#1

e.Perhaps one day he will join Reiffel, Cha

in Support & Feedback 04.05.2019 05:03
von miaowang123 • 180 Beiträge

Number of men who have played Test cricket for Australia: 443. Number of Australians who have umpired a Test: 91. Number who have done both: five. Number who have done both in the post-war era: one. At least for the time being. Paul Wilson hopes one day to double that last figure and join his former team-mate Paul Reiffel as a rare modern Australian Test player turned Test umpire.Already Wilson has taken some giant strides - at his size there are no other kind - and stood in four ODIs and four T20Is. Hard work and determination gained him a baggy green and those same qualities will be required to earn the umpiring equivalent. On sheer numbers alone it is a massive challenge: the ICCs Elite Panel, from whom most Test umpiring appointments are made, consists of only 12 men.I want to do Test cricket, but its a patience game - just keep getting more experience and do more games, Wilson says. Again, its being in the right place at the right time.There is a reason he used the word again. Right place, right time is how he describes his 1998 call-up to Australias Test team. But that phrase suggests his baggy green was won via nothing but luck. Wilson worked hard to put himself in the right place and waited for the right time to arrive.Like many Test players of the 1990s, he came through the pathway of the Australian Cricket Academy. So far, so normal. But what was unusual was how he came to the Academy. While still a teenager, Wilson left his Newcastle home and travelled halfway across the country to Adelaide to pitch his case to Academy director Rod Marsh.This was not how the Academy worked. Scholars were invited; they didnt just turn up and gatecrash. Until Wilson.I just rocked up to the Academy offices, Wilson says. I said, Im looking to see Rod Marsh... Rod said, Try to get rid of him. Begrudgingly, Rod accepted me to come into his office and say hello. As he describes it, he says, Heres this large lump of a lad who filled in the doorway. Our friendship started from there.You look back at it now and being a father of three kids, I cant sit back and say, dont go and do something unconventional. It was genuinely unconventional at the time, and no one else has really done it since. It was a unique thing and Im very glad I did it.Wilson was given a few weeks at the Academy, which turned into a few months, which eventually turned into a full scholarship. Within a couple of years he had made his domestic one-day debut for his adopted state of South Australia, and a Sheffield Shield debut came in 1995-96. His trajectory kept rising, an ODI call-up coming in 1997-98, and a place on the Test tour of India that followed.Glenn McGrath missed the tour due to a torn abdominal muscle, and Australias attack in the first Test in Chennai was made up of Michael Kasprowicz, Paul Reiffel, Shane Warne and Gavin Robertson. Wilson was just happy to be part of the squad. But come the second Test in Kolkata, he became Australias 376th Test cricketer.I found out the morning of the match, he says. My now umpiring partner Paul Reiffel had got injured in the first Test, so I was in the mix along with Adam Dale, who at that stage hadnt played. And Stuart MacGill was on that tour, and Greg Blewett was bowling some overs... so its me, Dale or MacGill, and I was lucky to get the call-up at Eden Gardens.Mark Taylor announced it, got presented with the cap, the old process from the captain. I was honestly blessed to play one game. There were a handful of guys who werent available for selection for that tour and also that Test match. I was in the right place at the right time, and I was extremely lucky to play one Test match.Not that the match went to plan for Wilson, whose entire Test record consists of 12 overs for 50 runs without a wicket, and no runs from two innings. He remembers the noise of Eden Gardens, the thrill of playing at such a marquee venue, the obsession of Indian fans who knew everything about his career - and the devastation of breaking down with injury mid-match.It was the back end of a long summer and we all go into matches carrying a couple of niggles, he says. What I thought was a niggle was worse than that, and during the Test match it went bang. I did a groin in the Test match and later on was diagnosed with osteitis pubis, which was not really well known at that stage but its a very common one these days.To me it was the devastation of knowing in your own mind youve got an injury thats not going to get you through the Test, let alone the rest of the tour... You know in the back of your own mind that this might be my only chance, and it was. You didnt have to be Einstein to work that out, with all the number of players coming through the system and onto the scene, that it was probably going to be my only chance.And so it was. Wilson never represented Australia again, in any format. He played out his career with South Australia and then Western Australia, and wondered what he would do when it all ended. Coaching was his first move, but something had nagged at him even during his playing days. He describes it as an itch he had to scratch. He wanted to become an umpire.His timing was good, for in the early 2000s, Cricket Australia was keen to get more former first-class players involved in umpiring, hence Reiffel and Rod Tucker were being welcomed into a project panel. After they were promoted to the full national panel in 2005, Wilson was the next in line. Not that he was lured into it; he instigated the move himself, having discussed the career with umpire Daryl Harper as early as 2002.Its a pretty major decision, he says. In Australia it was uncommon for first-class players to go into umpiring. Rod and Paul were trailblazers. In England its very common. In fact, the majority of the national panel are former first-class players. I thought, Why not? I took the plunge.It took some getting used to, being out on the field but not as a competitor. Concentrating on every single ball of a days play, often for several days in a row.Early on, you probably found yourself drifting, you find yourself going through the old habits of someone fielding at fine leg or mid-on or mid-off, Wilson says. But the routines as a player in the field arent dissimilar to an umpire. You switch up, switch down. When the bowler runs in, as a batter youre switching on for that ball to be bowled, and as an umpire its no different.We try and find a bit of downtime while the ball is dead. But once the bowler is running in you switch on again. Those things that became second nature as a player became very handy as an umpire. You just need to adjust it slightly, because you have to be on and off all day every day as an umpire.What did he find hard at first?Its the nuances, the signals, being on the right side, going to the right side when the ball is in play, staying still, concentrating on the front foot, then bringing the ball into focus - all those things that as an experienced umpire ten years down the track I take for granted as part of my routine. Its a completely different world to being a player, even though were on the same ground.He also learnt quickly that there is far more to being an umpire than making out or not-out decisions. A good umpire is a good man manager, who can defuse a tense situation before it goes too far, or prevent one entirely by communicating well in the first place. And that communication is not only with players, coaches and ground staff, but as you rise to the elite level, it is event managers, media managers, all sorts of additional stakeholders.At the core of the job, though, are the on-field decisions. That is what an umpire is judged on. It looks easy from the comfort of the living room but is deceptively difficult. It is mentally draining - Umpires sleep very well during a four-day game, Wilson says - and certain decisions are incredibly challenging in the split-second an umpire has at his disposal.Lbws are hard when theres bat and pad involved, he says. If everything is close together, thats a seriously tough decision. If its a clear-cut one, fine. When bat and pad are close together and theres two noises, what are the two noises?With the advent of BBL etc, there is also the noise factor. If the players cant hear each other on the field, theres a fair chance that when theres a fine nick it becomes very difficult for umpires to pick things up. Noisy venues are a real challenge for umpires because we use eyes and ears. Sometimes, one of those faculties can be taken away from us purely from it being a noisy venue.DRS is a useful safety net if available and Wilson is a great believer in using the technology, but the system brings its own challenges. And not just for the umpire on the field who has his decisions scrutinised. Sitting in the chair as TV umpire requires a different set of skills to standing on the field.I think most people thought it was the job you went to and just had the pipe and slippers, had your cups of tea, Wilson says. But its a completely different ball game now. Its effectively becoming a specialised role, over time. Your skills are not only to do with going through the processes and protocols, depending on the on-field decision and whether its a straight-out decision or something sent upstairs with a soft signal.But now we also have the advent of live-to-air comms. Then its making sure your communication skills are right - knowing that what youre asking the director for is what the person at home is listening to. You have to make sure that is clear and concise, so that the person at home can see and understand what youre looking for.If we can communicate clearly then its effectively educating the people sitting at home about the process the third umpire is going through. Some of the really good ones around the world are doing that really effectively, and actually educating the person at home watching the game. Youre probably educating the commentators as well, to a degree.Clear communication, forensic analysis, immaculate concentration - these are not traits one might necessarily expect of a big fast bowler nicknamed Blocker. Nevertheless they are traits that he possesses, and have helped him become an international umpire.Perhaps one day he will join Reiffel, Charles Bannerman, George Coulthard, George McShane and Arthur Richardson as Australian Test player-umpires. No doubt that would make him immensely proud, as he is of that one Test back in 1998.In that era, to have played any games for Australia - looking back on it now, at the players around at the time, it was just an absolute honour. Vente Air Max 95 . LOUIS -- Lance Lynn was one of the more enthusiastic participants as the St. Site Air Max 95 Pas Cher .Y. - Free agent outfielder Jacoby Ellsbury, fresh off winning the World Series with Boston, reached agreement with the rival New York Yankees on a seven-year contract worth about $153 million, a person familiar with the negotiations said Tuesday night. http://www.airmax95france.fr/ .Y. -- Bills receiver Stevie Johnson has a bone to pick with the NFL schedule maker. Achat Air Max 95 Pas Cher . There are some early surprises in the race for the Hart Trophy, but two of the contenders are the leagues biggest stars over the past decade. There are many more players in contention for the awards than just the three that Ive named, and a good or bad week can easily alter the landscape, but through the first 20 or so games of the NHL season, this is how the awards races look to me. Air Max 95 Nouvelle Collection . Nigeria beat surprise package Ethiopia 2-0 in the second leg of their playoff for a comfortable 4-1 aggregate victory. Victor Moses converted a 20th-minute penalty after an Ethiopian handball, and Victor Obinna made certain of Nigerias place in Brazil with his powerful free kick in the 82nd at UJ Esuene Stadium. ARLINGTON, Texas -- Cleveland Indians right-hander Josh Tomlin has gone from unbeatable at the start of the season to winless in August.And that potent Indians offense is suddenly struggling to score runs.Tomlin allowed two three-run homers, the first to Carlos Gomez making his debut for the AL-best Texas Rangers, and gave up eight runs without making it out of the fifth inning as the Indians lost 9-0 in the opener of a four-game series matching division leaders Thursday night.My job is to give us a chance to win, and right now Im not doing my job, said Tomlin, 0-5 with a 10.80 ERA in his five August starts.While Tomlin (11-8) failed to get past the fifth inning for the fourth time this month, the Indians managed only two singles in eight innings against left-hander Cole Hamels (14-4), who struck out eight without a walk.We havent swung the bat the last four games, but I think were third in the league in runs, manager Terry Francona said. Its not realistic that youre going to hit the ball out of the ballpark all year. It happens. Just got to fight through it together. We will.Cleveland (72-54) was shut out for the fourth time this season, and that came after the AL Central leader had been held to exactly one run in each of its three games at Oakland earlier this week -- the opener of that series being a 1-0 victory.You keep working, second baseman Jason Kipnis said. I wouldnt be surprised if we come out of it here soon.Hamels retired 19 batters in a row after Francisco Lindors solid two-out single to left in the first. The only other baserunner for the Indians against the lefty was Carlos Santana after a leadoff single in the eighth, though he was stranded at second after advancing on a passed ball.Had all pitches, all locations in play. Had the swing and miss, Rangers manager Jeff Banister said. He had the ability to do what he wanted to.After Gomezs homer in the second, Adrian Beltre and Rougned Odor also homered for the Raangers (75-53), who matched their largest winning margin of the season.ddddddddddddTomlin is scheduled to start once more before the calendar turns to September, next week at home against Minnesota. The right-handed Texas native was 7-0 through eight starts and 9-1 at the end of June, but now hasnt won since July 30.He was crisp, Francona said. He made a bad pitch to Gomez, and unfortunately its three (runs).LOFTY MARKSHamels is 21-5 in his 38 starts since the Rangers acquired him last season when he was coming off a no-hitter in his last start for the Philadelphia Phillies. His eight innings Thursday were the longest scoreless outing for a Texas starter this season.SHORT HOPSIndians 1B Mike Napoli had two errors in the fifth, one throwing and one fielding. ... Tony Barnette pitched a scoreless ninth, after giving up a leadoff walk, to wrap up only the third shutout this season for Texas. ... The Rangers had eight hits, one each by eight different players. The only starter without a hit was Carlos Beltran, who is in an 0-for-28 slide.FRESH STARTGomez made his Rangers debut five days after signing a minor league deal with the team and playing three games at Triple-A Round Rock. The 30-year-old two-time All-Star outfielder hit .210 with five homers in 85 games this season with the Houston Astros before being designated for assignment and then last week given his unconditional release.TRAINERS ROOMIndians: Instead of activating reliever Tommy Hunter from the disabled list next week as planned, the Indians released the right-hander who has been out since the All-Star break with after a back issue.UP NEXTIndians: All-Star RHP Corey Kluber (13-8), the 2014 AL Cy Young winner, is 5-0 with a 1.78 ERA his last eight starts.Rangers: LHP Martin Perez (8-9) is 7-1 with a 2.36 ERA in 13 home starts this season. ' ' '

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