Darrell Hair to stand in World Cup (12 February 1999)
For the second time in a fortnight the inadequacies of the ICC Code of Conduct were exposed last night
12-Feb-1999
12 February 1999
Darrell Hair to stand in World Cup
Rick Eyre
For the second time in a fortnight the inadequacies of the ICC Code of
Conduct were exposed last night. Australian umpire Darrell Hair was
found guilty of two breaches of the Code but escaped punishment after
the Code of Conduct commissioner could not find any provision under
which he could impose a penalty.
Hair was charged by the ICC after a complaint by the Board of Control
of Cricket in Sri Lanka (BCCSL) in November about comments he made in
his autobiography "Decision Maker - An Umpire's Story" relating to the
1995-96 Sri Lankan tour of Australia. Four charges were laid in
relation to breaches of clause 8 of the Code of Conduct (relating to
conduct detrimental to the game) following the executive meeting of
the ICC in New Zealand last month, the matter referred to the
Australian Cricket Board to conduct an independent hearing.
Last night in Melbourne, the ACB's Code of Conduct Commissioner Judge
Gordon Lewis (a Victorian County Court judge) heard the charges. Hair
represented himself at the hearing with the ICC represented by chief
executive David Richards.
Lewis found Hair guilty of two of the charges and dismissed the other
two. However, he said he was unable to find a penalty process in the
Code of Conduct that applied to umpires. Consequently, no penalty
could be applied despite the finding of guilt.
"We will take note of Judge Lewis' views about the inability of the
Code of Conduct to adequately deal with any penalty for an umpire and
refer his detailed reasons to our solicitors for their advice in
regard to the Code", Richards said in a media release issued today.
Following the hearing, the Australian Cricket Board named Hair as its
nomination for the World Cup umpiring panel.
This is the second Code of Conduct hearing for the ICC in two weeks
that has seen technicalities reduce the expected punishment. Sri
Lankan captain Arjuna Ranatunga was given a six-match suspension,
suspendeded for twelve months, after being found guilty of breaches of
the Code of Conduct for his on-field behaviour during Sri Lanka's game
against England on January 23. A number of procedural deficiencies
were identified in the course of the hearing, including the manner in
which the charges were laid, the timeliness of the reports by the
umpires, and the role of one person (the match referee) in both laying
charges and arbitrating on them.
Source :: CricInfo365