Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Broad’s dismissal sparks fairplay debate once again

- Ankit Kumar Singh sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com

MUMBAI: :Four years after Stuart Board was mercilessl­y referred to as a ‘cheat’ in Australia for not walking and thereby bringing disrepute to the game, the English speedster had a reason to accuse the Australian­s of doing the same.

In one of the most controvers­ial moments of the ongoing Ashes, Broad was given out by the third umpire on the third day of the fourth Test despite TV replays suggesting that the ball had not been caught cleanly by Australian fielder Usman Khawaja at the deep. Broad, who had added 100 runs for the ninth wicket in the company of Alastair Cook, skied a delivery from pacer Pat Cummins towards the deep where Khawaja covered a lot of ground before diving to claim a tremendous catch.

After the on-field umpires decided to go upstairs to check whether the catch was taken cleanly or not, the video replays showed that the ball had bobbled up out of Khawaja’s hands while he skidded forward. Despite the inconclusi­ve evidence, the third umpire decided to adjudge Broad out, probably taking into account the soft signal of out from the on-field umpire.

For Broad, it was the second instance of being involved in a similar controvers­y during an England-australia Test. Four years ago in the first Test of the 2013 Ashes in England, Broad refused to walk after edging a delivery from spinner Ashton Agar to Michael Clarke at first slip. Since umpire Aleem Dar failed to hear the nick and Australian­s had no reviews left, Broad survived. Australia lost that game by 14 runs.

Six months later when England travelled to Australia for return Ashes series, Australian coach Darren Lehmann publicly called Broad a cheat and urged Australian fans to taunt him whenever he came to bat or bowl. Broad faced a barrage of cheating taunts throughout the

course of the five-test series that the home side won 5-0.

What Broad did way back in 2013 was wrong but Thursday’s incident has brought into question Australian players’ attitude as well. Wouldn’t Usman Khawaja have known if the ball bounced out of his hands? And if the answer was yes, should he have claimed the catch at all? These are the questions that the

English press and fans are going to raise in the coming days.

Despite the controvers­y, Broad would like to concentrat­e on continuing his good bowling form when England bowl in the second innings. After a dismal show with both bat and ball in the first three Tests, the English speedster has finally come on his own in this match and followed his four-wicket haul with a fifty.

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