Sydney: The Australian media has come  down hard on the International Cricket Council (ICC) for not taking any  action against Indian captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni, whose criticism of  umpire Daryl Harper's performance in the first Test against West Indies  led to the withdrawal of the official from the third Test.
Harper  was to retire from the elite panel after the third Test, but following  the criticism he chose not to officiate in what would have been his  farewell match.
"Indian harassment and the ICC's inaction have  seen Australian umpire Daryl Harper pull out of his farewell Test in the  West Indies," reported the Australian Friday.
"While the ICC  said it was unfair criticism and defended Harper's record, it has not  taken any action against India's captain. And Harper, who was about to  stand in his 300th international, walked away," the report said.
The  report said that there were a number of disputed decisions that upset  the Indians, but they were only in that position because the Indian  players and board refused to countenance the use of the Decision Review  System (DRS). "Match referee Jeff Crowe did not punish Dhoni for his  outburst."
India won the first Test at Kingston by 63 runs and  captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni said: "If the correct decisions were made,  the game would have finished much earlier and I would have been in the  hotel by now."
The ICC's cricket manager, Dave Richardson, defended Harper's record.
"The  reality of the situation is that Daryl's statistics show his correct  decision percentage in Tests involving India is 96 per cent, which is  considerably higher than the international average for top-level  umpires," Richardson said.
Harper's former colleague Darrell Hair  supported him. "You can't have players picking and choosing umpires,"  Hair was quoted as saying in The Age.
The 59-year-old Harper, who  has stood in 95 Tests and 174 ODIs, is not the first umpire to feel  poorly treated. In 2008, Steve Bucknor was sent home by the ICC after  India complained about his performance in the controversial Sydney Test  against Australia. Mark Benson also walked away amid controversy over  the DRS in Australia two summers ago, citing ill health. — IANS
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