Game. The word represents a
contest. Two teams playing against each other or two individuals matching wits
and skills. However, there is one game which you actually play against yourself
– golf. It is an ultimate test of concentration and trying to focus on your
abilities and routine and get a better score than the last time you played the
same.
When you play the game on a
weekend, you are not offered solitude. The club pairs you with different
people. One such pairing, found me playing with a lady who was had represented
India in cricket. For someone whose long cherished dream was to play cricket in
whites at Shivaji Park, one of the nurseries of Indian cricket, it was a dream
come true. What more can a cricket fan; no a fanatic want than to spend four
hours in the company of someone who has played cricket at the highest level?
Of course at the age of 45, the fanaticism has been converted into admiration
and I began picking her brains. About the sport, the concentration levels,
fitness, staying motivated and the love for the game.
It turns out that the lady in
question is also a Match Referee. Now that is interesting. For me a match
referee was someone who has a very cosy and dream job. Wear a tie and suit, go
out for the toss, get paid to watch a match and then hand out a few fines.
As a child, we were told that the
grass is always greener on the other side. I understood the meaning of this
statement, when the lady explained to me her duties.
She is a match referee for domestic
games in India. Her job begins a few days before the match. It starts with
inspecting the arrangements for the players, in terms of accommodation, food,
travel etc. No, as a match referee, she is not responsible for the same, but is
responsible to report on the appropriateness of the same. She then has to
inspect the ground conditions and also the equipment like rollers, super
sopper, scoreboard, sight screen etc. After all the Board has paid for the
equipment and she has to report whether the same is in order and fit to use.
She then has to inspect the
cameras, whether they are placed properly as per standards. She also had to
interact with the cameramen, to check facilities and arrangements for them. We
take a lot of things for granted when we watch the matches on TV, but an
incorrect placement of the camera by even a few degrees can impact the outcome
of a match. She has also to check about the availability of a doctor at the
ground and whether an ambulance is present at the ground.
Once she is convinced that everything
is in order, she has to convene a captains’ meeting. She has to explain the
basic behaviour and the code of conduct. She conveys to the captain cases where
a certain player cannot bowl, as they have been reported for suspect actions.
She also conveys the disciplinary history of players coming into the match and
the impact a violation of the code can have on the team, or the player
concerned. She has to handle super sized egos. The bigger the player, the
bigger the ego. She also mentioned that she has to play the dual role of the
third umpire.
At the end of the game, she has
to prepare an umpire’s report, which is a very critical part of the job. This
reports the decisions they made on the field, the quality of decisions, errors
if any, how they handled player pressure, enforced discipline, ensured speed of
play etc. Over and above they also have to report on the facilities, the equipment,
the conduct of the match as well as handing out disciplinary actions against
the players if any.
On the whole it seems to be an
enormous job. She says, that in India the system is more difficult, as the
match referees also have to double up and play the role of the third umpire and
adjudicate on decisions referred by the on-field umpire.
So it is a tough job, where the
match referee cum third umpire has to concentrate on every ball, at the same
time, focus on the conduct on the ground. The match referee for international
matches has an easier role, as there is a separate third umpire.
I was told that India has only
one match referee for international matches. One of the reasons is that to be an
international match referee, one needs to have played international cricket.
Apparently most of the male match referees in the domestic circuit don’t have
international experience. Hence they are not on the international panel. But
the lady match referees in India have played international cricket. They can
qualify as international match referees.
Very recently, Claire Polsak of
Australia became the first woman to umpire in an Australian men’s top level
fixture. Another glass ceiling broken. As a follow up of that, why can’t women
be nominated as match referees in international cricket? They have inbuilt softer skills to handle
delicate situations better.
Since the 1983 Cricket World Cup,
the BCCI has had a great impact on international cricket administration. With
the amount of cricket being played today, there is going to be a huge pressure
on the existing pool. It is time to expand the pool.
The BCCI should moot the idea of
Women match referees in international cricket and begin by referring some of
its own woman match referees on the international panel. Time to break another
glass ceiling.
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