What's new

India controls the cameras but not the truth: Fair cricket for everyone — can we follow the football broadcasting model?

Ryw

First Class Star
Joined
Dec 12, 2010
Runs
3,842
The Asia Cup broadcast rights are typically sold by the Asian Cricket Council (ACC) to the highest bidder. Because the Indian market is by far the biggest in cricket (in terms of TV audience, sponsorship, and advertising money), Indian broadcasters usually win the rights. For example, in recent years Star Sports (India) has been the official broadcaster.

That leads to a few issues:

Conflict of interest: When the host broadcaster is from a country that also has a team in the tournament, suspicions of bias naturally arise like showing certain replays more often, cutting away from controversial angles, or influencing how incidents look to the audience.

TV directors’ role: The broadcast director decides which camera angles and replays to show live and to the third umpire. Even though the ICC or ACC has protocols, fans sometimes feel the timing and choice of replays favors one side especially in close LBW or catch decisions.

Cheating vs. perception: There’s no official proof that broadcasters deliberately manipulate footage to help one team. But when you mix huge money, BCCI’s dominance in Asian cricket, and passionate rivalries, fans often see bias as cheating or unfair advantage.

Global concern: Similar complaints have come up in IPL, World Cups, and even football tournaments where host broadcasters are accused of shaping the narrative or “protecting” local teams.


In theory, the third umpire is supposed to have access to all camera angles, not just what the TV director feeds viewers. But if those feeds are delayed, poorly timed, or shown selectively, suspicion grows.

How broadcasting and decisions are supposed to work

1. Host broadcaster:

The ACC (for Asia Cup) or ICC (for World Cups) sells rights to a broadcaster, often Star Sports or Sony in India.

The broadcaster provides the camera crew, TV directors, and graphics.



2. Third umpire access:

In theory, the third umpire has a direct feed from all camera angles (not just what’s shown on TV).

Tools like UltraEdge, ball-tracking (Hawkeye), and slow-motion replays are controlled by independent operators approved by ICC/ACC.



3. Neutral oversight:

ICC/ACC sends a Match Referee and Neutral Umpires.

The referee ensures that tech (Hawkeye, Snicko, Hotspot) is set up correctly.







Where the conflict of interest complaints come in

TV director bias: The broadcaster still controls what the public sees. They can delay, skip, or repeat certain replays to shape the crowd’s perception even if the third umpire sees everything.

Slow access: Sometimes the third umpire relies on the broadcast feed being queued up. If the director is slow to show the “right angle,” it creates suspicion.

Narrative control: Commentators (paid by the broadcaster) often influence how an incident “feels” to the audience, especially in India–Pakistan matches.

Commercial pressure: Since India brings the biggest sponsorship money, broadcasters prioritize that market, which looks like favoritism.





Why controversies still happen despite neutral tech

1. Human delay – Operators may be slow in pulling up the decisive angle.


2. Perception gap – Viewers see only what the TV director shows, not the raw umpire feed.


3. Trust deficit – Because BCCI dominates financially, other fans assume manipulation even in genuine mistakes.


4. Past incidents – There have been matches where wrong camera angles or missing UltraEdge replays raised eyebrows.



What could fix this?

Independent ICC/ACC broadcast team, not a commercial TV channel.

Public umpire feed option: showing viewers exactly what the third umpire sees, in real time.

Stricter contracts with broadcasters to ensure no delay or angle omission.

FAIR CRICKET FOR EVERYONE

DISCUSS
 
Given the kind of hostility between the two countries AND the influence on the broadcast, it will be extremely naive for anyone to think that BCCI/Indians will not anything and everything in their power to manipulate the broadcast in their favor - whenever possible.

Putting this down to conspiracy theories is just an attempt to make yourself feel better.

Cricket has not been fair for years now. Money talks. Those in power know where their salaries are coming from. It’s just the reality now.
 
We don’t have proof about India cheating

But we do have ample proof of Australia cheating in the past

South Africans tampering pitches

Pakistan being involved in fixing games etc

West Indies over stepping and getting wickets on no balls in 80s and early 90s

But yea let’s focus on India. The one cricket nation that plays fair cricket.

Cry me a river.
 
The problem isn’t about being anti-India or pro-Pakistan ,it’s about how cricket handles broadcasting compared to other global sports.

Take football for example: FIFA and UEFA don’t let one country’s TV channel run the World Cup or Champions League. Instead, they use neutral production companies like Host Broadcast Services (HBS), which provide the same feed, same replays, same graphics to every nation. VAR decisions are based on these independent feeds, and in some leagues they even broadcast the VAR process live to remove any doubt.

Basketball, rugby, tennis , all of them follow a similar model: the sport’s governing body controls the cameras, not a single broadcaster serving one country. That way, no one can accuse the system of bias, even if fans still argue about the decisions.

Cricket is different. The ACC/ICC sells rights to the highest bidder, which usually ends up being an Indian broadcaster because of the huge market. That means the TV director, commentators, and production priorities are all India-centric. Even if the third umpire has access to all angles, the public only sees what the broadcaster chooses to show. In high-voltage matches like India vs Pakistan, that creates the perception of manipulation and conflict of interest.

If cricket really wants to be global, it should adopt the same model as football: neutral host broadcasters controlled by the ICC/ACC, not a single country’s commercial TV channel. Until then, people will keep calling it the “India Cup” instead of the Asia Cup.
 
The op has a point. The tv director decides what replays are to be shown and that can help create a narrative
 
Last edited by a moderator:
2011 DRS had barely died down 14 years on, we now have this new angle.

Comparing ICC to FIFA is fair though, both are corrupt...after all FiFA gave the WC to that footballing powerhouse Qatar.

Not like that FIFA or UEFA are swayed by $$$€€€£££
Not to forget they banned Russia..
 
It's a good narrative to put forth esp considering if one doesn't like their team's performance. The entire bidding and awarding of Fifa WC is so dubious there are documentaries on it.
 
Indians will bark like dogs here.

The op has a point. The tv director decides what replays are to be shown and that can help create a narrative

TV director has to follow ICC protocols and make available all camera angles to the 3rd umpire.

Don't you trust the 3rd umpire ?
 
TV director has to follow ICC protocols and make available all camera angles to the 3rd umpire.

Don't you trust the 3rd umpire ?
Where did i talked about 3rd umpire?

Im talking about in general. Replays are not played according to the umpire, but according to the director.

You are talking about when decision is being reviewed, im talking about in general.

For example an umpire giving an lbw not out, and team dont review it. Now game is on going, now its up to the tv director to show that replay with hawk eye or not.

That matters alot, as a narrative could be built or hidden.

From the 2016 world t20, amirs first ball lbw was not given by the umpire, but the tv director never showed the hawk eye for it on replay
 
The Asia Cup broadcast rights are typically sold by the Asian Cricket Council (ACC) to the highest bidder. Because the Indian market is by far the biggest in cricket (in terms of TV audience, sponsorship, and advertising money), Indian broadcasters usually win the rights. For example, in recent years Star Sports (India) has been the official broadcaster.

That leads to a few issues:

Conflict of interest: When the host broadcaster is from a country that also has a team in the tournament, suspicions of bias naturally arise like showing certain replays more often, cutting away from controversial angles, or influencing how incidents look to the audience.

TV directors’ role: The broadcast director decides which camera angles and replays to show live and to the third umpire. Even though the ICC or ACC has protocols, fans sometimes feel the timing and choice of replays favors one side especially in close LBW or catch decisions.

Cheating vs. perception: There’s no official proof that broadcasters deliberately manipulate footage to help one team. But when you mix huge money, BCCI’s dominance in Asian cricket, and passionate rivalries, fans often see bias as cheating or unfair advantage.

Global concern: Similar complaints have come up in IPL, World Cups, and even football tournaments where host broadcasters are accused of shaping the narrative or “protecting” local teams.


In theory, the third umpire is supposed to have access to all camera angles, not just what the TV director feeds viewers. But if those feeds are delayed, poorly timed, or shown selectively, suspicion grows.

How broadcasting and decisions are supposed to work

1. Host broadcaster:

The ACC (for Asia Cup) or ICC (for World Cups) sells rights to a broadcaster, often Star Sports or Sony in India.

The broadcaster provides the camera crew, TV directors, and graphics.



2. Third umpire access:

In theory, the third umpire has a direct feed from all camera angles (not just what’s shown on TV).

Tools like UltraEdge, ball-tracking (Hawkeye), and slow-motion replays are controlled by independent operators approved by ICC/ACC.



3. Neutral oversight:

ICC/ACC sends a Match Referee and Neutral Umpires.

The referee ensures that tech (Hawkeye, Snicko, Hotspot) is set up correctly.







Where the conflict of interest complaints come in

TV director bias: The broadcaster still controls what the public sees. They can delay, skip, or repeat certain replays to shape the crowd’s perception even if the third umpire sees everything.

Slow access: Sometimes the third umpire relies on the broadcast feed being queued up. If the director is slow to show the “right angle,” it creates suspicion.

Narrative control: Commentators (paid by the broadcaster) often influence how an incident “feels” to the audience, especially in India–Pakistan matches.

Commercial pressure: Since India brings the biggest sponsorship money, broadcasters prioritize that market, which looks like favoritism.





Why controversies still happen despite neutral tech

1. Human delay – Operators may be slow in pulling up the decisive angle.


2. Perception gap – Viewers see only what the TV director shows, not the raw umpire feed.


3. Trust deficit – Because BCCI dominates financially, other fans assume manipulation even in genuine mistakes.


4. Past incidents – There have been matches where wrong camera angles or missing UltraEdge replays raised eyebrows.



What could fix this?

Independent ICC/ACC broadcast team, not a commercial TV channel.

Public umpire feed option: showing viewers exactly what the third umpire sees, in real time.

Stricter contracts with broadcasters to ensure no delay or angle omission.

FAIR CRICKET FOR EVERYONE

DISCUSS
Whining is now becoming a well oiled skill Amon Pakistanis. It’s an open bidding. Others are welcome to bid and buy rights India cannot do if others are poor. Last Pak tour to bd had no takers and BCB had to beg companies to pay. With that kind of markets around they need to be happy they are getting something, anything
 
From the 2016 world t20, amirs first ball lbw was not given by the umpire, but the tv director never showed the hawk eye for it on replay

And you think the director did that because he was biased against Pakistan ?
 
Where i said that? Looks like nationalism got invoked and logic got lost on you

Unless you've seen a repeated pattern of the TV director engaging in 'narrative shaping' a.k.a leaving out important replays in favour of one team, I don't see what the point of your post is. Just a waste of words.
 
In football, FIFA hires neutral broadcasters so no country controls the cameras, cricket needs the same, Problem isn’t India vs Pakistan, it’s broadcaster vs neutrality.


Until ICC controls the cameras, fans will never trust the replays. If Match Refree Andy Pycroft needs courage to stand up to India, imagine the poor TV director pressing replay buttons.


That’s why people smell bias.
 
Unless you've seen a repeated pattern of the TV director engaging in 'narrative shaping' a.k.a leaving out important replays in favour of one team, I don't see what the point of your post is. Just a waste of words.
It ßeems liķe you are wasting more words than me. Offcourse when things get questioned, the indian nationalism gets insecure
 
In football, FIFA hires neutral broadcasters so no country controls the cameras, cricket needs the same, Problem isn’t India vs Pakistan, it’s broadcaster vs neutrality.


Until ICC controls the cameras, fans will never trust the replays. If Match Refree Andy Pycroft needs courage to stand up to India, imagine the poor TV director pressing replay buttons.


That’s why people smell bias.

Football is run by intelligent Europeans.

Cricket is run by petty Indians.

This is why football is a global sport while cricket is infested by petty politics. :inti
 
Football is run by intelligent Europeans.

Cricket is run by petty Indians.

This is why football is a global sport while cricket is infested by petty politics. :inti
Agreed.

Before the evil bcci took over cricket , the game was adored by millions of europeans.

Icc aus and england spread the game to all corners of the planet and every kid in europe wanted to play the game day and night and was a major olympic event.

Evil BCCI destroyed the beautiful game
 
If india really could control all cameras and everything like third umpires, they would do it against stronger nations like Australia and England.

Yet there is no dubious call controversies while playing those nations.

Why would they waste it on minnows like Pakistan and Bangladesh who they can defeat with their eyes closed?
 
Camera dont matter. World can see who is making right decision and who is being biased... Chill
I agree, Bouncer bro.

Nothing can be done about this unfortunately as the BCCI has every single broadcaster, umpire, ex player, match referee in their pocket.

PCB along with Saudia can be the teue saviour of cricket. PCB with its flawless acumen and legal prowess and Saudia with the money..

Bcc’s days are numbered if you ask me.
 
It’s funny how the moment anyone questions the broadcasting setup or BCCI’s influence, the same responses pop up: “cry more, insecure, bitter, minnows”. Classic derail tactic instead of addressing the actual point.

Nobody is denying India’s cricketing strength, Pakistan fans themselves have admitted India has the upper hand in recent years. That’s not the debate. The issue raised here is about conflict of interest in broadcasting and the perception of bias when one nation’s broadcaster controls the global feed. In football, rugby, tennis, NBA, neutral host broadcasters are the norm. Cricket, meanwhile, sells its soul to the highest bidder, which just happens to be India every time.

And for those saying “If India really controlled everything they’d use it against Australia/England” , that’s not how power works. Influence isn’t about changing every result, it’s about controlling the narrative, the angles, the commentary, the perception. Just look at how many controversies erupt in India vs Pakistan matches compared to India vs Australia. Different stakes, different scrutiny.

So yes, laugh it off, post memes, call others bitter. But deep down everyone knows: when even a neutral referee like Andy Pycroft admits he feels the pressure, it proves the point. If officials feel it, players feel it, fans feel it, then the system is clearly not as neutral as some of you claim.

If raising that obvious truth is “whining,” then maybe you’re just too comfortable with the status quo.
 
And here we are, Fakhar Zaman given caught behind on a ball that clearly bounced into Sanju Samson’s gloves. Thank you TV umpire, thank you broadcaster, thank you TV director.

This is literally the point I made in my opening post. It’s not about whether India is a strong team (nobody denied that), it’s about the credibility of the broadcast and decision-making process. When obvious errors like this happen under the watch of the same broadcaster everyone was defending, how can anyone pretend the system is watertight?

People laughed, mocked, and called it whining, but today’s controversy proves that when one side controls the cameras and the feed, the perception of bias will never go away. Neutral host broadcasting, like football uses, is the only way forward. Until then, don’t be surprised if more fans lose trust in what they see on screen.
 
It was out.

80 to 20.

Technology might favor India but this is a poor example unless everything you see is green.
 
If you guys are so sick of India controlling cricket in their favour why don't you leave playing cricket under this obviously biased ICC and start your own cricket body?

Will this persistent whining stop then?
 
Take friendly boards like Bangladesh and UAE perhaps, and play cricket amongst yourselves. No need to give moolah and eyeballs to ICC under pretext of India-Pakistan cricket.
 
This was clearly a paid work by bcci.

They pais the cameraman not to shoot zoomed in image from the side well before the match started.
 
In theory, the third umpire is supposed to have access to all camera angles, not just what the TV director feeds viewers. But if those feeds are delayed, poorly timed, or shown selectively, suspicion grows.

How broadcasting and decisions are supposed to work

1. Host broadcaster:

The ACC (for Asia Cup) or ICC (for World Cups) sells rights to a broadcaster, often Star Sports or Sony in India.

The broadcaster provides the camera crew, TV directors, and graphics.



2. Third umpire access:

In theory, the third umpire has a direct feed from all camera angles (not just what’s shown on TV).

Tools like UltraEdge, ball-tracking (Hawkeye), and slow-motion replays are controlled by independent operators approved by ICC/ACC.



3. Neutral oversight:

ICC/ACC sends a Match Referee and Neutral Umpires.

The referee ensures that tech (Hawkeye, Snicko, Hotspot) is set up correctly.







Where the conflict of interest complaints come in

TV director bias: The broadcaster still controls what the public sees. They can delay, skip, or repeat certain replays to shape the crowd’s perception even if the third umpire sees everything.

Slow access: Sometimes the third umpire relies on the broadcast feed being queued up. If the director is slow to show the “right angle,” it creates suspicion.

Narrative control: Commentators (paid by the broadcaster) often influence how an incident “feels” to the audience, especially in India–Pakistan matches.

Commercial pressure: Since India brings the biggest sponsorship money, broadcasters prioritize that market, which looks like favoritism.





Why controversies still happen despite neutral tech

1. Human delay – Operators may be slow in pulling up the decisive angle.


2. Perception gap – Viewers see only what the TV director shows, not the raw umpire feed.


3. Trust deficit – Because BCCI dominates financially, other fans assume manipulation even in genuine mistakes.


4. Past incidents – There have been matches where wrong camera angles or missing UltraEdge replays raised eyebrows.



What could fix this?

Independent ICC/ACC broadcast team, not a commercial TV channel.

Public umpire feed option: showing viewers exactly what the third umpire sees, in real time.

Stricter contracts with broadcasters to ensure no delay or angle omission.
Funny part is, I posted about this almost 48 hours before the match and exactly what I warned about happened with Fakhar’s dismissal. So this isn’t “crying after losing,” it’s pointing out a structural issue that keeps showing up.

These broadcaster tactics may work against teams like Pakistan, Bangladesh, or Sri Lanka, but they never seem to appear when India plays Australia, England, or New Zealand. Why? Because broadcasters like Sky Sports, Fox Sports, and others maintain a much tighter grip on production standards and camera feeds. There’s no room for this kind of “oops, missed angle” controversy.

That’s the difference. With Star Sports and Sony running the show, the perception of bias is inevitable. And after incidents like this, it’s not paranoia it’s reality. If cricket wants credibility, it needs neutral host broadcasters just like football and rugby. Until then, enjoy the “India Cup” narrative, because the rest of the world can see exactly what’s going on. :)
 
How broadcasting and decisions are supposed to work

1. Host broadcaster:

The ACC (for Asia Cup) or ICC (for World Cups) sells rights to a broadcaster, often Star Sports or Sony in India.

The broadcaster provides the camera crew, TV directors, and graphics.
Where did you get this wrong information from?

OP's entire argument is based on flawed information. He might as well change it to,

but we know ICC will favour India, so same same :dhonidel.png
 
Nice try, but twisting technicalities won’t hide the bigger picture. Yes, ICC TV oversees the production standards at ICC events but who actually holds the broadcast rights and pushes the feed to billions of homes? Star Sports / Sony. Who hires the commentators, chooses which angles to replay for the public, sets the on-air narrative? Star Sports.

That’s exactly why ex-Pakistani cricketers, journalists, and even neutral fans have been questioning the “broadcast bias” for years. The Fakhar Zaman dismissal is just the latest example of why people don’t trust the system.

So whether it’s ICC TV cameras or not, the perception of conflict of interest remains because one country’s broadcasters dominate the coverage. And perception is reality when millions of viewers only see what that broadcaster chooses to show.

The fact that Pakistani media is openly discussing this shows it’s not just “forum whining.” It’s a genuine trust problem for the sport.
 
Yes, ICC TV oversees the production standards at ICC events but who actually holds the broadcast rights and pushes the feed to billions of homes? Star Sports / Sony. Who hires the commentators, chooses which angles to replay for the public, sets the on-air narrative? Star Sports.

The remedy here is for the PCB to register a complaint with the ICC if Sony's TV director had deleted the crucial frame showing the ball was grounded. No use whining about it on a messageboard. Fire off an email to PCB's grievance portal, maybe they'll listen.
 
As per PP consensus BCCI controls ICC, so what's different there?
Still no response — and the silence is deafening.
OP wants an ICC-controlled feed with an independent broadcast team (chosen by ICC) instead of the TV company that paid for the rights. Fair enough, one would think.
But here’s the kicker: who at ICC would actually make that call, and what governance process would apply & to whom would the contract be awarded to for delivering this model — when everyone knows BCCI allegedly pulls the strings at ICC?
On that, radio silence… as expected.

Kher koi naa.
 
Pakistanis are learning now what other cricketing nations have already experienced.

In an ODI against Engalnd, Dube got hit on the head while batting. He played well finished his innings and after the interval was replaced by a bowler Rana LOL

Dube is a batting all-rounder and Rana is a batting tailender.

England didn't like it but the ICC assigned officials to the game did not intervene. They get jobs during the IPL games and don't want to be blacklisted.


Having said that Pakistan is OK to complain about the wrong decision but should not rely on just Fakhar to make them win matches. He could have got bowled out the next ball.
 
Back
Top