'Much better if he did another job' - Hasaranga slams umpire over non-no-ball call
Written by I Dig SportsStill, Hasaranga was extraordinarily critical, though he did not refer to Hannibal by name.
"That kind of thing shouldn't happen in an international match," Hasaranga said of the incident. "If it had been close [to waist height], that's not a problem. But a ball that's going so high it would have hit the batsman's head if it had gone a little higher.
"If you can't see that, that umpire isn't suited to international cricket. It would be much better if he did another job."
Sri Lanka needed 11 runs off the last three balls when this occurred. As the delivery was deemed legal, and Kamindu made no contact with the full toss, they ended up needing 11 off the last two.
After the umpires deemed it a fair delivery, Kamindu was seen asking for the no-ball, and is understood to have also requested a review. However, the current ICC playing conditions do not allow player reviews for umpire decisions that do not involve potential dismissals. In fact, umpires themselves cannot initiate third-umpire reviews on no-balls, unless there is a dismissal at stake.
"There was a situation where you could review those calls before, but the ICC has got rid of that," Hasaranga said. "Our batsmen tried to review that. If the third umpire is able to check the front-foot no-ball, he should check this kind of no-ball as well. There's no reason why they can't. They didn't do even that, so I'm not sure what was going on in his (the square-leg umpire's) mind at the time."
The ICC's playing conditions define this kind of no-ball as: "Any delivery, which passes or would have passed, without pitching, above waist height of the striker standing upright at the popping crease"
Sri Lanka went on to lose the match by three runs to give Afghanistan their only victory of the tour, although the hosts won the series 2-1.