Covid19 has changed everything including sports. In cricket also, some rules are changed and some new are added. The most talked-about is ICC's ban on the use of saliva. Charl Langeveldt reveals how much the difference this will bring to the swing bowling and what bowlers can do to make up for it.
It’s a familiar thing on the cricket field that the wicket-keeper watches the ball thud into their gloves and flings it off to first slip, who licks a finger, shines the ball, and starts rubbing it against their trousers. The ball then gets thrown to mid-off, who repeats the process, covering one side of it with saliva. It gets passed onto the bowler, who gives it one more dose of spit and shine for good measure. The whole objective is to keep one side of the ball shining which aid in swing specially reverse swing.
While it’s not particularly hygienic, the process has never been questioned. But, in a Covid-19 world, this caught the attention of every cricketer. UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson recently described the cricket ball as a “vector of the disease”.
