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England's_No7 wrote:Great interview with Ray Price: http://www.espncricinfo.com/magazine/co ... 57539.html

clubcricketeradi wrote:The coating on edges of the bat nowadays is thick enough and is always well stuck to wood. It might generate lesser sound than wood but the hot spot should not be affected.
DeltaAlpha wrote:clubcricketeradi wrote:The coating on edges of the bat nowadays is thick enough and is always well stuck to wood. It might generate lesser sound than wood but the hot spot should not be affected.
Why do you say that, adi? Hotspot is sensitive to the nature - friction etc. - of the surface that the ball edges, so I would expect any change in the properties of the surface to affect Hotspot. Isn't that just what Brennan is saying?
clubcricketeradi wrote:DeltaAlpha wrote:What you have mentioned is correct. Delta, it would also depend on the technology. Whether the snicko is better at capturing lesser sounds or whether the hot spot is better at capturing lesser impact. But the hot spot also picks up some glare. There were a few series where DRS worked so well. Now in this series it is probably working at half its potential as umpires are misinterpreting the reports of the technology devices.
DeltaAlpha wrote:clubcricketeradi wrote:DeltaAlpha wrote:What you have mentioned is correct. Delta, it would also depend on the technology. Whether the snicko is better at capturing lesser sounds or whether the hot spot is better at capturing lesser impact. But the hot spot also picks up some glare. There were a few series where DRS worked so well. Now in this series it is probably working at half its potential as umpires are misinterpreting the reports of the technology devices.
DeltaAlpha wrote:DeltaAlpha wrote:clubcricketeradi wrote:DeltaAlpha wrote:What you have mentioned is correct. Delta, it would also depend on the technology. Whether the snicko is better at capturing lesser sounds or whether the hot spot is better at capturing lesser impact. But the hot spot also picks up some glare. There were a few series where DRS worked so well. Now in this series it is probably working at half its potential as umpires are misinterpreting the reports of the technology devices.
I wonder whether the umpires are trying to be too clever, whether they're badly trained or just a tad dumb. Or whether those watching the umpires are getting a bit more savvy. Could be any of those...
clubcricketeradi wrote:There were a few series where DRS worked so well. Now in this series it is probably working at half its potential as umpires are misinterpreting the reports of the technology devices.
DeltaAlpha wrote:Did I say otherwise, adi? It was you who raised the original point, and I was simply suggesting possible reasons:clubcricketeradi wrote:There were a few series where DRS worked so well. Now in this series it is probably working at half its potential as umpires are misinterpreting the reports of the technology devices.

DeltaAlpha wrote:Yeah, I suppose we are, adi. But the puzzling thing is why, when DRS has apparently been used successfully and without that much controversy in the past, has there been so much controversy in this Ashes series. What's changed? Is it the umpires or the perception of those watching them? Or something else?
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