It didn't work for India because Kumble used his referrals stupidly.Well It didn't work for India or for England, Did it ? It is not a perfect system as it is made out to be. I am not against it but let's not pretend as if it is an integral part of game or those are not for it just don't get it.
In its current shape, It is a half baked system, not too many umpires know how to use it, neither do the captains, technology is not perfect either.
Such a stupid idea. Batsmen would be as well referring decisions everytime they're out, even clean bowled, on the off chance the umpire has missed a bowler over-stepping by a couple of millimetres.Should only use it if the referals are unlimited. Fine teams/ban players if it is obvious that they are abusing the system and are over using it.
No, the point is that the way it has been set up, it can be rendered pretty damn useless due to the lottery factor.
But the way the system is in place atm, it can't be abused. That's the point.
But the idea was to use it only when the umpire was obviously wrong. It was never meant to try and overturn marginal calls so if you want to start challenging marginal calls and lose all your referrals then you deserve everything you get.No, the point is that the way it has been set up, it can be rendered pretty damn useless due to the lottery factor.
How's it a lottery?No, the point is that the way it has been set up, it can be rendered pretty damn useless due to the lottery factor.
That is what makes it a lottery. Call it what you want.How's it a lottery?
If you middle the ball onto your pads and get sawn off, challenge it, decision is over-turned and you still have as many referrals as you did at the start of the innings. If a team only used their referrals to overturn obvious howlers, they'd never run out of referrals.
If you want to take risks challenging an lbw call where it's extremely marginal and debatable whether the ball has hit in line or is marginal in terms of height, and lose your referrals, then that's your own stupid fault.
It's not a lottery. Reviews are there to overturn obvious bad decisions, not ones that might be wrong.That is what makes it a lottery. Call it what you want.
It does not matter how Kumble used it, a Decision review system should have nothing to do with captain's intelligence or his poor luck with it.It didn't work for India because Kumble used his referrals stupidly.
I was talking about this one :-Worked fine in the England-Pakistan series btw.
Yeah stupid idea because it is different from yours which sounds inconsistent because you wouldn't want it used when a bowler oversteps.Such a stupid idea. Batsmen would be as well referring decisions everytime they're out, even clean bowled, on the off chance the umpire has missed a bowler over-stepping by a couple of millimetres.
Let me repeat. I am not against it but if a captain or board is not for it you have to take that input and try to make the system better as opposed to calling him dumb or stupid or whatever else is being called here.Edit: If you think all decisions should be referrable and not just 3, and you don't like the tennis system, fine. But given the options of no UDRS or a UDRS in its current state, why wouldn't you at least want some way for decisions to be referred?
If you are such a big fan of technology, ever heard of bluetooth head sets? Set a camera that is fixed to the bowler's crease all the time then make the 3rd umpire watch that camera and instantly relay to the on field umpires if it is a no-ball. No time wasted. There are ways to make this **** work successfully if the fat umpire ****s are willing to work. Personally I would chuck all those fat, lazy bastards out of the field and make every decision based on technology.Such a stupid idea. Batsmen would be as well referring decisions everytime they're out, even clean bowled, on the off chance the umpire has missed a bowler over-stepping by a couple of millimetres.
Why not educate the players, BCCI, Boards, Umpires and all other stakeholders about using this technology properly, judiciously instead of going the cheap or easy way where you just want to put a deterrant to prevent the abuse of the system.He's just saying that you need something there to discourage players from appealing every decision made, otherwise it'd all get a bit silly. Yes, umpiring decisions could be made almost 100% accurate if we simply did away with umpires, and had people in the studio replaying of every delivery to check it wasn't a no ball, used Hawkeye every time the ball hit the pads, and went to Hotspot every time there was a halfhearted appeal for a caught behind. But that'd take forever and it'd be wildly impratical. The current system provides a good balance in terms of giving plenty of leewasy for teams overturn decisions while still discouraging them from using it willy-nilly.
That's a completely different issue and I'm completely in favour of removing the responsibility of checking for no-balls from the on field umpires.If you are such a big fan of technology, ever heard of bluetooth head sets? Set a camera that is fixed to the bowler's crease all the time then make the 3rd umpire watch that camera and instantly relay to the on field umpires if it is a no-ball. No time wasted. There are ways to make this **** work successfully if the fat umpire ****s are willing to work. Personally I would chuck all those fat, lazy bastards out of the field and make every decision based on technology.