by rich1uk » Sat Jul 13, 2013 8:45 am
posted this in the 1st test match thread but thought it might be better in here
been a lot of talk around after yesterday about the number of reviews captains should have and whether DRS is undermined by decisions like yesterday not getting reviewed purely because the team has none left , when its those type of decisions DRS is intended to deal with
I've been critical all along about how captains use DRS tactically rather than looking for howlers and have little sympathy for a captain having none left when a howler does happen when they have "wasted" them trying to get a second chance on a marginal decision. so was thinking about how you could possibly stop teams abusing DRS for tactical reasons and try to ensure that howlers got dealt with. firstly I don't agree with just taking it out of the players hands altogether and allowing the 3rd umpire to intervene. what would stop the umpires almost refusing to make any decisions in real time in case they get one wrong and refer everything to the 3rd umpire. if you look at runouts how often do you see an onfield umpire make a decision themselves even when it is pretty blatant that the batsman was either safe or out , and they refer almost everything to the 3rd umpire just in case.
so whats left. how about this for a radical idea. leave referrals in the players hands, don't have a limit on how many they can have but set a penalty of some description if the review isn't overturned. that way they would only be reviewing when they thought there was a clear mistake. the penalties could be a fixed amount of runs which increases every time they unsuccessfully review, for example maybe a 10 run penalty the first time , 20 the second time etc etc.
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