Waqar for uniformity on laws
Pakistan captain Waqar Younis Wednesday said the International Cricket Council (ICC) must show uniformity on laws and decide whether a match referee can take action on television footage
22-Nov-2001
Pakistan captain Waqar Younis Wednesday said the
International Cricket Council (ICC) must show uniformity on
laws and decide whether a match referee can take action on
television footage.
"I had said this when I was penalised for ball tampering
last year and I maintain this that how can a match referee
take action when on field umpires had not reported anything
wrong with the ball," Waqar said from Multan.
His reaction came after Sachin Tendulkar was handed a onematch suspended sentence and 75 per cent fine from his match
fee. Ironically, both Tendulkar and Waqar made their debuts
in the same Test in Karachi in the 1989-90.
The similarity in Waqar and Tendulkar's case was that the
match referees took extreme actions on the basis of
television footage and didn't consider the opinion of the
men in white standing in the centre.
Waqar was fined 50 per cent of his match fee and suspension
from one match on the 2000 tour of Sri Lanka.
"I did not see the footage but it could be anything from
cleaning grass or dust from the ball. ICC must decide on
that whether umpires are the sole authority to report the
shape of the ball or match referee can also take decision.
"I have been subjected to accusation of ball tampering but
nothing was proved."
Waqar said picking the seam of the ball was very common in
international cricket. "I think it's not an offence to pick
the seam and things like that have been done for so many
years in cricket."
Former Pakistan captain Wasim Akram believed India had overreacted on Tendulkar's suspension. "I think India has overreacted, probably because their star player was involved,"
Akram.
Wasim, who faced barrage of ball tampering allegations along
with Waqar on the 1992 tour of England, said the ICC had
given all the powers to match referees and umpires so every
team was bound to abide by them.
"Pakistani players Inzamam-ul Haq and Waqar Younis were
handed suspensions but Pakistan never reacted like this. We
have learned to take these things on the chin and I believe
it is time that India also start take it gracefully rather
than turn the incident into a circus," he said.
Inzamam was suspended for one match on showing dissent
against an umpiring decision in the final of the tri-series
at Lord's in June this year.
"I didn't see the footage but the referee must have taken a
serious step only after finding something concrete."
Wasim dismissed India's accusation of racism as "absurd". "I
have never come across racism on a cricket field in my 16-
year career. Its part of India's over-reaction."