The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Umpire errors leave England lost for words

- By Rory Dollard sport@sundaypost.com

England spinner Jack Leach claimed Test cricket had experience­d its own “VAR” moment after being involved in two controvers­ial umpiring decisions on day one of the second Test against India.

Leach thought he had centurion Rohit Sharma stumped and Ajinkya Rahane caught at short-leg during his spell in the evening session at Chennai, but saw both appeals waved away as India made 300 for six.

Ben Foakes’ sharp glovework went unrewarded when third umpire Anil Chaudhary made an unusually swift decision in Rohit’s favour, despite no obvious sign that the batsman had anything behind the line.

While that was at least a tight call, there was a clear error in reprieving Rahane after he was caught by Ollie Pope via pad and glove. England used a DRS referral to contest Nitin Menon’s “not out” verdict, but were perplexed to see Chaudhary uphold it without having viewed the relevant footage.

As with Rohit (161) before him, Rahane was dismissed almost immediatel­y afterwards, but match referee Javagal Srinath acknowledg­ed the failure by reinstatin­g England’s lost review.

“It’s a bit like VAR today, still controvers­ial even though you’ve got the video there,” said Leach, in reference to football’s own flawed relationsh­ip with technology.

“There’s nothing I can do. At the time I was a little bit angry, but getting a wicket the next over makes it a little bit easier and it’s not cost us too much.

“Out there we were trying to get them to roll it through because we felt it (the contact) had come after. They checked for lbw, which we knew wasn’t out,” he said.

“They said they were checking it, and then the LBW came up and we were saying, ‘No, no, no, check the other one’ and that was it. I got the impression that they hadn’t checked it.

“That’s all right, it’s obviously a mistake and these things happen.”

England will know India’s total is already a tough one to match on a pitch that is already offering big turn, with a promise of more to come as the loose surface breaks apart.

That is mostly down to Rohit’s wonderful innings, which defied the tricky conditions as he hit 18 fours and two sixes. Each one was roared on its way by 9,000 Indian fans – the first to return to a cricket stadium in the country since the coronaviru­s lockdown.

 ??  ?? England spinner Jack Leach
England spinner Jack Leach

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