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This is an archive article published on January 19, 2006

Lee joins McGrath, bats for umpires

Fast bowler Brett Lee believes Australian cricketers don’t make frivolous appeals, but joined colleague Glenn McGrath here today in con...

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Fast bowler Brett Lee believes Australian cricketers don’t make frivolous appeals, but joined colleague Glenn McGrath here today in conceding they had to be more careful with the way they treated umpires.

Both bowlers have fallen foul of officialdom this summer, Lee for dissent and McGrath for obscene language, during the third Test against South Africa in Sydney earlier this month.

And wicketkeeper-batsman Adam Gilchrist is also in trouble after being reported for dissent when he questioned an umpire’s decision during a one-day match against the proteas last Sunday.

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Although Lee maintained the Australians only appealed when they believed an opponent to be out, he agreed that both he and his teammates had to respect umpires’ decisions.

“There’s a line you can’t step over and we’ve got to make sure that we don’t do that,” he said.

“We’ve got to get to know the umpires a lot better and realise too that the umpires have only got 0.3 of a second to make up their minds, so it’s a very tough job. We’ve got the aids here, cricketers and journalists, and people watching on TV at home that we’ve got the super slo-mo replays and we can say: ‘That’s definitely going to hit leg stump’ or ‘he’s definitely nicked that’, whereas a bowler or an umpire and maybe a batsman, in the heat of the moment, have only got a split-second to work out what’s going on.

“Sometimes you want to know why that was possibly not out or why you’ve been given out and you’ve just got to learn to deal with it, accept the decision and get on with it.”

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Lee’s admission comes a day after McGrath conceded Australians needed to “pull our heads in” on the field, although he maintained umpires also had to be approachable.

During what has been a heated summer of cricket. Proteas coach Mickey Arthur has claimed that the Aussies were the best side in the world at excessive and aggressive appealing.

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