Welcome, Guest. Please login or register. Did you miss your activation email?
Pages: [1]   Go Down

AuthorTopic: Great article by Osman Samiuddin on the Inzi dismissal  (Read 572 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Please post once and this message will disappear! Introduce yourself, say hello, jump into a discussion...

Sahir

  • Team of the Century
  • *****
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 3,660
  • Money: 1000.00
  • Vintage fruit can never rot!
Great article by Osman Samiuddin on the Inzi dismissal
« on: February 10, 2006, 05:41:32 PM »
http://content-usa.cricinfo.com/pakvind/content/story/236394.html

Peshawar dismissal row rumbles on

Inzamam's reaction leaves a bad taste

Osman Samiuddin

February 10, 2006

It should first be clear that, by obstructing the field at Peshawar, Inzamam-ul-Haq was out.

Law 37 (1) states that a batsman is obstructing the field if he willfully obstructs or distracts the opposing side by word or action. It is also obstruction if a batsman willfully, and without the consent of the fielding side, strikes the ball with his bat or person - other than the hand not holding the bat - after the ball has touched a fielder. And Law 37 (2), on accidental obstruction, states it is for either umpire to decide whether any obstruction is willful or not. Inzamam patting the ball back appeared willful and, in any case, both umpires consulted each other before ruling him out. That incident and its aftermath, however, revealed two disturbing aspects.

The first was that Inzamam wasn't aware of the law. Given the abundance of rules and subsections governing the game, it is futile - though not unfair - to expect captains to be intimately aware of their minutiae. At least, knowledge of those concerning dismissals is prerequisite for every captain and player. Granted, it is an uncommon mode of dismissal - he was only the third man in ODI history to be dismissed in such a manner - but rarity should not justify ignorance.

Inzamam wrote in his column for The News: "Such not very common laws need to be explained properly and in detail." Is it not incumbent upon a player to know them himself? And if they need explaining to one with a 100-plus Tests and 350 ODIs, in a career spanning nearly 16 years, it reveals more about the player than the laws. That Inzamam should have known the law brooks no argument, defense or justification.

It wasn't the first time either that he has been caught unawares; in Pakistan's seven-wicket win at Wellington, in 2003-04, he shunned the extra half hour on the fourth day 28 runs from victory. Showers and inconsistent weather were expected on the final day and the decision bemused and shocked observers. To Pakistan's horror, play was delayed on the final morning but, luckily, only for an hour. The win was duly completed. In quite a different way, that situation also reflected a similarly dangerous lack of awareness of situation and circumstance.

But more regrettable than his ignorance are comments in the aftermath which only compound his folly. By publicly accusing India of acting outside the spirit of cricket he raised a question, of sportsmanship and spirit of the game, when it needn't have been invoked. The match was delicately poised in favour of Pakistan, Inzamam's was a crucial wicket and India needed it. The mode of dismissal was legitimate and the appeal as sporting or unsporting as any for an edge, leg-before, stumping or run-out. Incidentally, the appeal was also as genuine as the one Pakistan made when Sachin Tendulkar was run out at Eden Gardens in 1999, another dismissal that sparked debate about the spirit of cricket.

Tendulkar appeared to have grounded his bat before colliding with Shoaib Akhtar inadvertently, causing him to lift his bat when the bails were dislodged and being given out; Pakistan could have withdrawn the appeal given the accidental collision but chose not to, which was their right. In Inzamam's case, the decision didn't even involve considerations of a collision as a loophole.

Ultimately both decisions were correct according to law and that, not ensuing debate in both cases about sportsmanship, is what matters. Moin Khan, who played in that match, called Inzamam's dismissal deplorable, citing it as an example of India's desire to win by hook or by crook and launching a scathing personal attack on Rahul Dravid. Conveniently, Moin forgets Tendulkar's dismissal. Was appealing for it then not outside the spirit of the game as well? In a realm as grey as ethics, such accusations are damaging and unnecessary and though they hold less significance than Inzamam's, Moin's words are incendiary, misjudged and possibly hypocritical.

Worse still, Inzamam further implied it could affect relations between the two sides. Mostly, this series has been played in a cordial spirit, aside from some niggles at Faisalabad. Inzamam has thus not only made an issue from nothing, within the context of India and Pakistan, he has acted irresponsibly. As captain of a side in a series where so much is always at stake, where words must still be uttered cautiously, his comments are unnecessarily provocative; for a ravenous media on either side of the border not strangers to hyperbole and context-removal, they are gold-dust.

Already India has been compelled to issue a counter-statement, and although they have correctly called for the issue to be put to rest, it is unlikely that it will so easily. Inzamam claimed he has, "asserted on my boys not to make much of the Peshawar incident ... however, in my personal opinion the appeal was not made in a sporting manner. Instead, it just might have left a bad taste in the mouth."

How, though, can he expect his side not to make much of it when he himself has already done so? The bad taste has already been left in the mouth and it is not the Indians' doing.

Osman Samiuddin is Pakistan editor of Cricinfo

© Cricinfo

Logged

CLR James

  • Global Moderator
  • Team of the Century
  • *****
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 2,980
  • Money: 322411.00
Re: Great article by Osman Samiuddin on the Inzi dismissal
« Reply #1 on: February 10, 2006, 05:49:39 PM »

Very good article indeed.
Logged

dextrous

  • Administrator
  • Team of the Century
  • *****
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 16,128
  • Money: 2038476.00
Re: Great article by Osman Samiuddin on the Inzi dismissal
« Reply #2 on: February 10, 2006, 10:00:34 PM »
With a name like that, I bet he has a hard time at American airports...
Logged

Sahir

  • Team of the Century
  • *****
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 3,660
  • Money: 1000.00
  • Vintage fruit can never rot!
Re: Great article by Osman Samiuddin on the Inzi dismissal
« Reply #3 on: February 10, 2006, 11:59:06 PM »
With a name like that, I bet he has a hard time at American airports...

He's not the only one-- had my fair share of trouble, but what can you do?
Logged

sudzz

  • Marketing Moderator
  • Team of the Century
  • *****
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 4,004
  • Money: 405718.00
Re: Great article by Osman Samiuddin on the Inzi dismissal
« Reply #4 on: February 11, 2006, 10:42:49 AM »
With a name like that, I bet he has a hard time at American airports...

He's not the only one-- had my fair share of trouble, but what can you do?

You've had troubles...really...they even harass students specially those studying their own law?
Logged

dextrous

  • Administrator
  • Team of the Century
  • *****
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 16,128
  • Money: 2038476.00
Re: Great article by Osman Samiuddin on the Inzi dismissal
« Reply #5 on: February 11, 2006, 10:44:56 AM »
oh yes, if you're brown, hindu, muslim, or sikh, they harass you.
it's gotten a bit better but after sep 11th it was crazy...you'd always get selected "randomly" and pulled over at three different spots before you could get into the plane
Logged

Libran

  • Marketing Moderator
  • Team of the Century
  • *****
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 7,597
  • Money: 202807.00
Re: Great article by Osman Samiuddin on the Inzi dismissal
« Reply #6 on: February 11, 2006, 06:05:04 PM »
oh yes, if you're brown, hindu, muslim, or sikh, they harass you.
it's gotten a bit better but after sep 11th it was crazy...you'd always get selected "randomly" and pulled over at three different spots before you could get into the plane

Can you believe that Mr Premji too had his share of troubles ??
Logged

bouncer

  • Team of the Century
  • *****
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 1,033
  • Money: 1000.00
Re: Great article by Osman Samiuddin on the Inzi dismissal
« Reply #7 on: February 12, 2006, 01:03:15 AM »
oh yes, if you're brown, hindu, muslim, or sikh, they harass you.
it's gotten a bit better but after sep 11th it was crazy...you'd always get selected "randomly" and pulled over at three different spots before you could get into the plane

It is crazy. Your jacket, your laptop, your belt, your shoes all need to come out. the coins in the pocket too. oh, don't forget the cell phone. And on the other side of the security check-up, they will ask you to hurry up. I almost got into trouble in Newark for saying , come on guys, I only have 2 hands....

My son's thomas the tank engine (those small metal ones) also looked like a gun in th x-ray machine at Atlanta airport. Had some anxious moments because of that. Few more passes through the x-ray machine and a 15-minute huddle by some crisply dressed but extremely stupid officers did not do much good. Finally,I had to solve the mystery for them!!!
Logged

sudzz

  • Marketing Moderator
  • Team of the Century
  • *****
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 4,004
  • Money: 405718.00
Re: Great article by Osman Samiuddin on the Inzi dismissal
« Reply #8 on: February 12, 2006, 05:16:00 AM »
oh yes, if you're brown, hindu, muslim, or sikh, they harass you.
it's gotten a bit better but after sep 11th it was crazy...you'd always get selected "randomly" and pulled over at three different spots before you could get into the plane

It is crazy. Your jacket, your laptop, your belt, your shoes all need to come out. the coins in the pocket too. oh, don't forget the cell phone. And on the other side of the security check-up, they will ask you to hurry up. I almost got into trouble in Newark for saying , come on guys, I only have 2 hands....

My son's thomas the tank engine (those small metal ones) also looked like a gun in th x-ray machine at Atlanta airport. Had some anxious moments because of that. Few more passes through the x-ray machine and a 15-minute huddle by some crisply dressed but extremely stupid officers did not do much good. Finally,I had to solve the mystery for them!!!

I knew after 9-11 people are on teh knives edge but this is ridiculous, I would have thought with so many Indians coming into the US each year they would have become a bit more tolerant and would have invested some time understanding the difference between different types of browns.

On a separate note, I also got caught once at the airport with a small basketball (miniature) in my suitcase in the X-ray it looked oblong and onimnouly like something undesirable on a air plane, I was made to open the box and show it to the authorities who actually passed it through the X-ray twice and got a dog to sniff it.
Logged

justforkix

  • Global Moderator
  • Team of the Century
  • *****
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 14,896
  • Money: 503064.00
Re: Great article by Osman Samiuddin on the Inzi dismissal
« Reply #9 on: February 12, 2006, 07:48:21 AM »
Interesting - I have never any problems in airports so far.I fly reasonably frequently too. Never pulled up and so on. Only problem is have to get to the airports a bit earlier than usual. Also, taking off the shoes and belt is only optional.

I've never even had problems even when I brought 5-6 cricket bats from India a coupe of years back.

Actually the closest I came to being pulled up was when the security in Frankfurt/USA transit claimed she had detected a nailcutter inside my laptop  ::) ::). I seriously asked with a straight face if she had lost her mind !!!

« Last Edit: February 12, 2006, 08:52:42 AM by justforkix »
Logged

dhruvdeepak

  • Global Moderator
  • Team of the Century
  • *****
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 13,641
  • Money: 1553178.00
Re: Great article by Osman Samiuddin on the Inzi dismissal
« Reply #10 on: February 12, 2006, 08:27:51 AM »
heh, ive had my fair share of 'extensive' searches. especially at o hare
Logged
In the attitude of silence the soul finds the path in a clearer light, and what is elusive and deceptive resolves itself into crystal clearness. Our life is a long and arduous quest after Truth.
-- Mohandas K *hi
Pages: [1]   Go Up