Quantcast

Hales fined for dissent over Yasir catch

England opener fined 15 per cent of match fee by ICC as fallout continues from disputed catch on first morning at The Oval

England opener Alex Hales has been fined 15 per cent of his match fee after it emerged he confronted third umpire Joel Wilson over his dismissal on day one of the fourth England-Pakistan Test at The Oval.

Hales was given out in controversial circumstances in England’s first innings, refusing to walk after Yasir Shah claimed a low chance at mid-wicket.

Umpire Wilson, in the absence of a close-up look at the catch, stayed with the on-field decision of out, leaving Hales fuming.

The 27-year-old muttered some choice words as he trudged off the ground and the ICC revealed he then visited the third umpire's room to further question the decision. The ICC said he "made some inappropriate comments as he was leaving the room".

Hales was charged by match referee Richie Richardson and after play on day one admitted to a breach of Article 2.1.5 of the ICC Code of Conduct for Players, relating to "showing dissent at an umpire’s decision during an international match". Because he accepted the sanction there was no formal hearing.

His fine equates to £1,500 ($2,524) and he was also disciplined internally by England management.

Hales had been furious after he was given out off Mohammad Amir's bowling early in England's first innings, shaking his head and muttering as he walked off the ground.

A diving Yasir had claimed the catch and didn't hesitate in celebrating but the England opener stood his ground. Australian umpire Bruce Oxenford's 'soft' decision was out though he referred it to the third umpire Wilson to confirm.

In the absence of a close-up of the incident, umpire Wilson, whose voice as he came to his verdict was audible through the television commentary, said "there's not enough evidence to suggest the catch is either clear or not clean" and advised Oxenford to stick with his original decision.

Quick Single: Might Moeen leads England revival

Broad was straight on Twitter after play, questioning Dean Wilson, the cricket correspondent for English newspaper The Daily Mirror, about an earlier tweet announcing the dismissal of Hales.

While television replays had indeed failed to get a closer view replay of the catch, Hales also opted to voice his opinion on social media in response to Broad, attaching a zoomed-in picture, inferring the ball had touched the ground before Yasir could get his hands around it.

Hales, who was out for six, has had a poor series thus far, passing 50 just once in seven innings and failing to nail down his spot at the top of the order.

While disciplinary action for cricketers as a result of social media posts is far from uncommon, it remains to be seen whether either player will be reprimanded by the ICC; the governing body could construe the tweets as a violation of Article 2.1.3 of the ICC Code of Conduct, which relates to 'public criticism of the umpire's performance'.

The fresh controversy comes a day after the England captain Alastair Cook rubbished claims from a Pakistan television program that his side were involved in ball tampering during the previous Test at Edgbaston.

"The way both sides have played, there have been little flash-points but we've been talking about cricket for three Test matches, which is the first time (that's happened) in a series I've played in against Pakistan," Cook said yesterday.

"Hopefully we'll be talking about cricket at the end of this next Test."

Hales meanwhile has been particularly active on social media of late, after he refunded an irate England fan 10 per cent of the price of his ticket after complaints about the team's slow over rate during the third Test against Pakistan in Birmingham.

The 27-year-old transferred £4.10 ($7) into Alexis Fuller's bank account as a partial refund on the £41 ($70) he had paid for his ticket.

"That was all in good spirits," Hales said. "I saw the tweet and it made me chuckle and he had a point as well.

"I didn't think I'd get a response, but when he did it I thought I better go through with it.

Quick Single: Vince a victim of his own temperament

"He sent me his details and I thought I better do the right thing. I might have crumbled with 20,000 more tweets but it was in good spirits, a bit of fun."

England, led by Moeen Ali's superb 108, fought to 328 in their first-innings before Broad made a late breakthrough to reduce Pakistan to 1-3 at stumps.