One of the great things that modern umpires must learn is man management. I am quite unsure why this is so simply because the roles of the captains and the umpire are now clearly defined and apart from the occasional advice to a bowler who is unravelling after a couple appeals have been turned down and a few catches are dropped that cricket is a tough game but let's get on with it the rest becomes a mystery to me.
It would seem now days that cricketers can lose their concentration and cool and continue to moan and snipe away but once an umpire shows a little touch of rancour it would appear that the world is collapsing because many people somehow believe that this is unbecoming. Somehow an umpire must remain above being human.
So what we do know is that for many people the more 'pressure' they are placed under the more liable they are to error. The more liable they are to error the more likely they are to be criticised. Now isn't that what banter and sledging is all about? Unsettling people, putting them under pressure, hoping they will make a mistake? Of course it is. Now where in the Laws or rules or common sense does it say that you put pressure on an umpire other than by appealing for something that has a chance of being given out? Well there is nothing in the rules, laws or etiquette.
In cricketing heirachy the ICC sets the tone that flows through the country controlling body down through the associations and to club level. At club level they should set the tone for the captains to carry through. Now before I finish this article I know what some folks are thinking. You are thinking if we can't or shouldn't do this this somehow takes away some advantage we can achieve. Nothing could be further than the truth. You can play tough you can play hard and you can appeal for what has a chance of being out but you accept the decsion and move on. It's runs on the board or wickets in the book that count.
So the game is not played against the umpire it is played against the opposition. The umpire is an impartial person in the process. The process is in the hands of the players.
Comments please.