The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Irate IPL umpire reported for kicking door

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An Indian Premier League umpire has been reported to the national body for allegedly kicking a door after an altercatio­n with Royal Challenger­s Bangalore skipper Virat Kohli, a press report said Tuesday.

Englishman Nigel Llong's on-pitch argument with Kohli, who is also Indian captain, was just the latest in a string of heated exchanges between players and umpires in this edition of the T20 extravagan­za.

Llong, 50, who is due to umpire the IPL final on Sunday, called out Bangalore paceman Umesh Yadav for a no-ball in a May 4 match against Sunrisers Hyderabad but replays suggested the bowler's back foot was behind the line.

Kohli and Yadav protested the call, made in the final over of the Hyderabad innings, but Llong stood with his decision. Umpires withdrawin­g a no-ball call is extremely rare.

Llong, who is on the Internatio­nal Cricket Council's Elite Panel of umpires, then vented his anger by kicking the door of the umpires' room at Bangalore's M. Chinnaswam­y Stadium, according to the Times of India newspaper.

The newspaper said that Llong paid 5,500 rupees ($72) in compensati­on for the damage but the state associatio­n has decided to report the incident to the sport's national body, the BCCI.

"It was an unfortunat­e incident. As a state associatio­n we are duty bound to report it and we are writing to the CoA (Committee of Administra­tors)," a state official was quoted as saying.

The Board of Control for Cricket in India was not immediatel­y available for comment.

Llong was also part of a controvers­ial decision during Bangalore's rained-off match against Rajasthan Royals when the bowlers were allowed to bowl only one over in the five-overs-a-side contest when a maximum of two is allowed.

The ugliest incident involving players and umpires this IPL involved Chennai Super Kings skipper and former Indian captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni storming onto the pitch to confront Indian umpire Ulhas Gandhe over a no-ball decision.

Gandhe signalled a no-ball for height, only for his Australian square-leg colleague Bruce Oxenford to overrule. Dhoni, who had been bowled by Ben Stokes the previous delivery, ran out of the dugout to argue with the officials.

Dhoni, 37, due to lead Chennai against Mumbai Indians in the IPL's first effective semi-final later Tuesday -- dubbed "El Clasico" of the IPL -- was docked 50 percent of his match fee.

This IPL also witnessed controvers­y on only the third day when Ravichandr­an Ashwin's "Mankad" run-out of England batsman Jos Buttler triggered a worldwide debate on the spirit of cricket.

Ashwin, captain of Kings XI Punjab, stopped in his delivery stride to whip off the bails while Buttler, for Rajasthan Royals, was backing up at the non-striker's end. While within the rules of cricket it is generally seen as contraveni­ng the spirit. - AFP

 ?? — AFP photo ?? In this file photo taken on July 17, 2017, umpire Nigel Llong (C) speaks with Sri Lankan cricket captain Dinesh Chandimal (R) during the fourth day of a Test match between Sri Lanka and Zimbabwe at the R. Premadasa Cricket Stadium in Colombo. - Indian Premier League umpire Nigel Llong has been reported to the national body for allegedly kicking a door after an altercatio­n with Royal Challenger­s Bangalore skipper Virat Kohli, a press report said May 7, 2019.
— AFP photo In this file photo taken on July 17, 2017, umpire Nigel Llong (C) speaks with Sri Lankan cricket captain Dinesh Chandimal (R) during the fourth day of a Test match between Sri Lanka and Zimbabwe at the R. Premadasa Cricket Stadium in Colombo. - Indian Premier League umpire Nigel Llong has been reported to the national body for allegedly kicking a door after an altercatio­n with Royal Challenger­s Bangalore skipper Virat Kohli, a press report said May 7, 2019.

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