Pakistan umpires snubbed
In what can be considered as a biased decision by the game's governing body International Cricket Council (ICC), no Pakistani umpire will be included in the eight-man elite panel of umpires
23-Jun-2001
In what can be considered as a biased decision by the game's governing
body International Cricket Council (ICC), no Pakistani umpire will be
included in the eight-man elite panel of umpires.
Highly placed sources confirmed that while no Pakistani umpire would
stand in Tests until 2004, there would be two nominees from Pakistan
in the 25-man panel that would supervize one-day internationals.
According to the latest decision, both third country umpires will
stand in Tests from April 2002 with the matches to be shared by
umpires in the elite panel. In the one-dayers, there will be one local
umpire who has to be in the 25-man panel.
The elite panel, which is being selected by ICC's new chief executive
Malcolm Speed and chairman of ICC's cricket committee Sunil Gavaskar,
will be given a two-year contract with a retainer according to the
standard of living in the umpire's country but equivalent match fee.
The Pakistan cricket officials said their umpires would not be
included in the elite panel because of their poor ratings awarded by
the captains and the match referees. However, extensive electronic
coverage has exposed that the standard of umpiring was on a decline.
Even the so-called best umpires were making glaring mistakes.
The Old Trafford Test Englishman David Shepherd and West Indian Eddie
Nicholls committed so many blunders and were involved in not calling
Pakistani and English bowlers for over-stepping. To rub salt to the
wound, four English batsmen were dismissed on what should have been
called no-balls. Pakistani umpires Mian Aslam and Riazuddin also
committed some errors in the home series against England last year.
But if Shepherd can be retained in the elite panel and his decisions
can be labelled as human errors, why shouldn't the Pakistani umpire
get the same benefit and equal treatment.
Aslam, since being nominated in the ICC panel of umpires, has yet to
get an overseas posting while Riazuddin has supervized only two Tests
and a triangular one-day series in Singapore. It is time that the
Pakistan cricket officials put their foot down and use all their
resources to stop Australians and Englishmen from enforcing their
monopoly in the elite panel of umpire or for that matter dicatating
the game.