Dump Hot Spot and get ready to hand down massive fines

By Brett McKay / Expert

If it emerges Australian and English batsmen have been using silicone tape, or indeed have applied anything to their bat edges for the sole purpose of fooling the Hot Spot technology within the Decision Review System, the ICC will have little option but to get rid of the infrared tool.

And then it should prepare itself to hand down massive fines and/or suspensions.

Nine News last night reported the bombshell development, with the International Cricket Council said to be investigating the matter.

The development appears to be centred on Kevin Pietersen’s dismissal in England’s second innings of the Third Test at Old Trafford, where he was caught behind to Brad Haddin off Peter Siddle.

Pietersen immediately reviewed the on-field decision to give him out, and though there was a clear noise and the only thing near the ball was Pietersen’s bat, no heat signature appeared on Hot Spot.

That evidence alone was deemed not enough to overturn the decision and original appeal was upheld, much to Pietersen’s visible disgust as he left the field.

During Nine’s coverage of the Test on Monday night, Ian Healy and Brett Lee discussed on air a tweet along these lines from former New South Wales allrounder Dominic Thornley:

The suggestion is that by using silicone tape or some compound on the edges of bats, the heat signature generated by the ball taking the edge may be reduced, or even dulled completely.

In Fairfax’s reporting of the story last night as it developed, Chris Barrett and Andrew Wu listed a number of points on how the silicone tape is said to work, including:

“In theory, a bat treated with silicone tape would have a much smoother surface area than a standard bat, so less friction would be generated by a snick, and therefore less heat would be detected.”

This becomes an interesting development personally, too, as only yesterday afternoon I floated a theory of why Hot Spot may not be picking up nicks like in the Pietersen dismissal. Commenting on Cam Rose’s column, I wrote this:

“If you look at KP’s one again, you’ll notice that the seam of the ball is what makes contact with the bat, and not actually the leather. There was another at Trent Bridge – Haddin, I think – that was the same.

“My theory is that in these cases, where the seam makes the contact, the string within the seam is softer than the ‘hard’ leather side of the ball, and so string-on-bat could create a softer noise and even carry a lesser heat characteristic on contact than does leather-on-bat, and thus will make a fainter hot spot, or indeed, no spot at all…”

If, however, it emerges Pietersen and any other player is using something on their bats to fool Hot Spot, then I’ll happily park my theory and remove any benefit of doubt I was giving to players for perhaps not realising they’ve nicked the ball.

If they’re putting something on their bats to dull a heat signature, there’s a fair chance they know they’ve hit the cover off it as well.

And here’s where the ICC needs to get tough.

Listeners of the Cheap Seats podcast will know Ryan O’Connell and I have different views on whether a batsman not walking should be considered a cheat, but in this instance, there can be no doubt.

The application of any tape or compound or substance on the edge of the bat for the sole purpose on fooling Hot Spot can only be considered out-and-out cheating.

If the allegations by Channel Nine are correct, it must be dealt with the same seriousness as anyone who attempts to alter the ball, be that by using a thumbnail, sun cream, dirt, mint saliva, or the good old bottle top.

Hefty fines must be handed down to those found guilty, and lengthy suspensions must be considered too.

It amounts to bringing the game into disrepute of the worst kind.

The problem is going to be in proving the allegations, though. Using tape on bat edges, or applying clear protective adhesive to bat faces, has been going on for 20 years or more.

The difficulty is going to be determining whether something applied to a bat is for the purposes of protection of the bat itself, or for something more sinister.

If the allegations can be proved, the ICC must come down hard on the individuals.

The ICC should also immediately remove Hot Spot from the DRS armoury and no longer allow players to review catches. If they are actively cheating the system, they don’t deserve the benefit of being able to overturn a howler.

The actions of a few mean everyone can just go back to accepting the umpire’s decision in the flesh, just as the actions of a few mean players are drug-tested or they have to hand in their mobile phones during the hours of play.

It’s cheating of the highest order, and the individuals found guilty deserve everything that comes their way.

The Crowd Says:

2013-08-08T14:21:26+00:00

Dicko McDonald

Roar Rookie


Totally agree! The inside edge into the pad used to be the big howler and hence why DRS and Hotspot was invented. Can't believe so many media outlets are giving air to this ridiculess story.

2013-08-08T10:47:58+00:00

Pete

Guest


Like KP said why do it if it stops an inside edge being seen and you get sawn off LBW

2013-08-08T07:05:17+00:00

Jitter

Guest


-- Comment from The Roar's iPhone app.

2013-08-08T07:05:14+00:00

Jitter

Guest


Player would still have to assume the nick won't be picked up at all. Sounds like an unnecessary risk, especially with the current state of umpiring -- Comment from The Roar's iPhone app.

AUTHOR

2013-08-08T06:43:03+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


Temba, I was a late convert on the clear adhesive faces used on bats, I preferred the natural face and was happy to do the work sanding and oiling the face and edges as required. I was probably a bit of a bat nerd though, regularly changed grips, shoo goo on the toe, etc. Had a bat repair kit in my kit bag! (Got a lot of stick for having it, but it got a surprising amount of use from begrudging team mates..) The last bats I bought i put the clear face on them though, you had to - they cost twice as much and last half as long!

2013-08-08T06:24:02+00:00

TembaVJ

Guest


Hi Brett if you have played cricket you will remember how you felt about your favorite bat, I hate new bats. I would use a bat till it broke, then go home and cry about it. In later years of playing we used fiber tape to increase the life of your most prized object in the world. If they gave me an option take a new bat or we feed my mum to a pack of wild dogs I would have kept the my old bat. I have seen pictures if it was purely protecting the outside edge then maybe, but its both sides. So it could get you out if you nicked it.

AUTHOR

2013-08-08T05:57:14+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


Like Big Bash stumps!!

AUTHOR

2013-08-08T05:55:37+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


One more post, Jayvan. You only had to scroll down one more post....

2013-08-08T05:46:22+00:00

Jayvan Collins

Roar Pro


Law 6! It is definately against the law. Unless they can successfully argue that it is for repair.

2013-08-08T05:32:09+00:00

i am drs

Guest


If i was employed by CA I'd be commissioning the installation of industrial strength freezers in all the aus ground's home dressing rooms for the aus batsmen to store their bats prior to batting for the upcoming Ashes series. Imagine it for a moment; clarke edges one to third slip and hot spot shows his -50°C bat with no edge haha

2013-08-08T05:23:47+00:00

MadMonk

Guest


Brett it is not inconsistent. He says no one will cheat and he has never heard players talk about it in the dressing room. The qualification is only to the point of players may have talked about it (just he hasn't heard those conversations). I think the better plan would be to run metalic stickers down the edge of the bat and a watch battery in the handle, light the thing up like a christmas tree and then get them to spot a hotspot.

AUTHOR

2013-08-08T05:02:27+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


Bunyip, the more DRS dominates conversation, the more I'm staring to agree with you..

AUTHOR

2013-08-08T05:01:14+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


I used ShoeGoo right up until the day I retired, Hoy. Actually, there would still be half a tube in my disused kit. Actually, there might be half of a lot of things in that kit now. Scary thought...

2013-08-08T04:54:46+00:00

Bunyip (the other one)

Guest


Just get rid of it - the game is fine it does not need DRS - decisions even out over a match. It proves that no matter what technology you have it is still a human decision open to interpretation. NRL, AFL, Rugby, Cricket the sports that use technology all still have howlers whether they are made by a video ref or ref on the field - it makes no difference. If it must be used than clearer rules need to drawn up - I find video takes the fun joy of a wicket or try to very low levels - great try, got 'im yes your out - oh wait review - maybe its not a try or a wicket - did he ground it?, was he onside?, did that seagull cause obstruction?, is a part of the foot behind?, did he hit it?, was the finger under the ball or did it hit a blade of grass that happens to taller than the rest first? - arrrggghhhh! It creates more doubt rather than confirming the doubt over the original decision that was referred! I am fine with forward pass being missed or a dodgy LBW - its part of a game and any team worth a dime should be able to overcome it - they did up until recently

2013-08-08T03:40:59+00:00

Atawhai Drive

Guest


It's not inconceivable, Brett. It's not inconceivable that I could make a comeback to cricket and become the most unlikely selection for Australia since John Watkins. But in this instance, a single allegation from a seriously dodgy source is enough to provoke a healthy degree of journalistic scepticism.

2013-08-08T03:27:29+00:00

Hoy

Roar Guru


What ever happened to shoe goo? Remember that one from the 90s? Every bat at school had shoe goo on the toe. Now? Not so much. The DRS is an amazing stuff up. They introduced it to stop Umpires making howelers, but the umpires making calls using DRS have made the most howlers I have ever seen. It is worse than the NRL ones, and how they come up with some decisions defies belief.

AUTHOR

2013-08-08T02:41:35+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


Let me guess, you put silicone tape on your pads....

AUTHOR

2013-08-08T02:40:45+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


Is it really that inconceivable though, AD, that batsmen might seek to gain an advantage, knowing that the Hotspot people have already conceded it will never ever pick up every nick?

2013-08-08T02:17:22+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Expert


In actual fact, I very rarely got snacked out, but I didn't want to take away the humour from your sledge. Now if you made a joke about LBWs on the other hand, I would retreat hastily from the conversation. . .

2013-08-08T02:15:43+00:00

Atawhai Drive

Guest


'If there's something more to it.' I for one will be utterly amazed if there is the slightest shred of truth in Nein's allegation. I could speculate that with the Ashes already gone, Nein is stirring things up in a desperate attempt to preserve the only thing it cares about . . . ratings. But shabby speculation of that sort is to venture into Nein territory. The DRS contoversy is about flawed technology and human error in applying it. 'Bat tampering' is just a bizarre and irrelevant distraction from an issue that is not going to go away.

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