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Cricket Sports

PCB to send Ajmal to UK for test of remodeled action from bio-mechanics lab

LAHORE:  Pakistan Cricket Board has decided to send Saeed Ajmal to England for test of his remodeled bowling action from  an independent bio-mechanics lab to get his action cleared from ICC for the upcoming World Cup cricket tournament.    

According to sources in PCB, the board wanted to get Ajmal’s action cleared from ICC well before next year’s ICC world cup, so that he can be included in the squad for the mega event.

For this purpose, Ajmal action will be sent to UK within two months for a test from an independent bio-mechanics lab in UK to ascertain whether his remodeled bowling action is in conformity with the relevant ICC laws.

After clearance from an independent lab, Ajmal will go for a test in any ICC-specified lab to clear his action.

Meanwhile, in a related development the University of Western Australia (UWA) has raised serious doubts over the reliability of the recent biomechanics tests which resulted in suspension of Pakistan ace spinner Saeed Ajmal from international cricket.

ESPNcricinfo reported that UWA, which withdrew its services from the ICC in March this year because of a dispute over its intellectual property, claimed the ICC was using their methods ‘unsatisfactorily’.

“We have withdrawn our services,” Jacqueline Alderson, an associate professor in biomechanics at UWA told the website.

“We were initially aggrieved by the ICC leveraging our research without our knowledge or permission. However that is now compounded by the lack of transparency surrounding the current testing.”

In particular, UWA expressed concerns about the monitoring of Ajmal’s action after it had cleared the off-spinner in a previous test in 2009.

Alderson said that in tests conducted on Ajmal in 2009, the ‘frame of ball release’ was crucial in establishing the legality of his bowling action.

“More than any other bowler we have tested,” Alderson said, a large number of Ajmal’s deliveries would have been illegal in the 2009 testing if the point of ball release was identified to be “1-2 frames or 0.004-0.008 seconds later”.

The university highlighted four areas of concern in the current tests conducted by the ICC: (A) The method of judging the moment of ball release (B) The repercussions of placing markers in different places (C) The influence of both elbow ‘flexion’ and ‘extension’ (D) The continued use of 2D imagery in testing

 

 

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