London:
Who exactly is Aleem Dar, the umpire who wrongly gave Sachin Tendulkar
out at Lord's and wrecked what was set to be a pulsating final
of the Natwest Trophy?
Also
Read: India to file complaint against Umpire Dar
Dar,
who has largely had a decent run as an umpire in recent years,
also gave out Indian skipper Rahul Dravid, a decision which too
looked controversial in television replays. With two stalwarts
out to dubious decisions, the thrill was almost sucked out of
the game.
Dar
was born Aleem Sarwar Dar in the Jhang district of the Pakistani
Punjab in June 1968. He had a cricket career of sorts when he
played in the Pakistani domestic circuit for Allied Bank, Gujranwala
Cricket Association, Lahore, and Railways (Pakistan) as a right-handed
batsmen and leg-break bowler.
He
did not exactly set grounds on fire as a cricketer, but he certainly
left thousands of Indian supporters fuming by raising his finger
when the ball had passed Tendulkar's bat untouched. Dar mistook
the noise of the bat hitting the front pad for a snick, plunging
an entire country into gloom.
Discuss:
Was Umpire Dar responsible for India's defeat?
Not
a few England supporters were also dismayed at the way Tendulkar
was given out. Many of them had turned out not only to witness
a thrilling finale, but also to see Tendulkar bat in what appeared
like his last appearance at the Lord's.
Dar
is no stranger to the pressure-cooker atmosphere of one-day internationals.
He made his international debut in an ODI between Pakistan and
Sri Lanka at Gujranwala on Feb 16, 2000.
Also
Read: England beat India by seven wickets to win ODI series |
Full Coverage: India in England 2007 | Twenty20 World Cup
In
2002, he became a member of the Emirates International Panel ICC
of umpires. He impressed the ICC with his accurate decision-making,
and was chosen to umpire at the ICC Cricket World Cup in early
2003, where he was ranked as one of the better performing umpires.
He
was then appointed to stand in his first Test in October 2003
between Bangladesh and England at Dhaka. Over the next six months,
he was appointed to stand in several more Tests, and as the neutral
umpire in ODIs away from Pakistan.
In
April 2004, he became the first Pakistani to be part of the Emirates
ICC Elite Umpire Panel. Since then he has been regarded as one
of the top umpires, being nominated for the ICC Umpire of the
year Award in 2005 and 2006, although he was beaten on both occasions
by the Australian Simon Taufel, who is also very highly regarded.
Dar
has stood in numerous high-profile matches, including several
India-Pakistan ODIs and five Ashes Test matches. He was also one
of the on-field umpires for the final of the 2006 ICC Champions
Trophy, standing alongside Rudi Koertzen.
The
highlight of his career has been his appointment to in the final
of the 2007 Cricket World Cup between Australia and Sri Lanka,
where he officiated with Steve Bucknor. He has, however, never
stood in a Test match in Pakistan, because his appointment in
the international panel came after the introduction of neutral
umpires for Test matches.
Dar
has had a few edgy moments too. These include death threats being
made against him and Bucknor during the Test match between England
and South Africa at Centurion in January 2005.
Dar
was also criticised for two decisions he gave during the England-Australia
Test match at Trent Bridge in 2005, giving Damien Martyn out LBW
when he had gotten an inside edge on the ball, and then Simon
Katich leg before to a delivery which pitched outside leg stump
and would have bounced over the stumps.
He
was also involved in controversy in the 2007 Cricket World Cup
final where he along with fellow officials Bucknor, Koertzen,
Bowden and Crowe were unaware of the playing conditions regarding
the result of a match under the Duckworth-Lewis system, and made
Australia bowl three unnecessary overs in near darkness.
Consequently
the ICC decided to suspend him, along with the other four officials,
from duty for the next ICC event, which was the 2007 Twenty20
World Championship.
Many
in India will see Dar as a villain for wrongly giving Tendulkar
and Dravid out, but in ICC circles, he is regarded well for his
dedication, professionalism and generally decent decision-making
ability. Sifysport
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