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#umpire

11 incidents tagged

🥊Moderate

Tim David Fined for Refusing to Hand Ball to Umpire — Twice in the Same Match

Mumbai Indians vs Royal Challengers Bengaluru

14 April 2026

Tim David fined 25% of match fee for twice refusing to hand the ball to umpires in the same match — a Level 1 Code of Conduct breach.

#IPL 2026#RCB#Tim David
🥊Moderate

Nitish Rana Fined for Audible Obscenity — CSK vs DC, IPL 2026

Chennai Super Kings vs Delhi Capitals

11 April 2026

Delhi Capitals batter Nitish Rana was fined 25 per cent of his match fee and given one demerit point for an audible obscenity directed at fourth umpire Anish Sahasrabudhe during Delhi's defeat to Chennai Super Kings on 11 April 2026. The flashpoint came when Tristan Stubbs's request for a glove change — driven by Chennai's heavy humidity — was denied at the boundary rope. Rana, batting at the other end and watching the exchange, walked over to argue and crossed into Code of Conduct territory. The match referee judged the breach a Level 1 offence and Rana accepted the sanction.

#IPL 2026#Nitish Rana#umpire
🥊Serious

MS Dhoni Storms Onto the Field to Argue with Umpire

Chennai Super Kings vs Rajasthan Royals

11 April 2019

MS Dhoni walked onto the field from the dugout to argue with umpires over a no-ball call that was reversed, in an unprecedented act for the usually calm captain.

#dhoni#umpire#no-ball
🥊Mild

Sachin Tendulkar's Frustration with Billy Bowden's Trigger Finger

India vs Various

6 April 2011

Sachin Tendulkar showed visible frustration with umpiring decisions on multiple occasions, particularly with Billy Bowden, despite his generally calm demeanour.

#tendulkar#bowden#umpire
🥊Moderate

Ricky Ponting's Umpire Arguments — The Finger Pointer

Australia vs Various

2 January 2003

Ricky Ponting was frequently involved in heated arguments with umpires throughout his career, often pointing his finger and showing visible dissent.

#ponting#umpire#arguing
🥊Mild

Curtly Ambrose Refuses to Remove Wristbands

West Indies vs England

18 November 1993

Curtly Ambrose refused to remove his white wristbands when asked by the umpire, leading to a standoff that required captain Richie Richardson's intervention.

#ambrose#wristbands#umpire
🥊Serious

Sunil Gavaskar Tries to Walk Off with Partner — MCG 1981

Australia vs India

7 February 1981

Sunil Gavaskar was so furious with an LBW decision that he tried to take his batting partner Chetan Chauhan off the field with him in protest.

#gavaskar#walkoff#lbw
😂Serious

The Idris Baig Affair — Water-Pouring at Peshawar, 1956

Pakistan vs MCC

1956-02-12

During an MCC under-25 tour match at Peshawar in February 1956, captain Donald Carr and several team-mates donned masks, abducted Pakistani umpire Idris Baig from his hotel and dragged him to Billy Sutcliffe's room where they doused him with buckets of water. The incident, born of frustration with Baig's umpiring, almost ended the tour and triggered demonstrations on the streets of Peshawar.

#pakistan#mcc#idris-baig
Mild

Charles Bannerman's Later Life — Player to Umpire, 1879-1930

Australia

1879-02-08

Charles Bannerman, the man who had scored Test cricket's first century in March 1877, played his last Test in February 1879. He continued for NSW until 1888 but his career declined sharply. He coached in Melbourne, Sydney and New Zealand, and stood as umpire in twelve Tests between 1887 and 1902. He died in poverty in Sydney in 1930.

#charles-bannerman#umpire#later-career
Mild

John Lillywhite — Umpire, Publisher and the 'Green Lily', 1848-1875

Sussex, Middlesex; later umpire and publisher

1865-04-01

John Lillywhite — Sussex roundarm bowler, umpire of the 1862 Willsher walk-off, and founder in 1865 of John Lillywhite's Cricketers' Companion (the 'Green Lily') — sat at the centre of the 1860s cricket establishment. Son of William 'Nonpareil' Lillywhite, brother to Fred and James, he played first-class cricket from 1848 to 1873, umpired 29 first-class matches, and established the family's central London emporium at Euston Square in 1863.

#john-lillywhite#umpire#publisher
🏏Moderate

Umpiring Standards and Player Disputes in the 1850s Cricket

Various county and representative sides

1855-07-01

Umpiring in the 1850s was a notoriously contentious business. Ex-professionals stood as umpires but were often accused of favouring their county's interests; the laws gave batsmen and bowlers little formal right of appeal; and the growing overarm controversy made no-balling — technically required but socially dangerous — a minefield for the men in white coats. Player disputes with umpires were frequent and sometimes ended matches.

#roundarm-era#early-victorian#1850s