by Durhamfootman » Thu Feb 12, 2026 7:03 pm
From the cricketer
Erasmus was at the centre of what was the major flashpoint of this high-scoring game in Delhi.
The fifth delivery of the eighth over saw umpire Rob Tucker call the ball dead after Erasmus, bowling with a round arm, let go of it from well behind the crease. It caused a brief exchange between Tucker and the Namibia skipper before play resumed. Bowling as India were going along at 14-an-over, it was a clear, legitimate attempt to disrupt their rhythm and upset Tilka Varma.
Tucker's intervention was peculiar, and it wasn't particularly clear which breach of the laws he was responding to. In the end, it emerged he was acting on Law 20.4.2.5, which states:
"Either umpire shall call and signal Dead ball when the striker is not ready for the delivery of the ball and, if the ball is delivered, makes no attempt to play it. Provided the umpire is satisfied that the striker had adequate reason for not being ready, the ball shall not count as one of the over."
This explanation is problematic because Varma, whose head was up, looking at the bowler, attempted to play at the ball, got something on it (it is unclear what, exactly) and thus ensured it wasn't given as a leg-side wide. And it is further complicated by Erasmus later attempting the ploy on multiple occasions during his allocation, and even took the wicket with one when Hardik Pandya was caught by Dylan Leicher via a brilliant relay catch.
This tactic caused a similar stir on a couple of occasions in 2024 when Mark Watt was denied wickets against Oman, in the T20 World Cup no less, and against Australia. Like Erasmus, the Scotland left-armer has often deployed this strategy - indeed, the ICC made a point of celebrating one attempt on social media during the last T20 World Cup - and yet his perfectly reasonable attempt to inject some variety into his spell was undone by pedantic umpiring. Because while the dead-ball ruling is clear, it is ultimately at the discretion of the umpire when a batter is indeed ready. And it is reasonable to conclude here that Tucker made a misstep.
Anyone with a passing interest in cricket knows this has become normalised, and to great success in the WPL by Tanuja Kanwar and Sneh Rana. Kieron Pollard was known to get creative, too. Sure, rule in favour of the batter when they are truly not ready, but clearly they are being given the benefit of the doubt. The cards are stacked enough in their favour as it is.
Fortunately, the incident had no bearing on the final outcome, and it hasn't yet appeared to have cost a team a victory. Maybe it is a non-issue while the game continues to fragment off the field. But it just feels like another way of clipping the wings of the Associates, who, despite being very competitive during these opening rounds, will understandably try things to further reduce the gap between them and the full members.
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