Targeting the umpires
IS over-appealing leading to the spate of very poor umpiring decisions in international matches over the last 12 months
The Surfer
25-Feb-2013
IS over-appealing leading to the spate of very poor umpiring decisions in international matches over the last 12 months? Bob Simpson answers the question in his column
There is no doubt that the players are less respectful to umpires than they once were. Perhaps this is because the changing world we live in is less respectful to authority in general. I wonder if bowlers who are verbally happy to chirp at umpires with such cracks as `Are you blind?', `How could you make that decision?', would enjoy it if umpires, after a bad ball, said things such as `Call yourself a Test bowler'? `Hell, my grandson is more accurate than you' or `What a lot of rubbish, how on earth did you get into the Test side?'
Rohit Brijnath agrees with Simpson and appeals for cricketing decorum, targeting Australia in particular.
Certainly a team must express itself, but neither must it believe that winning makes any behaviour acceptable. For a decade, Australia's team has personified cricketing excellence, their play a triumph of discipline, desire, talent and courage. But leadership in sport is more than swinging a bat and hurling a ball.