Legendary Australian player Steve Waugh has advised the BCCI to work for the interest game in the world. Meanwhile he also backed the controversial DRS system. With the Indian Cricket Board finding itself in a soup in the recent time, Waugh on Friday asked the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) to look...
Part five of Simon Taufel's lecture delivered at the Marylebourne Cricket Club's (MCC) Spirit of Cricket Cowdrey Lecture. Taufel has upheld the integrity of the game throughout his career and was a phenomenal umpire until he retired from international cricket in 2012. In this video, he talks about the Decision Review System (DRS). He also...
If ever confirmation was needed, the umpire's decision is no longer final, at least at the international level, the first Test between England and Australia at Trent Bridge was proof of that.
Several cricketers have brought disrepute to the game by using illegal and unfair practices in the sport which should be actually based on honesty, uprightness and integrity, former Indian captain Bishan Singh Bedi said at chennai on Saturday.
The much debated Decision Review System (DRS), the use which was opposed by the International Cricket Council (ICC), found an unlikely supporter in Jaywant Lele, the former secretary of the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI). He has urged the Indian cricket board to bring it to function. It was not only the...
Deprived of the Decision Review System due to India's steadfast opposition, umpires could be taking advantage of an anomaly in referral rules.
With England having an outside chance of qualifying for the ICC Women's World Cup final, left-arm spinner Holly Colvin said the defending champions would have to make sure that they not just win but win convincingly against New Zealand in Mumbai on Wednesday.
Pakistan has objected to the use of Hot Spot ball tracking technology and also to the appointment of umpire Steve Davis in the ongoing Test series in South Africa.
Left red-faced after the powerful BCCI opposed the Decision Review System at the Executive Board Meeting here, the ICC on Thursday said that it will not force India to accept the controversial technology in bilateral series.
The International Cricket Council (ICC) cricket committee, which will be meeting at the Lord's in London for its two-day annual conference starting Wednesday, might re-consider the legality of switch-hit shot to retain a fair balance between bat and ball.