Nehra episode an unsavoury controversy
Anand Vasu - 12 June 2001
The recently concluded Test match between India and Zimbabwe at
Bulawayo threw up an odious record that every bowler would aim to
avoid. In the second innings, Delhi left arm seamer Ashish Nehra was
warned twice for running on the pitch and then banned from bowling
further when he transgressed for the third time. Umpire Russell Tiffen
cautioned the bowler twice and it was Darrell Harper at the other end
who finally put an end to Nehra's efforts. This was the first time in
Indian cricket that a bowler had been banned from bowling.
The law concerning this aspect of the game is very clear. If a player
runs on the protected area, (the protected area', is defined as that
area contained within a rectangle bounded at each end by imaginary
lines parallel to the popping creases and 5ft/1.52m in front of each
and on the sides by imaginary lines, one each side of the imaginary
line joining the centres of the two middle stumps, each parallel to it
and 1ft/30.48cm from it) he is two be warned by the umpire twice. If
the bowler runs down the protected area in his follow through a third
time, the umpire is left no option but to instruct the captain to take
the bowler off the attack with immediate effect.
That is precisely what happened.
Historically however, such a thing is not completely without
precedent. In 1967-68, Kiwi fast bowler Dick Motz was removed from the
attack in similar circumstances in a Test match against India. Motz,
then one of New Zealand's leading bowlers bowled just 14 overs in the
second innings, having taken 6/63 in the first innings.
However, the incident has come in for some criticism in the Hindustan
Times. The Delhi newspaper carries a report from Bulawayo suggesting
that Nehra was bowling to a plan. The report goes on to add, "Coach
John Wright and skipper Sourav Ganguly got an immense brain wave and
reasoned that if they played two left-arm pace bowlers in the XI it
would create sufficient rough outside the right hander's off stump,
which would be subsequently exploited by the off spinner Harbhajan
Singh." The skipper and coach would not take kindly to the insinuation
that the Indian team were seeking to derive extra advantage in this
manner.
While neither Wright nor Ganguly have issued an explanation in regard
to this incident, the team manager, former Indian opening batsman
Chetan Chauhan said that the matter was being looked into and would be
corrected. However, Nehra, the pick of the Indian bowlers in the Test
match has no history of problems with his run up.
It is unfortunate that such issues have come up just when India are
savouring their first Test win outside the subcontinent in 15 years.
Nehra, with just two Test matches behind him, would do well to steer
clear of matters of this kind and concentrate on finding the outside
edge of opposition batsmen instead.
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