The Surfer

How technology could have changed history

Peter English
Peter English
25-Feb-2013
Michael Kasprowicz gloves down the leg side, England v Australia, 2nd Test, Edgbaston, August 7

Getty Images

Peter Lalor argues in the Australian Ricky Ponting could have made a ton on debut, Australia should have won the 2005 Ashes and India may have won the Sydney Test if the proposed ICC rules on umpire referrals were already in use.
Errors have at times changed the course of a match and a career. Ponting was given out lbw on 96 in his debut Test at Perth against Sri Lanka to a ball clearly going over the stumps.
Andrew Symonds was given not out in Australia's first innings of the Sydney Test against India this summer when he admitted he hit the ball. That and a number of other decisions in the match had many Indians believing they had been robbed. And, of course, England may never have won the 2005 Ashes had the umpire seen that Michael Kasprowicz's hand was not on the bat when the ball hit his glove, with the Australians three runs short of a remarkable victory in the second Test.
In the Age Chloe Saltau looks at the rise of Brad Haddin, the son of a Gundagai publican.

Peter English is former Australasia editor of ESPNcricinfo