Slow over charge penalties price Australia a spot within the 2022 World Test Championship last and the Aussies have been now docked 10 factors and fined, with England copping even harsher penalties for breaches throughout the Ashes.
The strikes from the International Cricket Council left Australian opener Usman Khawaja, who has been outspoken about gamers being fined, livid.
England had been deemed even higher offenders throughout the five-match collection, docked a mammoth 19 factors by the ICC, complicating the trail for each groups to get to the 2024 WTC last.
While the Australians had been deducted half of their match payment for offences within the fourth Test at Manchester, the house workforce had been pinged for offences in 4 of the 5 matches that had been dominated by quick bowlers.
England’s match charges had been docked 10 per cent for the primary Test, 45 per cent for the second, 15 per cent for the fourth and 25 per cent for the fifth.
The penalties have left Australia, who received the WTC last towards India in July, in third place on the desk and England fifth, beneath the West Indies.
Khawaja vented his frustration on social media, questioning how the Australians may very well be fined having solely bowled as soon as in Manchester, a match that ended with two days of rain.
“Don’t even get the chance to bowl in the second innings at Manchester … and ICC still fines us and takes 10 WTC points … that makes sense,” Khawaja posted on Twitter.
During the collection, Khawaja revealed he had approached the ICC about decreasing penalties for sluggish over charges in Tests after it determined to melt sanctions.
Khawaja stated it was “really frustrating” for gamers to lose their match charges regardless of delivering entertaining matches.
Former Australia captain Ricky Ponting stated the onus needs to be on the match officers to maintain up the tempo of play.
“I think the umpires need to start just getting the players around more,” he stated on the ICC Review.
“Getting them ready, getting them organised, making sure the batter’s ready to face up, making sure the bowler is at the end of his mark when the batsman gets back to his crease. “We’ve got to find a way not to be losing so much time in these games.”
But Australian captain Pat Cummins stated this collection was an “outlier” and most matches had been performed at a faster tempo.
“It feels like there‘s different plans every second over, or every over, every couple of balls,” he stated at The Oval.
“One batter might have a totally different plan to another one, so there’s lots of field movement. (There is) a lot more fast-bowling overs than there ever has been.
“This series is maybe that little bit higher pressure, and it’s not only the fielding side but you see the batters taking that little bit of extra time.”
Source: www.news.com.au