alfie wrote:As for Deep it was also fairly clear he touched the ball. Quite apart from the spike on ultra edge there is a clear red mark on his bat just after the ball passes which wasn't there before so I have no doubt that on this occasion the sound technology worked
The smoking gun moment of the red mark being left was not shown to the third umpire, the replay was only shown a while after, so we can separate it from our judgement of the decision making process. For me, there is an obvious contradiction in approach between both dismissals - why, when snicko says nothing has been hit can the umpire use the visual evidence, yet when a sound registers on Snicko, its conclusive evidence of a bat hit despite the frozen picture being shown of the ball well away from the edge and no registering of any edge the exact moment it passes the bat???
You either use all this technology or you don't. But as we all know nothing man made is perfect we also have a trained human charged with looking at all of it and making a considered decision ... which itself is not guaranteed to be 100% correct every time ; but is probably more likely to get things right than the old way of relying on the real time eyes and ears of an umpire standing 20 odd yards away.
Where Snicko is concerned, umpires just look for sounds without having the ability to decipher what they are seeing. I remember Ian Bell years ago being given out in South Africa for a top edge registering on Snicko - it was not an edge. The sound produced was in no way consistent with what you would get with something hitting something, but the umpire seen a murmur on snicko, and that was it. Sound = bat.
I already gave the long boring explanation, but beyond absolute doubt the soundwave shown in the replay of Akash's wicket shows that the whole system being used is picking up all kinds of interference. We already know the technology is faulting after Jaiswal's wicket - why, therefore, are we using it? There is clearly something very wrong going on.
In fact I see the chap who actually founded the firm which operates it says that it won't always pick up anything on "glance type shots"
He is talking b*llocks. They use condenser mics with extremely high sensitives, they can pick up the sound of a mouse farting from 10 miles away when cranked out at the max. This itself causes issues because the microphone is picking up all kinds of ambient noise (which is why usually in live circumstances you use dynamic mics, but they are not as sensitive), and his actual quote was to say that all they had with the Jaiswal edge was ambient noise from the crowd on the audio. Put simply, this is a setup/operator issue, not the microphone not working. The sound will be somewhere in the recording, you just need to bring it out and isolate it from all the noise.
Worth noting that TV Audio Engineers, especially in live events like sport, do not tend to be audio specialists but also work back up on cameras and other stuff, and as a result are nowhere near as skilled as their music/film industry equivalents (quite famously so, in general they are pretty rubbish). The fact he is saying he can't actually use his own equipment is pretty embarrassing - but he did used to be an accountant for most his life, so he's probably faking it. Or maybe, as he does own hot spot too, it was just a sales pitch for selling extra gear to the Aussie Cricket Board.
Either way, its unacceptable. Your job is to assess the sound, saying in certain cases you dont have the capability to do it is... well, pretty shocking. Nothing new. He did say in the Aussie/England game last time in Melbourne that the distinct sound of the pitch at the MCG interfered with the tech. But I guess that underlines my point, doesnt it? The owner of the tech is saying the scrapping sound of a batsmans boot on the pitch is being picked up like edge sounds, and we are supposed to trust this?
Surely once the Jaiswal dismissal passed, the match referee implements the protocol that removes snicko for use in the match