A study has revealed that the introduction of neutral umpires in Test cricket has led to a drop in the number of leg before wicket (LBW) decisions going in favour of the home teams, revealing that the home umpires favour their own teams in the long format of the game.
The findings from research by economists, published by the Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, come amidst renewed debate on whether neutral umpiring is still required in Test matches following the introduction of the Decision Review System (DRS).
??Economists Dr. Ian Gregory-Smith from the University of Sheffield and Dr. Abhinav Sacheti and Professor David Paton from Nottingham University Business School analysed LBW decisions in exactly 1,000 Test matches that took place between 1986 and 2012, nearly half of Test matches ever played in the history of cricket.
Until 1994, both umpires in Test matches were from the same country as the home team, from 1994 to 2002, one of the two umpires was required to be from a neutral country and after 2002 both umpires were required to be neutral.
The economists found clear evidence of fewer decisions in favour of home teams with neutral umpires.
Sacheti, lead author of the study, said that their results suggest that when two home umpires officiated in Test matches, away teams were likely to suffer on average 16 percent more LBW decisions than home teams, adding that when the ICC introduced the one neutral umpire policy, this advantage to home teams receded to 10 percent.
Sacheti also said that when two neutral umpires were required in every Test match, this advantage to home teams disappeared, adding that this result holds even when they control for the quality of teams, the ground where the match was played and so on.
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The economists found that the bias by home umpires in favour of home teams had been particularly strong in Test matches played in Australia, India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka.
A possible explanation for the finding is that home umpires were unduly influenced by pressure from local crowds and, indeed, a similar bias towards home teams has been noted amongst football referees.
In fact, the study has found home bias in Test matches to be strongest towards the end of the game, when crowds are often at their smallest. Many cricket fans have long claimed that home umpires are biased towards their own team and the findings of this latest research appear to provide support for such claims.
However, Paton offered a word of caution, saying that the results do not necessarily mean that umpires deliberately favoured their home teams, adding that the bias may have been unconscious. He said that the fact remains though that introducing neutral umpires seemed to get rid of the problem.
Recently, some commentators have suggested that the introduction of the Decision Review System (DRS) eliminates the need for neutral umpires.
Gregory-Smith, from the University of Sheffield, agreed that new technology can help to improve decision-making but warned that whatever the reasons behind the bias, their results suggest that cricketing authorities should be very cautious before returning to a system whereby umpires can officiate in Test matches involving their own country.