Tendulkar wants more technology in umpiring

By Rahul Bajaj
for Cricketain.com

Published: October 27, 2009

New Delhi: India’s batting maestro Sachin Tendulkar has come out in support of more technology being used for umpiring decisions saying that the umpires should be left to adjudge only the LBW decisions while the technology can take care of the rest.

Tendulkar, who will be beginning his 21st year in international cricket next month, even went on to advocate the rotation of on-field umpires every session of a test match to provide them adequate rest. He, however, denounced the referral system introduced recently. A veteran of 159 Tests and 431 one-day internationals, Tendulkar said he was in favour of more technology in cricket to make the umpire’s task more accurate.

“It is tough for the umpires to watch the no-balls and watch what’s happening in the front,” he was quoted as saying on the India Today’s website. “For basic line decisions, like no-balls and run outs, you must have a laser or something like that. Something like what you have in tennis to decide serves. You can call it (a no-ball) with a machine.”

Tendulkar said that close bat-pad decisions can be relied on television X-ray technology called “hot spots” which clearly illustrates the first point of contact of the ball — either pad or bat. “They should use the hot spot for bat-pad decisions, so the main umpire has to make only the leg-before calls,” he said. “I’m quite happy with the hot spot because that establishes the contact.”

“For caught behind and all, the hot spot will come. Close-in catches, again the hot spot will come. You don’t need a machine for clean bowled, so only the leg-before decisions is what the umpire has to concentrate on,” he added.

Tendulkar, the world’s most prolific batsman, said that three on-field umpires should be nominated before every test match so that they can take turns to rest for a session of a Test. But he did not support the new referral system, where umpires get help from a colleague watching television replays to adjudicate on close decisions.

“I’m not particularly happy with the referrals because I’m not convinced of the TV angles,” he said. “I wasn’t happy when we first went through it (on the tour of Sri Lanka last year).”

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