Your awareness needs to be sharper, says Marais Erasmus, about officiating in a Twenty20 International match. Photo: Getty Images
The Twenty20 buzz is phenomenal: Marais Erasmus
Senior umpire talks about handling the pressures of Twenty20 cricket
28 September 2012 - 07:45pm IST Wisden India staff
In
the Twenty20 format, where a single ball can change the course of the game,
much is written about the pressures batsmen and bowlers face. But the umpires
out in the middle are not spared either.
Marais
Erasmus, one of the umpires officiating at the ICC World Twenty20 2012,
explained that the format of the game is such that the umpire needs to be all
the more attuned to what is happening around them.
“Your awareness needs to be a
little sharper and different skills come into the game, so as an umpire you
have to be aware that things may happen quicker and that players may play
different shots to what they normally do,” he said.
Preparing for a Twenty20 game involves
knowing both the laws and the playing styles of the players thoroughly.
“For our
own preparation, we need to ensure that we know the competition laws that are
applicable and touch up on our normal cricket laws,” said Erasmus. “We had a
conference before this tournament to specifically concentrate on everything
that is applicable at this tournament.”
Of
course, three hours of cricket is certainly easier on the umpires compared to
the stamina required for the longer formats of the game. “In this case we just
need to anticipate,” said Erasmus. “You have to be fast and you need to react
fast.”
And just
like the players, the umpires also need to take care of their fitness. “I do
quite a bit of running and cycling to build up my fitness levels, but all the
guys have got different ways of preparing,” he said. “We all have our own
individual fitness programmes.”
The
biggest challenge, understandably, is the noise that accompanies a Twenty20
game, but then again, the umpires wouldn’t have it any other way. “It makes it
a challenge for the umpires to hear the faint nicks or the inside edges,” said
Erasmus. “The buzz is phenomenal so you are up for it, and your adrenalin is
pumping. Normally, that is quite enjoyable.”
And more
than the men’s tournament, it is the women’s tournament that is a test of the
umpire’s skills. “We haven’t seen 40 per cent of
these players,” said Erasmus. “But we exchange notes as the tournament carries
on, if we are not involved in certain of the games.”
The absence of television replays in the women’s
group games requires umpires to be even more on their toes. “Last season, I did quite a few domestic non-televised matches in South
Africa, and you suddenly think: ‘this is much harder work!’ You can’t just make
the TV sign and send it upstairs. You have to make sure your concentration
levels at square leg are very sharp.”
Erasmus
believes that the women’s game has come a long way since his involvement in the
2009 edition of the tournament when England, Australia and New Zealand teams were the best teams.
“Now the West Indies has come
along, India is a threat, and South Africa is playing well so it seems like the
other teams are catching up and putting more pressure on the top sides,”
he said.
Erasmus
is hopeful that the women’s game will soon scale even greater heights. “I am sure they are going to
take the next step and get even better,” he said. “Skills-wise, the ladies are
really up there with the men – obviously it is a slower game, not being as
strong as the men, but skill-wise they are very good.”
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