Sir Clyde Walcott bats for Sri Lanka (14 May 1999)
LEICESTER, World one-day champs Sri Lanka found a strong ally in Sir Clyde Walcott, when the former International Cricket Council (ICC) chairman spoke in support of having stump microphones switched on throughout the World Cup competition and also
14-May-1999
14 May 1999
Sir Clyde Walcott bats for Sri Lanka
Sa'adi Thawfeeq
LEICESTER, World one-day champs Sri Lanka found a strong ally in
Sir Clyde Walcott, when the former International Cricket Council
(ICC) chairman spoke in support of having stump microphones switched
on throughout the World Cup competition and also went on record to
state that there was no evidence to suggest that Muthiah Muralitharan
'threw'.
Walcott, who is in London for ICC meetings and to promote his
autobiography 'Sixty Years on the Backfoot', said he wanted sledging
- abuse directed at batsmen by bowlers and fielders - outlawed.
"I would love to see it banned. What they are trying to do is make
the batsmen lose concentration, but it is bad for the game and I
think umpires could take stronger action to stop it. Some of them
have been weak," he was quoted in the British press.
The 'Daily Mail' reported that the ICC had discussed leaving stump
microphones switched on so offenders can be caught and punished.
Sri Lanka are one of the countries supporting the idea of having the
microphones on throughout a match. Sri Lanka captain Arjuna Ranatunga
said last week: "If you are playing the game properly you don't have
to switch the microphones off. The microphones should be there full
time. You tend to take such precautions only if you are worried. The
public is there to support cricket and they have the right to know
what's happening in the middle".
England captain Alec Stewart is opposed to the idea, after having
been caught using abusive language against Sri Lanka in the World
Series Cup game at Adelaide early this year, and during the Sri
Lanka's tour of England last year.
Walcott rated the Australians as the leading sledges with England in
second place.
On the question of Muralitharan and why he continues to be called for
throwing despite the ICC clearing his action, Walcott told 'The Daily
Telegraph': "No bowler is ever "clear" - that is the wrong word. All
bowlers are reviewed on an ongoing basis, therefore the umpire (Ross
Emerson) in Adelaide was perfectly within his rights to call Murali
if he thought his action had deteriorated since the last time he was
studied on video tape.
"Murali has been studied again since Adelaide and still there is no
evidence to suggest, he is transgressing the law as it stands.
Incidentally, our purpose is not to throw a bowler out of the game,
it is to help him. If a bowler has a problem we look for him to
improve his action. The ICC does more for the game behind the scenes
than people realise," said Walcott, who still chairs the ICC cricket
sub-committee.
Source :: The Daily News (https://www.lanka.net/lakehouse/)