Something that's really annoying is that umpires don't seem to bother checking for front foot no balls any longer, if they did then maybe the Indian bowlers would have adjusted their run ups accordingly.
Glad the Windies won, as I think it gives us a better chance. They're a hell of a side though.
Quote from: Chris Jameson on March 31, 2016, 08:53:03 PMSomething that's really annoying is that umpires don't seem to bother checking for front foot no balls any longer, if they did then maybe the Indian bowlers would have adjusted their run ups accordingly.You sense a collective shrug of the umpire community's shoulders on no balls. I agree, they should be preventing them by calling them, either the old fashioned "looking" thing or by the third umpire checking video or hawkeye doing a realtime whatsit (which the BCCI would probably veto).
At one time a wicket off a no ball was rare. Now there seem to be two or three instances in a test series. Bowlers know that umpires won't check and probably push it a little. It makes a mockery of the tradition of good umpires like Bird and Bucknor.
Quote from: Villan For Life on April 01, 2016, 10:07:28 AMAt one time a wicket off a no ball was rare. Now there seem to be two or three instances in a test series. Bowlers know that umpires won't check and probably push it a little. It makes a mockery of the tradition of good umpires like Bird and Bucknor.Every wicket is checked to see if it's a no ball so pushing it is pointless. It's just poor discipline on the part of the bowlers.The umpires have enough to look at every ball, they can call the obvious ones but I'd leave the onus on the captain of the fielding team, him or someone on his side should be having a word with a bowler who is close to over-stepping, after all it's them who lose out when wickets are ruled out for no balls.
Quote from: Dave Cooper please on April 01, 2016, 01:17:30 PMQuote from: Villan For Life on April 01, 2016, 10:07:28 AMAt one time a wicket off a no ball was rare. Now there seem to be two or three instances in a test series. Bowlers know that umpires won't check and probably push it a little. It makes a mockery of the tradition of good umpires like Bird and Bucknor.Every wicket is checked to see if it's a no ball so pushing it is pointless. It's just poor discipline on the part of the bowlers.The umpires have enough to look at every ball, they can call the obvious ones but I'd leave the onus on the captain of the fielding team, him or someone on his side should be having a word with a bowler who is close to over-stepping, after all it's them who lose out when wickets are ruled out for no balls.Umpires used to call them and everything they have to consider as the ball is bowled hasn't really changed. I don't understand why Umpires cannot call no balls anymore. How many illegal balls now go undetected? It makes a mockery of the no ball rule.