Wasn't the on field decision not out but it was referred then to the 3rd umpire?I also remember Harmison doing something to Inzamam in a test match....I think the appeal then should have been withdrawn (it wasn't) as it should have been yesterday.The thing that got me was Smith saying it was blatantly out - it was anything but blatant. He also said it was in the rules, which always make me chuckle, as they are called laws.
It was absolutely the correct decision. There was active obstruction and therefore on appeal and umpire can decide. Normally if the umpire gives out you would, in cricket, expect the opposition captain to withdraw the appeal but yesterday and in the past both teams have been guilty of not doing that so no one has moral high ground on this.
Quote from: olaftab on September 06, 2015, 10:11:53 AMIt was absolutely the correct decision. There was active obstruction and therefore on appeal and umpire can decide. Normally if the umpire gives out you would, in cricket, expect the opposition captain to withdraw the appeal but yesterday and in the past both teams have been guilty of not doing that so no one has moral high ground on this.Given the ridiculous appealing that goes on nowadays in first class cricket, nobody has any right to the moral high ground. I have lost count of the times when somebody at Edgbaston has uttered in dismay something like "Don't embarass us" to an appeal from our team, and we are far from the worst offenders.
To be honest I think appealling is a major part of the spectacle of the game and has to stay in. It allows the crowd to get involved as well.
Quote from: PaulWinch again on September 07, 2015, 02:14:58 PMTo be honest I think appealling is a major part of the spectacle of the game and has to stay in. It allows the crowd to get involved as well. I agree, and I also don't have a problem with Smith no withdrawing the appeal (I do have a problem with the 'blatently out' comment afterwards though, show some fucking humility). My issue with this is that I just don't think, in real time, you can definitively say that he was intent on blocking the ball from hitting the stumps rather than intent on making sure the ball didn't hit him anywhere painful.
Quote from: adrenachrome on September 06, 2015, 04:50:50 PMQuote from: olaftab on September 06, 2015, 10:11:53 AMIt was absolutely the correct decision. There was active obstruction and therefore on appeal and umpire can decide. Normally if the umpire gives out you would, in cricket, expect the opposition captain to withdraw the appeal but yesterday and in the past both teams have been guilty of not doing that so no one has moral high ground on this.Given the ridiculous appealing that goes on nowadays in first class cricket, nobody has any right to the moral high ground. I have lost count of the times when somebody at Edgbaston has uttered in dismay something like "Don't embarass us" to an appeal from our team, and we are far from the worst offenders.I've posted this before.....I think that all appealing should be done away with. You're either out or you're not, I don't understand why (other than because its tradition) that a team has to appeal.If the umpire thinks that a player is out, they should just give them out immediately.