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Bairstow wasn’t doing anything to try and gain an advantage either. Very poor from the Aussies. It could though be the kick up the arse this England side needed for the rest of the series.
Carey threw the ball immediately after he caught it , if he had of been stood up to a slower bowler nothing would have made of it. Bairstow was given out stumped NOT run out.
Quote from: Draytonian III on July 02, 2023, 02:26:20 pmCarey threw the ball immediately after he caught it , if he had of been stood up to a slower bowler nothing would have made of it. Bairstow was given out stumped NOT run out. Exactly. He was doing his job.I don't get how some people seem to think that the Aussies are somehow responsible for Bairstow doing something stupid.
So throwing the ball at the stumps as soon as you receive it is 'devious'.Jesus wept.
Bairstow could be criticised for naivety.The Umpires had no choice - under the rules of the game he was out.But sustaining the appeal was poor form from the Australians. Totally out of keeping with the spirit of the game.They deserve the brickbats coming their way.You could see from the reactions of Stokes and Broad (two very experienced test match cricketers) what they thought of the Aussies behaviour.
The batsman has made it crystal clear that he considers the ball dead.
Quote from: BillyStubbsTears on July 02, 2023, 03:51:35 pmThe batsman has made it crystal clear that he considers the ball dead.Not that it matters (because whatever Bairstow considered is completely irrelevant), but how did he do that before Carey threw the ball? I must have missed it.
Quote from: Glyn_Wigley on July 02, 2023, 08:04:01 pmQuote from: BillyStubbsTears on July 02, 2023, 03:51:35 pmThe batsman has made it crystal clear that he considers the ball dead.Not that it matters (because whatever Bairstow considered is completely irrelevant), but how did he do that before Carey threw the ball? I must have missed it.You MUST have missed it. Watch it again.Bairstow stands up after ducking. Still in his ground.Looks across to the umpire. Still in his ground.Looks down at his feet and scratches the ground (a tic many batsmen have after surviving tough deliveries). Still in his ground.Every part of his body language says he has no intention of considering the ball live. He doesn't need to hold a banner up with those words on it.If you watch the video again, you'll also see Khawarja at point (in the batman's eyeline) start to walk off in a clear "that's that action finished" sense.Finally, and in my opinion crucially, is the wording on the definition of dead ball in the laws of the game. One of the definitions is that the ball has become dead when it is settled in the gloves of the wicket keeper. Bairstow left the ball. In his ground. He was still in his ground when he will have heard the ball hit the keeper's gloves. He was still in his ground when, unknown to him, the keeper speculatively chucked the ball at the stumps.In the spirit of the game, there is tacit agreement on these things. Bairstow absolutely ad a right within that spirit to consider the ball dead when he left it and the keeper caught it. That's precisely the point that Broad was emphasising by theatrically asking Carey numerous times if the ball was dead. He did it to emphasise the fact that no batsman ever has to do that. Its accepted as a matter of tacit agreement between batsman and keeper. I'm truly bemused that so many people are sticking to a legalistic interpretation of the letter of the law and refusing to think about the spirit of the law that it represents.
Bairstow could be criticised for naivety.The Umpires had no choice - under the rules of the game he was out.But sustaining the appeal was poor form from the Australians. Totally out of keeping with the spirit of the game.They deserve the brickbats coming their way.You could see from the reactions of Stokes and Broad out in the middle (two very experienced test match cricketers) what they thought of the Aussies behaviour.