African Safari: The tour diary
Ashish Shukla - 21 November 2001
Stirring up St. George's Park
Those who believe that cricket reporting is only about sitting in a
press box, sipping champagne, and looking through binoculars at how a
batsman leans into a cover drive should have been at St. George's Park
on Tuesday. The ground was buzzing with scribes turning up at the venue
as much as three hours before the start of the final day's play of the
second Test. The best positions in the conference room were being
sought, and television crews jostled with each other to ensure that
nothing came in between their cameras and the podium. Even in the land
that witnessed Hansie Cronje's sensational fall not too long ago, the
incident warranted a national audience.
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Elsewhere, in the commentators' cabin, Sunil Gavaskar was getting
slightly agitated with the producers of the television channel for
wanting to follow the regular practice of having a pitch report. "This
is not a moment when you should worry about the nicety of a pitch
report. There is a far more pressing issue, and people are more keen to
know about the decision on the players than to listen to the pitch
report."
In the conference room, match referee Mike Denness finally arrived and
suitably asked the chief executive of the Eastern Province, Gerald
Majola, to speak on his behalf. What happened in the press conference
thereafter has been well recorded by now and does not bear repetition.
Enlightened point of views throughout the day only served to expose
Denness' disasters.
There remained some confusion as to whether it was indeed the producers
of the local television networks who brought the much-talked-about
footage Denness' attention, or whether it was the match referee himself
who sought the video. Local television producers were keen to slip out
of the spotlight and insisted that it was Denness who asked for the
television footage. Again, Gavaskar was reluctant to admit the argument.
"It is difficult for the television crew to say they were not
highlighting the issue. They kept focussing on one man and his fingers
from the entire field. Television can't claim in this instance that they
were being neutral."
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Sir Geoffrey Boycott was his inimitable self. "Mike (Denness) sat in the
press conference looking like a wax statue from the Madame Tussaud's."
Cricket commentator Alan Wilkins had even received an email in which
Indian tennis great Vijay Amritraj wanted to know what was happening.
All this to-do was largely because the issue involved Sachin Tendulkar,
the Kohinoor of Indian, and international, cricket, a man who has never
been accused of even a hint of mischief. Never a dissent, an argument,
or a raised voice; a man who should be applauded as a role model by the
establishment and used as an example for others to emulate has been
slandered by the insensitivity of an uncaring, if not blatantly biased,
match referee.
Now the attention has shifted to India, particularly in view of what
Jagmohan Dalmiya, president of the Board of Control for Cricket in India
(BCCI), said on television. The immediate goal for the Indian side must
be to have Virender Sehwag reinstated in the final Test starting at
Centurion Park on November 23. The general consensus was that the ICC
should constitute a panel to review the judgements of Denness and so,
till it arrived at a decision, all rulings must be kept in abeyance. If
such a situation develops, the committee will take at least a week;
Sehwag would then be easily available for the Centurion Test.
Former South African paceman Brett Schultz said that the least the match
referee could have done was to speak to the umpires on his walkie-talkie
and then tell the players to get on with the game without excessive
appealing. "Especially when it involved so many youngsters who are just
breaking out in the international arena," said Schultz. A view no doubt
echoed by many throughout the cricket-following world.
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