Umpires deliver a bouncer (16 June 1999)
The England and Wales Cricket Board's directive on the use of young, fast bowlers is at the centre of a controversy in the Birmingham League after Walsall were handed victory over Moseley by default
16-Jun-1999
16 June 1999
Umpires deliver a bouncer
Mike Berry
The England and Wales Cricket Board's directive on the use of young,
fast bowlers is at the centre of a controversy in the Birmingham
League after Walsall were handed victory over Moseley by default.
Nick Warren, a promising 16-year-old medium-fast seamer attached to
Warwickshire, was the innocent victim in the dispute after he reduced
Walsall to 58 for six in reply to Moseley's 98 for seven. Only seven
overs were left to bowl when the umpires instructed that Warren, who
had figures of 8-4-15-6, had to be rested under the mandate that
precludes teenage quick bowlers from being exposed to long spells in
Premier League cricket.
Malcolm Eustace, the Moseley captain, refused to comply, so the
umpires called a halt and awarded Walsall the points. But Peter
Davies, the Moseley secretary, said: "It's not in the laws of cricket
or the rules of the League."
Several top bowlers have suffered back injuries thought to have been
caused by excessive workloads in their early years, and the ECB
directive has been drawn up to prevent damage to youngsters whose
bodies are not fully developed.
Source :: The Electronic Telegraph