The batsmen of the whole world used to bow down in the spin of former Australian spinner Shane Warne. Away from the cricket field, Warne is also very active on social media. Now he has quipped on DRS. Shane Warne shared a video clip and with its caption, he has put a smiley emoji.
Shane Warne had fun on DRS
In the video shared by Shane Warne, the record of his Test career is visible. In which it is written that 103 Test matches, 461 wickets, strike rate 62.20, average 26.30 and best 8 wickets for 71 runs. After this, the caption written by Warne is that how many more with DRS i.e. how many wickets would I have after DRS. Actually, there was no DRS rule at the time of Warne.
‘There would have been 10 thousand wickets’
The clip posted by Shane Warne is from a Test match with Pakistan. In which he bowls and makes a strong appeal for LBW. But umpire Steve Buckner negates his strong appeal while replays clearly show the ball is hitting the middle stump. After this tweet of his, the users said that you are the best bowler of the century and you would have had 10 thousand wickets.
What is DRS rule
The full form of DRS is Decision Review System. It is also known as UDRS. UDRS is called Umpire Decision Review System. With DRS you can challenge the umpire’s decision in-game. While playing, if a team feels that the umpire has given a wrong decision, then it can use DRS.
Captain is right to take DRS
For DRS, the T mark is made by the captain of the team with both hands. The captain has to take the decision of the DRS within 10 seconds. DRS is not given in case of overtime. When the captain points to the T mark, that decision is seen by the third umpire. The third umpire sees the whole incident by replaying, if the decision taken by the umpire is wrong, then he gives his decision by changing it, if the decision taken by the umpire is found to be correct, then no change is made in it. goes.