Use technology, please

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| Cricket cannot continue to be the only game that refuses to recognise the role technology can play in administering the game. To be sure, we have seen the introduction of a third umpire for run-out decisions, but that is as far as it has gone. "Hawk-eye" may tell millions of viewers whether a leg-before-wicket decision was right or wrong, and the invention of the super-close-up lens and the "snickometer" helps catch the most minor touch of bat to ball; together, they make umpires look stupid when they are shown to have been wrong. It is not enough to say that it is human to err and that everyone makes mistakes; if the technology exists that can prevent such mistakes, and if the occasion is important enough for the organisers to make sure that mistakes do not mar it, then the technology should be used. |
| Another tradition-bound sport, lawn tennis, has shown the way. In the US Open, players have been allowed to challenge umpiring decisions, and the matter is decided by using technical aids that tell you whether one tiny part of the ball has ended on the line or not "" a level of detail on a ball travelling at more than 100 kmph, which a line judge or chair umpire cannot reasonably be expected to get right all the time. Umpires who have had the experience of their calls being overturned through this process say that they do not feel belittled or humiliated, precisely because everyone knows that you cannot be right all the time. And since each case becomes a dispute only if the player involved challenges a call, too much time is not lost in the process. This approach can easily be adopted in cricket. Players, umpires, the audience and the game will all benefit. So what is holding it up? |
First Published: Sep 10 2007 | 12:00 AM IST