take the catch diving and sliding arm-first along the ground. No, I would reckon that if there is finger/hand between the ball and ground when the ball is taken it's a fair catch and from what I saw, Symond's fingers (third and 4th) were under the ball when the catch was taken. I'm sure the ball touched a few blades of grass between his fingers but is that 'grounded'? Don't think so, myself. Fair catch for mine.
Put it this way, if you give that not, there are so many slips, gully and cover catches destined to go the same way so as to make a game farcical.
Unless you have a telescope able to zoom right in, you won't see whether those blades of grass touched the ball. I get the scene in Futurama in my head where the outcome of a horse race is decided by electron microscope and Farnsworth complains "No fair! You changed the outcome by looking at it!" It seems like it's just going to get that ridiculous and even then you won't satisfy everyone.
It doesn't matter if it touches the ground. If he has control of it and it touches the ground it is fine. Under the rules you can have control of it in mid-air, so there is no relevance to whether it touched the ground if you think he had control of it.It is still touching the ground! So not out.
Its funny how nearly everyone who has posted in this thread has said not out, yet the poll is in favour of "Yes". Where are you cowards? No reason? No explanation?
Wrong:It doesn't matter if it touches the ground. If he has control of it and it touches the ground it is fine. Under the rules you can have control of it in mid-air, so there is no relevance to whether it touched the ground if you think he had control of it.