Ian Bishop’s first reaction when Keemo Paul whipped off the bails with Zimbabwe’s No.11 Richard Ngarva backing up in last Sunday’s decisive Under 19 World Cup match in Bangladesh was, ‘Oh, No!’.
As TV umpire Tim Robinson checked the video replay on whether or not the last man’s bat was out of his ground, the former West Indies fast bowler, now globe-trotting TV commentator, added: ‘It’s sad if it ends that way.’ It did as Ngarva’s bat was shown to be on but not within the crease.
After watching a fascinating, fluctuating match throughout on the other side of the planet, my sentiments corresponded with Bishop’s. The West Indies required one wicket and Zimbabwe three runs to win for one or the other to move into the quarter-finals.
As Paul started his run, presumably to bowl the first ball of the last of the 50 overs, I found myself mumbling a silent plea that he would end it by knocking back the middle stump of the facing batsman, Kundai Matigimu, much as Azarri Joseph had spectacularly done with his 140 kph pace twice earlier in the innings. Instead, Ngarva offered an easier option and Paul took it.
In a post-match discussion, Bishop’s fellow commentators Dominic Cork, Pommie Mbangwa and Alan Wilkin were adamant Paul had breached the Spirit of Cricket. They would not be persuaded by Bishop’s view that it didn’t any more than sledging did.
Nothing in the game has fuelled an outbreak of strong, contentious views more than chucking and ‘Mankading’, a term derived from the great Indian all-rounder’s run out of Australia’s Bill Brown, backing up in the 1947 Test in Sydney. Technology that precisely measures the permitted degree of flex in a bowler’s delivery elbow has largely eliminated argument over the former; no formula has yet been devised to deal with it, the most prominent a suggestion for one mandatory warning to the transgressing batsman.
Inevitably and immediately, Paul’s latest intervention filled the internet and the social, print and broadcast media with contrasting views, many from past and present players. As with chucking, most of the outraged comments referred to the Spirit of Cricket preamble to the Laws that are exclusively authored by the MCC.
Among them was the former New Zealand captain Stephen Fleming who condemned the West Indies tactic as ‘absolutely disgraceful’. He apparently forgot his role as New Zealand captain in an earlier case that challenged the Spirit of Cricket declaration. In 2006, as Sri Lanka’s last man Muttiah Muralitharan strolled down the pitch to congratulate Kumar Sangakarra on reaching 100 in the Christchurch Test, he was run out by Brendon McCullum’s throw from the outfield. I was on the TV commentary panel and recall Fleming stating that ‘the game doesn’t stop when a player gets 100’.
The Spirit of Cricket preface to the Laws reads: ‘Cricket is a game that owes much of its appeal to the fact that it should be played not only with the Laws but also within the Spirit of the Game. Any action which is seen to abuse this spirit causes injury to the game itself. The major responsibility for ensuring the spirit of fair play rests with the captains.’ The ‘fact’ is that it has been used by teams and players, from W.G.Grace to the present time, only when expedient, prompting the International Cricket Council (ICC) to introduce its own code of conduct.
The MCC stated its position on the present case in unambiguous language. “It’s clear to us. If he’s out of his ground, he’s out,” their spokesman said. “If the batsman had not been out of his crease, there would have been no issue about the spirit of cricket. Obviously this is as small a margin as it gets but that makes no difference. If you’re out, you’re out. This is not a spirit of cricket issue, it’s a laws issue.”
It echoed Don Bradman’s take on Brown’s original ‘mankading’.
“The laws of cricket make it quite clear that the non-striker must keep within his ground until the ball has been delivered,” the revered Australian captain wrote in his autobiography. “If not, why is the provision there which enables the bowler to run him out? By backing up too far or too early the non-striker is very obviously gaining an unfair advantage.”
A captain of most recent vintage was also strong on the interpretation of the Spirit of Cricket.
Mike Atherton maintained that “any inch gained, deliberately or not, in a tight run chase is an inch lost to the fielding side and therefore he is fair game. Mankading cannot happen if a batsman is in his ground.”
Writing in The Times, he was also scathing of “the nonsensical preamble known as the Spirit of Cricket.”
He called it “well-meaning guff…that should be scrapped.”
“Test cricket is one of the greatest games known to man, but cricket itself is not special because of any moral superiority over other sports, nor should it pretend to be,” he added. “Anything that can be invoked as contrary to the game’s spirit, when a player is abiding by the laws, must be nonsense. Play to the laws, and you will be playing in the right spirit.”
Whether or not the bowler issues a warning to the batsman boils down to personal preference. The most prominent case of a West Indian making such a choice was Courtney Walsh in the final over against Pakistan in Lahore in the 1987 World Cup.
Pakistan needed 14 for victory with the last pair, Abdul Qadir and Salim Jaffar, remaining. They got to within two runs when Walsh spurned the chance of clinching victory off the last ball by declining to run out non-striker Jaffar, a long way down the pitch. Qadir then duly got the required two to third man.
Walsh is presently one of the West Indies selectors. It can only be speculated what he would have told his young charges had he been their coach in Bangladesh.
There can be no question over Charlie Griffith’s response in such circumstances. A fierce, no-nonsense competitor, he had no compassion for dozy batsmen.
He despatched Trinidad and Tobago’s left-hander Alvin Corneal in a regional match in 1964 and Australia’s Ian Redpath in the Adelaide Test of 1968-69. As Australia sought quick runs pursuing a winning total of 359, Redpath was absent-mindedly going walkabout down the pitch when Griffith cut him short. Australia ended 21 short of their goal with nine wickets down.
Predictably, the incident set off a heated debate in the press box where I was a peripheral participant. Bill O’Reilly, Australia’s leading spinner in the 1930s, then writer for the Sydney Morning Herald, supported Griffith. It was put to him that he might have used the tactic at some time in his long career. “Ah, when I was bowling they weren’t so anxious to get to the other end,” he shot back.
The same could not be said for Paul although at 18 he appears to have Griffith’s mind-set.