No unfortunately Hair cannot be equated to a player since he is not one, he is actually an administrator of the game. The same yard stick that applies to players cannot be applied to him.
Why not? He is one of the many participants in the game "out in the middle". He is not an administrator, whose work is generally behind the scenes. So, players get fined and banned for every small transgression, while an umpire who may do the same in full public view gets off scot free?? Just as players have to not only display their skills but also maintain some decorum, umpires should also have the same yardsticks applied to them
Secondly the so called mis deameanours of Hair are actually his interpretation of the law and therefore his decision on the field. Well thats what he is paid for.
It is not levying the ball tampering charge that Hair is guilty of. It is levying the same without adequate evidence (note: even Doctrove who was the other umpire in the match suggested that they wait for a few more overs so that they may figure out who the culprit was). Independent witnesses (Simon Hughes and Geoff Boycott) also gave evidence that there is no indication that the ball has been unfairly or deliberately tampered with. This is not a mere interpretation or misinterpretation of the law. It shows that Hair perhaps is prone to jump the gun in certain cases without any adequate thought about the ramifications of his actions.
I have no argument with his decision to forfeit the test match and stick to his guns. Although I do believe that some flexibility could have been demonstrated here, once both captains and everyone else concerned wanted to get on with the game. But that is his call and he is entitled to it.
Thirdly there is an on field umpire, there is the square leg umpire, the TV umpire, the fourth umpire and finally the match referee. Any decision taken by a on field umpire can be rectified (we have see numerous instances of the TV ump supplying unsolicited info on number of balls in a over or even boundaries etc) by one of these people. So to lay blame entirely on Hair for either the tampering charge or for calling Murali etc is inappropirate.
This is precisely what Doctrove tried to do by suggesting that they wait a few more overs to find out what the real reason could be. And, Hair conveniently ignored the same. He also did not choose to ask the third umpire or the match refree if they had seen anything suspicious. No, he wanted to take the decision there and then - on an issue that has been highly contentious in the past as well. Again, an inability to gauge a situation and handle it appropriately.
On the Muralidharan throwing incident, calling Murali is fine but calling a no ball from the bowling end is not. It is not his brief - he better be focusing on the foot, while the square leg umpire takes a call on whether it is a throw or not. Ignoring this and superceding the square leg umpire not only shows that he was probably not doing the job he was supposed to be doing (i.e. watching the foot) but also disrespect for his colleague in the same match (i.e. the square leg umpire)
Finally, if we were to treat it in the context of a corporation, there are many a abrasive, uncouth bosses who are rude, prejudiced and poor man managers yet they manage to deliver time and time again and these people are generally rewarded with fat bonuses most times. So Hair in that context was just a poor man/image manager not really a bad professional.
First, those days are gone or on their way out. A poor man manager or one who is prejudiced has no place in most corporations nowadays. Unless a person's function is totally individualistic, his ability to maintain a cordial atmosphere is a critical element of most appraisals. If it is not the case in certain places, it is wrong. That is the way it ought to be.
Second, if that is the way we want it to be in cricket, allow players to go the entire length as well - contest decisions and be rude to the umpires. But if umpires are to be protected from things such as running towards him while appealing, players also ought to be protected from umpires who are trigger happy in nature - especially if the trigger is pulled selectively.
This decision to sack Hair has basically conveyed to umpires world wide that to take a bad decision is ok but to take a unpopular stance is strictly not ok. If you think a guy chucks-talk about it in a interview not on the field, if you think a team of dopeheads tampers the ball keep quite and write about it in your memoirs.
Well then you will have Asoka D'silva, Billy Bowden and the rest and the game shall get into a further mess.
No. It communicates to the umpires that you better have a good reason for taking any decision. And, like in any situation where one person is sitting in judgment over another, the graver the allegation the more concrete the proof ought to be. Take any decision that you feel is right, but follow the process laid down. If you feel the processes are faulty, get them changed before you go and do your own thing on the field of play in full view of the paying public.