
|

'Michael Clarke did the right thing when he waved away appeals for a 'catch' he had
scooped up from Jacob Oram'
© Getty Images
|
|
The notion that a cricketer would cheat has always
been seriously at odds with the supposed spirit of the
game, and too unpalatable to contemplate. It is a naive
view and it ignores both history and human nature.
When Dwayne Bravo emerged somewhat less than
exuberantly from his outfield tumble and roll to send
back Michael Yardy in England's final match of the
Champions Trophy in India with a catch that video
replays showed had bounced in front of him, you did
not have to wait long for the head-scratching in the
commentary box.
The pause reflected obvious misgivings. But it
also underlined the reluctance of commentators ever
to draw the instant conclusion that a player would
do something underhand. In football, the outraged
response to a foul or dive is in-built; in cricket the
default reaction is: surely not!
I'm not calling Bravo a cheat. Only he knows how
right or wrong he was to claim that catch. But it didn't
look good. It was a decent piece of athleticism that put
him in position to attempt it in the first place, yet he
hardly celebrated accordingly.
There followed the sort of moral
confusion cricket has had to face
with increasing regularity. It is a
game saddled with impossibly high
standards from the past. It has also
become, over the past decade, a game
scrutinised to an unprecedented
level by TV cameras. There is no
hiding place.
Bravo was charged with failing
to "conduct play within the spirit of
the game". This arose from repeated
viewings of the slow-motion film
which left no doubt the ball had
bounced up from the turf into
his hands.
The buck was then passed to the
match referee, Mike Procter, who didn't so much drop
it as bin it. He will say he had a tough call to make. The
evidence was incriminating, no doubt, but the bounce
was small enough for Procter to judge, purely on the
player's say-so, that Bravo may not have been aware of it.
Procter chose the word of the player. The
expensive, hi-tech video evidence became suddenly,
curiously, ludicrously irrelevant. It was like being
presented with the body, but agreeing with the
accused that he could not be sure if he meant to pull
the trigger.
The mantra from older players goes that in times
gone by there would have been no dilemma: before
super slo-mo, the snickometer, Hawk-Eye and all the
other gadgets, players were scrupulously honest. If the
ball fell short, they would not claim it; if they got an
edge, they walked.
Well, we all know that was not universally the
case. And how could it be? Cricketers then might have
lived in an age more obviously imbued with a sense of
fair play, uncorrupted by the sort of money available
today, but they were just as fallible and weak as any
gold-digging, passport-swapping, bet-taking soldier of
fortune in the modern game.

|

'It was a decent piece of athleticism from Bravo that put
him in position to attempt it in the first place, yet he
hardly celebrated accordingly'
© AFP
|
|
If Bravo was guilty, it was in his lack of side. He
pouched the chance and walked slowly back towards
the bowler with little show of emotion. Into that look
and stroll could be read several interpretations: he
is one cool dude, he was waiting for the video replay,
he wasn't sure at all if the ball had smacked him
square in the hands with no deflection ... or he at
least briefly suspected that the ball had had the sting
taken from its journey by the ground.
In effect, he gave himself the benefit of the doubt.
So did Procter. But the match referee's version was, in
my opinion, just as flawed. "Television replays appeared
to show the ball bounced but Dwayne thought he
had taken the catch cleanly," Procter said. "From my
experience as a player I know that can happen, but
we needed to ask the question to make sure it was a
genuine mistake by the player. For that reason the
umpires were right to lay the charge but, after we all
talked it through, I had no reason to
disbelieve Dwayne's version of events."
That is clearly nonsense. The
reason he had to at least seriously
doubt "Dwayne's version of events"
was what his eyes told him when
he examined the replay. The reason
he had to believe him was he found
it uncomfortable to come to the
conclusion that Bravo would try
to deceive him. And maybe the
player didn't. Perhaps he was totally
innocent. And, given the parameters,
Procter had no choice but to acquit.
Yet, despite his eminence as
a former player, I have to take
issue with Procter's logic, and, by
inference, that of Bravo. Bravo said he had no doubt
he caught it; Procter said that sometimes it is hard to
tell. You can't have it both ways.
A few days later, Michael Clarke did the right thing
when he waved away appeals for a 'catch' he had
scooped up from Jacob Oram. He knew it had bounced
first and he said so instantly. Anyone who has played
the game, at any level, knows there is a different feel
between a ball that lands at unimpeded speed square
in the hands and one that is even minimally slowed
down by hitting the ground. Indeed, a half-volley
invariably nestles in the hand much more gently than
a ball that flies above the turf. And certainly a genuine
catch has that unmistakeable "smack" about it. Did
Bravo know? I hope his take on it was genuine. But, if
he was in the slightest doubt, he should have called for
the replay himself, and accepted the decision. Those
last three words should be what cricket is all about.
Kevin Mitchell is chief sports writer for The Observer