Denesh Ramdin was happy to let Misbah-ul-Haq walk off after claiming a caught behind chance
Pakistan captain Misbah-Ul-Haq took a harsh view of Denesh Ramdin's actions during the last ball of the ninth over at The Oval, labelling the wicketkeeper's ruse "not in the spirit of the game".
Misbah bottom-edged a Kemar Roach delivery to Ramdin, who initially
seemed to have snaffled the chance, but lost control of the ball falling
forward, and it slipped out of his gloves onto the turf. But instead of
making his mistake obvious to the umpire or his team-mates, Ramdin
simply picked up the ball and threw it in the direction of the square
leg umpire, before joining his team-mates in the celebratory huddle.
Misbah turned to the dressing room, but square leg umpire Nigel Llong
alerted the third umpire, and the replay revealed the chance had been
dropped. The batsman, who had not scored at the time, went on to make 96
not out.
"What can I say about that?" Misbah said when asked about the catch
after the match. "I think he should have told them what happened, but I
don't know what he was thinking at that time. I would not be very happy
if my wicketkeeper did that.
"If we don't know anything, then it's fine, but if you know clearly that
it's not a catch, you should not claim that because it's not in the
spirit of the game."
West Indies captain Dwayne Bravo vouched for and defended his
wicketkeeper, whom he says, does not feel he acted dishonestly.
According to MCC's Law 32, a batsman can only be caught if the fielder
obtains complete control over the ball and his movement.
"Denesh honestly thought he had control of the ball," Bravo said. "By
rights the umpire had another look and the replay showed he did not. So
we don't play the game like that. History shows we've never had anything
negative against us unlike other teams.
"Unfortunately, he did not catch it. He's a very honest player, and as I
said, history shows if you check the records that we don't have any
stigma or negatives around us as a team. We have been true in our
cricket careers and history has shown that we play the game in true
spirit of the way it should be played. I don't think we did something
like this deliberately."
Roach said he had also thought it was a clean catch, but was
philosophical about the lost chance, which would have given him his
fourth wicket of the morning, and left the opposition 17 for 4.
"I thought he caught it. I really thought he caught it," Roach said.
"But the square umpire thought differently. That's an issue for them to
deal with, and we'll see what plays out from here. You make mistakes. No
one goes to drop a catch, but it happens, so you just have to accept it
and move on and be professional about it."
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