Cricket umpire ‘headbutts’ player in England over ‘disputed’ decision!

London, May 26(ANI): A cricket match between Oswestry CC and Whitchurch CC in England descended into chaos when an umpire allegedly headbutted a player during an argument.

According to reports, the umpire gave a batsman “not out” and had a heated row with a fielder, who was convinced that the official had made a mistake.

Later, things turned ugly as players from both the sides piled into each other.

“I couldn’t believe what was going on. I have never seen anything like that on a cricket pitch in my life,” The Mirror quoted one of the players, as saying.

The club game reportedly had no neutral umpires so was being officiated by players from the batting side.

The situation only got under control only when local police intervened to part the warring teams.

The game was abandoned. (ANI)

Kiwi elite umpire Bowden finally breaks his silence

London, May 24 (ANI): Cricket umpire Bowden has become the antithesis of the archetypal man looking down the 22-yard strip, the understated, sober, unnoticed chap in the white coat.

But while he loves the attention, Bowden hates the accompanying media criticism and is desperate to be taken seriously, and not for his antics.

So for three years, he has laboured under the weight of a self-imposed media ban.

He has asked the permission of the International Cricket Council to be interviewed by the Sunday Star-Times, and wanted advance notice of the question topics, to which he has compiled judicious written replies.

Then, over the space of two hours, he happily answered every question anyway, talking about everything from the crisis of faith he suffered when arthritis ruined his cricketing career, to how he sings adapted Michael Jackson lyrics for motivation. And so emerges the other reason for the media ban: Billy Bowden can’t help himself.

Bowden says he was “destined” to become an umpire, although he too admits he would rather have been an international cricketer.

When he was 21, he contracted severe viral arthritis the original reason for his bent fingers curtailing a career he thinks might, with hard work, have culminated in national selection.

Until four years ago, when he became an ambassador for Arthritis New Zealand, he didn’t talk about it publicly.

“Was it because I was embarrassed, because I was a failure, my faith was tested… because it was why, why me?” he says. “I was healthy, only 21, my life was in front of me, and it was an injustice. I wasn’t happy.”

Eventually, his strong Baptist upbringing allowed him to reach a more positive conclusion. “Arthritis has been good for me, because I am sitting here now talking to you about something I would probably never have done if I had been healthy and played cricket. God has got a plan for everyone, and that was my plan… my arthritis has changed my life and turned me into someone I might not have been.”

Twenty-five years, 46 test matches and 132 one-day internationals later, Bowden is the only New Zealand member in a 12-strong world elite panel.

He reckons he spends just 90 nights a year in his own bed. His wife Jenny, a nutritionist who writes a column for the Listener, travels with him only half the time. He leaves the country again on Thursday for the Twenty20 World Cup in England, the day after their third wedding anniversary.

While he’s told his schedule only three months in advance, it’s likely that this year’s schedule alone will include Dubai, England, South Africa (for the ICC Champions Trophy) and perhaps the West Indies.

He agrees that it is, at times, a lonely existence. Then he chirps up.

“I follow the sun, I experience cultures, the different countries, and basically, I do something I love. It can’t get much better than that, can it? Just quietly, I think any criticism that I do get in the papers, on radio or on TV, I just say to myself, that’s OK, I probably had a more fun day than them anyway.”

He once, reportedly, danced around an Auckland pub on South African captain Hansie Cronje’s shoulders and gave the craggy Australian captain Steve Waugh an impromptu hug at the end of his final test (“I think Steve liked it,” he says wryly. “If I saw him now, I’d give him another hug”). So the reality of modern-day cricket must make it even more painful; there’s little socialising between player and official.

“It’s more like business than pleasure now,” he says, “they’ve got their team, we’ve got our team.” Then he adds:

“Unfortunately you can’t be seen in the bar or cafe with them because the next day you might have to make that tough decision and there could be a journo, like you, with a photo.”

Bowden’s like that. A lot of replies, which began life about other topics, slowly meander around to the media, their treatment of him, and his attitude towards them.

He’d contend that his dad is far more obsessed. Marcus Bowden, an 83-year-old retired Baptist minister, is a big fan of his youngest son. “He looks after everything that goes in the paper, good, bad or indifferent, he cuts it out,” says Bowden.

“He might need another house to put it all in. It’s just a hobby.” Bowden tells his dad not to make agitated phone calls to Radio Sport and sports editors.

The media bans, announced to the Dominion Post in 2006 and the Sunday News a year later, were, he says, not arrogance on his part, but about improving his own performance.

Has he ever been hurt about the things that have been written? While he shrugs off how one 2007 survey of Australian players rated him test cricket’s worst umpire, the one that seems to have stung (and he accepts as valid) was when he was widely criticised for openly souveniring match balls and stumps.

This mantra, which he repeats later, appears to have come from Jenny, whom he describes as his “inspiration” and his “hero”. They’ve been together for eight years (he has two children from a previous relationship, daughter Brooke, 19, and son Fraser, 16, who captains Westlake Boys’ cricket team). “My gorgeous wife says `bingo, they are on to it, they are correct, so don’t try to fight it’,” he says. (ANI)

Umpire Bowden shaken by Lahore terror attack

Wellington, Mar.8 (ANI): New Zealand cricket umpire Billy Bowden has said the very thought of being inside the umpires’ mini-van that was sprayed by bullets during the terror attack on Sri Lankan cricketers in Lahore last week, still sends shivers down his body.

Bowden said he could have been given duty for the Pakistan-Sri Lanka series, but the International Cricket Council (ICC) appointed him for the South Africa-Australia series.

“It’s a sobering thought,” stuff.com quoted Bowden, as saying.

Recollecting the television grabs of the attack, he expressed happiness that all officials had escaped unhurt, barring fourth umpire Ahsan Raza.

Raza is still recuperating in hospital. His condition is said to be serious, but stable.

“It is impossible to imagine the enormity of what the officials in that mini-van went through. I am just thankful that the officials in there emerged physically unscathed and that the news of the one umpire who was seriously injured, Ahsan Raza, appears to be more encouraging,” Bowden said.

He also supported match referee Chris Broad and umpire Simon Taufel’s stance over the security issue.

Both Broad and Taufel have expressed their unhappiness about the security arrangements made for the whole convoy.

Bowden said he would continue to officiate in matches played in India and other sub-continent countries except, Pakistan.

“The incident happened in Pakistan, not one of the other three countries, India, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh on the sub-continent. I have to have faith in the ICC. If they say it is safe to go and umpire in a particular place then I have to believe in that view,” he added.

About the 2011 World Cup, whose future hangs in uncertainty following the terror attack, Bowden said the ICC would take the right decision in this regard. (ANI)

Pak umpire Ahsan Raza’s condition critical

Lahore, Mar.5 (ANI): Test cricket Umpire Ahsan Raza, who was seriously injured in Tuesday’s attack on the Sri Lanka cricket team, is still in critical condition.

Raza had sustained bullet injuries which have damaged his lungs and liver.

He is on ventilator supports at the Services Hospital here, The Daily Times reports.

Meanwhile, three police officials admitted to the same hospital with bullet injuries have been discharged.

“Six men are still under treatment in the surgical unit, while one is in the medical ICU,” a senior doctor said. (ANI)

`I hit the floor of the van’, recalls Oz umpire for Pak-Sri Lanka Test

Lahore, Mar.4 (ANI): Australian cricket umpire Steve Davis said that he immediately hit the floor of the van he was traveling in when the terrorists attacked the convoy carrying the Sri Lankan cricket team to Lahore’s Gaddafi Stadium.

Davis said that he thought the shots were firecrackers at first, but when gunmen opened fire on his van, killing the driver and seriously wounding two others, he hit the floor.

“We heard what sounded like fire crackers and popping off and we realized it was something a bit more serious so we all hit the floor of our van,” The Courier Mail quoted Davis as telling ABC Radio.
“We had come to a halt behind the Sri Lankan bus. It seemed like ages but we were pelted with bullets and the windows started smashing in. Our driver was shot dead. Our liaison officer was sitting next to the driver was wounded in the shoulder and he got to the floor,” he added.

Davis was travelling with another Australian umpire Simon Taufel, and both quickly realized how serious the situation was.

“Unfortunately our fourth umpire, the reserve, a Pakistan umpire, was hit while he was laying on the floor, through the lung and the spleen and he is in a critical condition having had surgery,” he said.

Former Australian test cricketer and Pakistan cricket coach Geoff Lawson said there won’t be any cricket played in Pakistan in the forseeable future.
Speaking from Johannesburg, Lawson said his experience of Pakistan had been “a very positive one”.

“I don’t think there’ll be cricket from anyone in Pakistan in the forseeable future. Certainly The World Cup in two years…will have to be non existent,” he added. (ANI)