>Apocalypto<
20.03.2012
- Joined
- 2 February 2007
- Posts
- 2,233
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- 2
..there's only one IDIOT here. That be the person who thinks that Australia are top of the world in all forms of the game.
..there's only one IDIOT here. That be the person who thinks that Australia are top of the world in all forms of the game.
We have to knock you poms over in England to reassert our domination before we can go around bragging too much.
The whole intent of Australian sledging as I understood it was aimed to offend and rattle the opposing player - that involves saying things that are going to put them off their game - the more it bites and messes with their head the better. The reputation the Aussie's have (I don't know the reality, I've never stood on a field next to them during a match) is that they take it to the wire and will use whatever underhanded comments they can to get under the skin of the opposition.
What does that involve? I don't know, never heard it directly - maybe someone else could comment.
For example, does australia's sledging tacticis include things like:
* derogatory comments about a persons mother, sister, brother, father?
* Does it include comments about where they were born or how they were conceived?
* Does it include comments about what sort of sexual partners they like to have?
* Does it include comments about their personal hygiene?
I could think of all sorts of very nasty things that could be said to someone that wouldn't be classed as racism but would be very offensive and not in the spirit of any sport or positive human interaction. (I'll save everyone the use of explicit examples).
So where is the line drawn?
If you play with fire you get burnt. The Australian's (at least according to hearsay and legend - I've never stood on a field next to them) have had a reputation of playing with this fire for years.
I'd agree that sledging doesn't need to be part of the game. If the Aussie's want it to be part of the game thats their business but then keep it on the field. You can't have it one way and not the other.
If they're going to police on field language and verbal behaviour then do it consistently.
If you dish it out then you have to take it - and if its getting out of hand then the way to compromise is to approach your opponents directly and sort it out man to man - not go crying to a judiciary imo.
I believe he believed he caught it. Looking at the replay, I’m not sure – but there’s no doubt it hit the glove.What about the 'catch' Ponting tried to claim which actually hit the ground? Or where he raised his finger to signal to the umpires that Ganguly had been caught out?
The sub continent can only get the umpires sacked - not Australian Captains!
Punter did a great job, they won, he showed good sportsmanship (remember the catch he didn't claim) and fantastic leadership for the boys on the field.
What a load of sooks! I read in the paper they're considering going home. I thought people grew out of sulking before they were 10. They lost, they need to move on and fight a good fight at the WACA.
I wonder if people are getting 'gamesmanship' mixed up with 'sportsmanship'?
.......
This has now opened a can of worms, and the Australian behaviour will now be highly scrutinised for the slightest misdemeanour.
As long as you have humans making the decisions, the outcome will always be imperfect. Umpires in any sport will always do their best to make the right decision, because, lets face it, it’s much easier to get things right than deal with the fall out. On top of that, officiating is competitive in itself. These guys want to get a better ranking, a better review and ultimately the best appointments possible.The problem I had with the umpiring during the test, and in any sport really, is that the umpires had too big a part to play in the final result. The best umpiring displays often go unnoticed, because, that's how it should be. Yes there are swings and roundabouts, but that doesn't change the fact that there were far too many mistakes, not evenly spread, that had an impact on the final result.
Ricky Ponting didn’t make the umpiring decision. I don’t get how this is relevant. He appealed some times where replays showed the batsman wasn’t out, but who doesn’t? Ricky Ponting isn’t the one bringing the game into disrepute by abusing umpires like the Indians are. He’s won the test and he’s happy. And he’s certainly not focusing on the umpiring decisions that went against the Aussies during the test.As for Ponting, its like the pot calling the kettle black. If things go against Australia, he's the first to complain. Anyone remember Glenn McGrath's problem with the West Indies? He gave it out, and couldn't cop it back. Classic case of the bully-boy.
They are already. This thread is the product of it.This has now opened a can of worms, and the Australian behaviour will now be highly scrutinised for the slightest misdemeanour.
Ricky Ponting didn’t make the umpiring decision. I don’t get how this is relevant. He appealed some times where replays showed the batsman wasn’t out, but who doesn’t? Ricky Ponting isn’t the one bringing the game into disrepute by abusing umpires like the Indians are. He’s won the test and he’s happy. And he’s certainly not focusing on the umpiring decisions that went against the Aussies during the test.
And so it should be I think - particularly regarding racist slurs. ....
Having said that - its a shame that some of the fun seems to have gone out of the game.... some of the sledges I found here are just hilarious.
Best Cricket Sledges site
97% of all statistics are made up!I bet he's not...considering they went about 80% in favour of the Aussies.
Any objective observer could see that. Symonds in the first innings was out in the 30s....as for Dravid yesterday? did you see those incidents? I am just fed up with Ponting and a couple of others who clearly dish it out but go running to mummy when they get whacked back. I would say calling an Indian a bus driver is as racist as calling Symonds a monkey.
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