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England hopes fade for Decision Review System against India England hopes fade for decision review system against India
(about 4 hours later)
England do not expect India to accept the Decision Review System in time for the five-Test series between the teams later this summer. England do not expect India to accept the decision review system in time for the five-Test series between the teams later this summer.
India have been isolated for several years in refusing to accept the accuracy of the DRS, consistently resisting attempts by the ICC to make it compulsory in all international cricket. They allowed stump microphones and Hot Spot cameras to be used to aid caught-behind decisions on their last tour of England in 2011, but not Hawkeye’s ball-tracking technology. India have been isolated for several years in refusing to accept the accuracy of the DRS, consistently resisting attempts by the ICC to make it compulsory in all international cricket. They allowed stump microphones and Hot Spot cameras to be used to aid caught-behind decisions on their last tour of England in 2011, but not Hawk-Eye’s ball-tracking technology.
Giles Clarke, the chairman of the England and Wales Cricket Board, has yet to discuss the matter with his Indian ally N Srinivasan, but he and other ECB officials at Lord’s on Sunday confirmed that DRS is unlikely to be in operation when the series starts at Trent Bridge next month. That will be a frustration to Alastair Cook and his England players, who have maintained their support for DRS even when it was causing so much controversy during last summer’s Ashes series. Giles Clarke, the chairman of the England and Wales Cricket Board, has yet to discuss the matter with his Indian ally N Srinivasan, but he and other ECB officials at Lord’s on Sunday confirmed that DRS is unlikely to be in operation when the series starts at Trent Bridge next month. That will be a frustration to Alastair Cook and his England players, who have maintained kept their support for DRS even when it was causing so much controversy during last summer’s Ashes series.
India took a 1-0 lead in their three-match one-day series in Bangladesh with a seven-wicket victory in Mirpur, where Parvez Rasool, a 25-year-old off-spinner, became the first man from the troubled Jammu and Kashmir state to play international cricket.India took a 1-0 lead in their three-match one-day series in Bangladesh with a seven-wicket victory in Mirpur, where Parvez Rasool, a 25-year-old off-spinner, became the first man from the troubled Jammu and Kashmir state to play international cricket.