NEWS ALERT

NEWS UPDATE : Asian Cricket Third Sri Lanka-Pakistan ODI abandoned due to rain COLOMBO: The third One-day International between Sri Lanka and Pakistan was abandoned due to rain here at the R Premadasa Stadium on Wednesday. The umpires made this decision after consulting ... Australia want to master all forms of game: Clarke SYDNEY: Australia's limited-overs tour of England and Ireland represents the start of a two-year campaign to make them the top nation in all three forms of the game, captain Michael Clarke said ... Bopara glad to be back for England SOUTHAMPTON, England: Ravi Bopara is eager to make up for lost times as he tries to revive his ... South Africa name unchanged squad for England series JOHANNESBURG: South Africa have kept faith with a winning formula by naming an unchanged squad for the three-Test series in England starting next month, Cricket South Africa (CSA) announced on ...


Tuesday, June 05, 2012

Gavaskar slams ICC over Indian rain-rule snub


NEW DELHI : Batting legend Sunil Gavaskar has hit out at the International Cricket Council (ICC) for retaining the Duckworth/Lewis rule for rain-affected games despite an alternative suggested by an Indian engineer.
The game's world governing body on Friday said it would stick with the rule devised by Englishmen Frank Duckworth and Tony Lewis, as it did not feel that any improvements could be offered in the method put forward by V. Jayadevan.
Gavaskar, writing in his column for the Times of India newspaper on Sunday, said the ICC should have at least given a trial to Jayadevan's system of calculating revised targets in limited-over matches.
"In all fairness ICC should have tried the Jayadevan method for a year, like they do with trial laws, and then decided," the former India captain said.
Jayadevan, an engineer from the south Indian state of Kerala, has spent a decade working on his so-called VJD system which has been used in Indian domestic matches since 2007 following a recommendation from Gavaskar himself.
The ICC's cricket committee, meeting in London, said it had considered Jayadevan's method in detail but found no evidence of any significant flaws in the D/L method, which was first introduced internationally in 1996.
Gavaskar also castigated the Indian media for failing to get behind Jayadevan. "Unfortunately the Indian media was busy with the IPL (Indian Premier League)," the former opener wrote.
In England, Jayadevan's challenge has been seen by some as another attempt by India, the game's superpower, to chip away at the influence of the former colonial power and inventor of the game.