Association of Cricket Officials | Page 5

Beyond the Boundary Thinking about the current topics, I really wasn't going to moan, but then a third item flagged 'annoyance' and so here goes. They are all to do with us not having the status we need and being frustrated by the limits this imposes on our ability to progress. To start with a very close one, my club now has a superb new pavilion (partly enabled by multi-thousands from the ECB, for which grateful thanks are extended) and so when using the officials’ room for the first time recently, I was sad to see in it the reality replicated through village clubs across the land – already half full of equipment, old advertising materials and crumpled umpires’ coats thrown over chairs and coat rails. Worse than that, no hooks, no table, no mirror. Even worse than that, no respect for what we do and who we are. This physical lack of care mirrors a general negative stubbornness in clubs to search for, educate and promote new umpires and scorers from the ranks of older players, parents or supporters. We are naïve if we believe clubs will eventually choose to become positive and active on our behalf – they won't, and only league points deductions will cure it. So we might as well get on with that. The second aggravation came from a question by a 4th XI umpire who asked what he should do when a delivery rolled along the ground after pitching. My innocent enquiry as to ‘infrequency’ was torpedoed by his ‘three or four an over’, and it was clear that the council-maintained ground was not being, thus becoming a trial for officials and players alike, and a likely health and safety issue. Clearly, there is a need for a code covering the fitness of grounds and pitches. Similarly, on standing with Peter White recently, he told me the sad story of his Mitcham club that plays on Mitcham Common and uses that legendary pub where John Smith and his mates supped ale and wrote their interpretations of the Laws in the 1950s; common land and pub under threat (more in the next issue). Lastly and most topical, ‘Ground, Weather and Light’. I do not wish to moan about the guidelines, except that they are over-winded and preaching to the converted. The same 'converted' assembly of members who know that Law 43 urges all of us to use our common sense which we mainly do – as our old friend Gavin from Devon reminded us. The worry here is that non-members, no matter how experienced, may have a less-concerned ‘uninsured’ view of the state of play, thus creating doubts that should not be present. Pierre Tartari email us at [email protected] contact us on 0121 446 2710 5