Give Afridi a break..

Ball-tampering is not the heinous crime it is being made out to be; it’s time it had official sanction

Cricket is a great leveller. Nothing better exemplifies this truism than Shahid Afrid’s shocking fall from grace. It took a fleeting moment of madness for him to become the villain of the game. Our hero’s stocks are trading at zero today.

The wrath directed at him is understandable. The hardliners can certainly take him anywhere with this - to the cleaners or the gallows. They can push for his ouster from the team. Afridi’s act may well have undone years of work towards dispelling the dark shadows of ball-tampering that seem to have hounded Pakistan cricket forever.

But it is also time to remind ourselves that this madness stems from a certain mindset and a background. Afridi comes from an era, a cricketing culture, where ball-tampering is considered a normal cricket activity, the done thing on flat Pakistani pitches - an art form and not a sin. It’s been a part of the Pakistan team’s standard operating procedure.

All teams have one. The Aussies have been brought up on sledging, and while the rest may see it as uncouth, offensive behaviour that is against the principles of this game, it is appreciated by them as a legitimate weapon to be used against oppositions. England moan when they make a tour of the subcontinent, and maybe this is part of their operating procedure.

Pakistan under the tutelage of Imran Khan learned the value of ‘‘ball keeping’’. It was a wonderful science. The instructions were to keep the ball dry; to parent the shiny side and ignore the other, so that the elements, like a dry pitch and bristly outfield, could naturally rough it up. Spinners were constantly asked not to dampen the ball with sweaty palms. The scratching was left to the elder statesmen of the team, but it was a last resort - an act of desperation that its perpetrators did not boast about. Only their sheepish behaviour gave away the story; that the ‘‘hand of God’’ had played its part.

Reverse-swinging the ball is certainly an art. And the condition of the ball is only one aspect of it. At times even a well-looked-after ball can behave against its masters’ wishes and not bend. Factors like breeze and cloud are needed to aid the process. Most important in the process of reverse swing is the bowler’s craft: the speed of the ball, the angle of the arm, the wrist position, the length of the delivery - these are what produce the magic.

If ball-tampering is being openly admitted by the players, and given that it is difficult to assign reasons for why reverse swing happens (since even tampering is often ineffective in generating reverse swing), shouldn’t the authorities stop looking at the practice with suspicion?

Calling ball-tampering unlawful and an offence is regrettable. If ball-tampering is being openly admitted by the players, and given that it is difficult to assign reasons for why reverse swing happens (since even tampering is often ineffective in generating reverse swing), shouldn’t the authorities stop looking at the practice with suspicion and instead look to bring it into the cricket syllabus so that we can all move on? It will challenge a batsman’s technique and will improve the standard of competition. Test cricket in the subcontinent on dead pitches will perhaps not be boring to watch anymore.

As long as there is imbalance between bat and ball, there exists a possibility, a risk, of someone playing God and attempting to bridge the gap between the two. Bowlers have been dealt a rough hand by the administrators. Flat pitches, thick bats, short boundaries, limits on bouncers, free hit and Powerplays are just a few things that have neutralised bowlers. Is it not wrong that a game that preaches equality and fair play has confined bowlers to the status of inferiors in a master-servant relationship with the batsmen?

Offspinners were forced to revolt against the unjust system, and they created the doosra, which has managed to bring a semblance of balance to a skewed relationship and also reinvented a dying art. Some would say bowling the doosra is tantamount to chicking; others view it as a justified mutiny against the lop-sided rules bowlers operate under. The managers of the game need to understand that a six may bring momentary pleasure, but the fall of a wicket is, and will always be, the ultimate high in cricket.

So give Afridi a break. He may not have played this one by the book but he certainly did read from the book of his predecessors. And he was forced to play God.

Ramiz Raja: Don’t crucify Afridi | Opinion | Cricinfo Magazine | Cricinfo.com

his whole so-called career has been one big break... what more of a break should he be given...

Re: Give Afridi a break..

he has shown guts too.. if not as a batsman.. then as a bowler n fielder.. :hayaa:

he brings the aggression to the team.. :slight_smile:

Re: Give Afridi a break..

^^ and shame to the country.. as a captain u don't get called cheater or get involved in this kind of activity...

I'm happy to give him indefinite break from the rest of his career.

That article is pure rubbish. You cant just allow ball tampering and give everyone a free hand at it. The 'art' is in keeping it in a condition that makes it swing... use as much spit, or sweat or ur arse muscles to rub it on as you please... the 'art' is in reverse swinging the ball while legally keeping the ball in a suitable condition to do so, not mindlessly chomping on it and having blatant disregard for the rules and regulations and not leaving an ounce of respect for your country and your team by any cricket lover with morals in this world.

Ball 'tampering' is normal...standard operating procedure. It is Pakistan's culture.
Shame on you Rajay...come up with something better next time.

Thank you. It has 'undone' the work alright!

Now get out of the commentary box and do something constructive for Pakistan cricket.

Re: Give Afridi a break..

i thnk he needs some psychatric treatment.....i cant accept him as captain.....sr py charh gya hy....in past i do like him but now.....

Re: Give Afridi a break..

well well..

okay raise your hand if you have never cheated in life..

counting hands

Re: Give Afridi a break..

It’s just that people don’t like OTHERS to cheat. It brings shame. :rolleyes:

Re: Give Afridi a break..

mere dil ki baat keh di aap ne :)

still counting hands

Re: Give Afridi a break..

nice article, tx

Re: Give Afridi a break..

im with afridi n will always be ........Make him the captain n than see the performance of the team .........he has done it n admitted it now end this issue

Re: Give Afridi a break..

waleed.. :hugz:

:champ:

The rebel who could be king, and a rule whose time may be up..

Why Afridi may be the captain Pakistan needs, and why the case against ball-tampering may not be as strong as some of us think

Shahid Afridi has always brought the essence of roulette to cricket. Not just the gambling variety but the rather more deadly Russian version. Predicting what Afridi is likely to do on a cricket field is like putting money on one of the 37 numbers on a roulette wheel and hoping you get it right. Off the field, though, he is more the oddball, likely to put the gun to his head and pull the trigger with one bullet in the clip. He has added greatly to the game but has self-destructed beyond imagination; a flash of genius one moment and a descent towards stupidity the next. Nobody else would do a pirouette on the pitch with spikes on. Hardly anyone would score a century off 45 balls opening the batting against a potent adversary. And certainly nobody would bite a dirty cricket ball and hope to camouflage the act by saying he was smelling it!

I am not sure which was the more daft act: actually biting the ball (and testing his immunity!) or saying he did so to win his side a match (having realised that the “smelling the ball” approach was a touch flawed). It couldn’t have got worse for Pakistan, with the trademark boardroom squabbles at full pitch, a pathetic performance on the field, and the hysteria over the IPL auction. Their real problems actually figure in that order; they’d be in reverse if you go by the time spent in debate over them.

In spite of all this I believe Afridi might well be the right man to lead Pakistan in limited-overs cricket, for he is most likely to understand others like him. There is something about him that engages you, there is a little playfulness to him and he seems willing to take a gamble. He might just nudge the Pakistanis away from rebellion and towards victory. Some believe that he is at the heart of most rebellions - precisely the reason why he must be given a stint as a leader. In most parts of the world an offence as dramatic and disturbing as biting a ball to alter its condition would ensure you never became captain. But such is the diversity in our little sport that I suspect in another part of the world it may not even be remembered for too long.

I believe Afridi might well be the right man to lead Pakistan in limited-overs cricket, for he is most likely to understand others like him. There is something about him that engages you, there is a little playfulness to him and he seems willing to take a gamble

But at least one good has come out of it. We now have a nice debate on the whole issue of ball-tampering. Predictably bowlers, who have always played the role of the exploited, sometimes with good reason, are all in favour of fiddling a bit with the ball. Batsmen (and at least one wicketkeeper) are up in arms. The law doesn’t allow it but maybe the time has come to question whether the law is indeed just. Cricket allows you to “maintain” the state of the ball but not to “alter” it. You can therefore rub the ball on your flannels to ensure the shine stays longer, but you cannot rub it on the ground, for example, to ensure it goes faster. But in either case you are altering the natural condition of the ball.

By maintaining the shine a bowler prevents the ball from deterioration. And yet the worsening of the ball, and the ensuing implications, are at the very heart of our game. Either action seeks to make the two halves of the ball unequal, so why should one be allowed and the other outlawed? Is it because one helps conventional swing and the other encourages reverse swing, which has always been looked upon as the naughty child in the family? Or, let’s face it, is it because batsmen don’t like reverse swing?

Having said that, I must admit I am not a fan of ball-tampering, but I do believe that if it went to a just court, those in favour would have a decent case.

Angus Fraser, always interesting to read, equates it to a batsman who knows he is out but stands his ground. Like ball-tampering, not walking has traditionally been looked down upon; unlike ball-tampering, it is now accepted. So, here’s a thought for everyone. Can you make walking mandatory? Put it in the laws of the game? And make standing your ground attract a fine? Would that make people walk all over again? What fun that would be.

I don’t know if Afridi would ever walk, but he certainly would find a hysterical reason for staying on!

http://www.cricinfo.com/magazine/content/story/446934.html?CMP=chrome

PS: ppl criticized Rameez on his remarks.. but I feel Harsha is someone who is always spontaneous and acceptable..

Its not just about ‘cheating’, its stupid enough to do it on field thinking that nobody is watching, not just once TWICE. Can you bring me another idiot like this? 1st one was dancing on the pitch, and this time he chews on the ball TWICE… not once, TWICE. Now bring me another idiot like this… waiting :chai:

lets get real people. Rameez Raja is not lying about reverse swing/working on the ball, etc.

similar thoughts have been expressed by Aamir Sohail. in fact reverse swing and how it has been obtained in the past is one of the reasons Pakistan hasn't been able to develop good openers - according to Aamir Sohail. his theory is that Pak bowlers became so obsessed with working on the ball and reverse swing that we have very few good new ball bowlers in Pak domestic which automatically means that we don't develop openers with good techniques...

the only thing up for debate is how the ball is worked on and whether it is legal or not. every decent team in the world works on the ball. the Pak team might have been a little more enthusiastic. regardless nothing is wrong with working on the ball by consistently throwing the ball one-bounce to the bowler and protecting one side... but biting the ball outright is just plain retarded.... and hence, something Afraidi was always going to do.

of course, there is the question of balance between bat and ball as well. even 10-15 years ago ODIs were considered a batsman's game... and the rules have become even more ridiculous in terms of favoring the batsman. so, imo, this ball change, power plays, free hit, etc are rubbish. they're going to kill genuine fast bowlers. how many truly express, quality fast bowlers are playing now anyway? there's not a single Wasim/Waqar/Walsh/Ambrose/Donald quality bowler playing now... and all these great fast bowlers played cricket in the same era more or less.

so, either allow the bowlers to work on the ball (not by biting it of course) or get rid of retardedness like power plays, free hits, etc that Gavaskar introduced. balance the game a bit. if a bowler bowls a no-ball, if you must then make it a free hit... but the batsman has to face the ball without the box...

balance the game out man... donèt kill the fast bowler. thatès the only reason to follow this game.

People who are defending Afridi while doing that are trying to justify his actions. While some are not doing it very openly, majority are doing it very openly. In my opinion his actions shoud not be defended and frankly speaking I don't believe when he said that it was done for the country. Honestly speaking I think it is BS. I think he did it to win that game and make himself the strongest contender for the captaincy.

Having said that people who are criticizing Afridi need to cool their jets too and let's be realistic. In an environment where almost every step is taken in the wrong direction, you can't say that two wrongs don't make a right and so lets cricify Afridi. He did a foolish thing, got puniched and we need to move on.

I have seen bigger scandals in a rather clean society and even then people forget about such things after a while unlike us who always want to live in a melodramatic world.

Brother Fkhan, he already was the strongest contender and was going to be appointed captain anyways. We all know that.

-Salman

I agree...ball tampering or no ball tampering...Afridi will be the next Pakistan captain unless Ejaz Butt is completetly retarded. Afridi did do it for the country...we have seen in the past how passionetly he wants to win. When he danced on the pitch, he wasnt even a contender for captaincy at that time but he did it cuz our bowlers were getting zero help from the pitch.

He will prove to be a good captain because he thinks out of the box...sometimes a little too out of the box :p