But the 3rd Umpire Wilson's view was
the one that mattered. The incident - and an aftermath in which Smith and
Morgan remonstrated about the decision - certainly added some spice to
proceedings. The crowd began booing the Australians and when Starc put down a
reverse-sweep off Morgan at short fine leg three overs later, the spectators
cheered with glee. For Stokes, it was
the second time this summer that he has walked off Lord's after a curious
dismissal against Australia. In the Test match he was run out in the second
innings when he jumped to avoid a throw from Mitchell Johnson instead of
grounding himself over the crease.
‘ Obstructing the
field’ is indeed one of the approved
methods of dismissal. It is not new too –
the only time a batsman has been
dismissed obstructing the ball in a Test match was in the South African cricket
team's tour of England in 1951 when, in the fifth Test, Leonard Hutton top
edged the ball and, thinking the ball would hit the stumps, attempted to hit
the ball away, thereby preventing the wicket-keeper from catching the ball.
Australia captain
Steve Smith said England batsman Ben Stokes was "blatantly out" and
he did not regret appealing for his dismissal in the one-day international at
Lord's. "If you're out of your crease and put your hand up to stop the
ball, it's out," said Smith after the 64-run win. England captain Eoin
Morgan said he would have withdrawn the appeal. Smith chose not to withdraw
Starc's appeal and, after on-field umpires Kumar Dharmesena and Tim Robinson
referred the decision, television umpire Joel
Wilson recommended that Stokes be given out.
Recalling
a batsman ? – Gundappa Vishwanath recalled Taylor; Mahinder Singh Dhoni retracted his appeal
against Bell !! – not Aussies, neither England would have done. In
ODI, Rameez
Raja (Pakistan) became the first batsman to be dismissed 'obstructing the
field' ; Mohinder Amarnath (India) became the second player to be dismissed for
'obstructing the field' in ODIs when he kicked a ball away from the bowler to
prevent being run out. Mohinder Amarnath (India) was also involved in 'handling
the ball' in the second final of the World Series Cup at Melbourne, 1985-86
which Australia won by 7 wickets.
In 1989 at
Ahmedabad in ODI no 589, Krishnamachari
Srikkanth was the captain – in that final over 8 was needed with 2 wickets in
hand – Kapil Dev cleaned up the tail, giving a win by 6 runs. After a 61 run stand with Navjot Sidhu, Mohinder Amarnath, the striker, was adjudged
by umpire Khizar Hayat to have obstructed the field. Amarnath had kicked away the ball as
Ratnayeke, the bowler, and Ranatunga were converging on it.
To conclude, on the final day of that Test in Perth, Rick
Darling drove Sarfraz Nawaz to Sikander
Bhakt to cover, who idly shied the ball towards the non-striker s end. The
unsuspecting non-striker, Andrew Hilditch, picked it up and threw it back to
Sarfraz, who appealed for handling the ball . The umpire had no option but to
give Hilditch out !!!! Earlier Sikander
Bakht, had been mankaded by Alan Hurst. Australia
needed 236 to win the Test, the openers were going good with 87 partnership,
when that incident occurred.
It did not change
the course of the match – but did leave a sour taste. Though there have been ‘handled the ball’
victims, Hilditch was given out, when he was the non-striker !!!
With regards – S.
Sampathkumar
6th Sept. 2015.
