You guys are still missing the most important point of this entire thread.
Go back and read the early posts especially before #71 or 1st page of this thread.
Those were written before this World Cup even started, not after a loss, not after a controversial decision.
The points raised were three simple concerns about modern cricket:
• Broadcast presentation choices (angles, replay timing, frame selection)
• Technology interpretation during tight decisions
• Tournament structuring and scheduling advantages
None of that is science fiction. These are structural discussions about transparency in elite sport.
Now let’s address the replies:
First nobody said one decision decides a match. Cricket is not that simple.
Teams still have to bat and bowl well.
That has always been acknowledged.
But pretending technology discussions are irrelevant just because teams also make mistakes is not an argument.
Second the long lecture about UltraEdge, Snicko and syncing is ironically proving my point. These systems still rely on operators, review officials and broadcast feeds. They are not magic robots running in space with zero human input.
Even the DRS protocol itself allows multiple angles to be requested and selected. That is exactly where transparency matters.
Third calling this a “tinfoil theory” doesn’t change the timeline.
This thread existed before the tournament started predicting that:
• Broadcast debates would occur
• Technology interpretations would be questioned
• Scheduling advantages would appear
And here we are people arguing about UltraEdge, angles, reviews and scheduling.
So clearly the discussion was not as ridiculous as some posters claim.
And lastly, about the “selective crying” narrative that’s just deflection.
When technology controversies happen in Ashes, IPL, World Cups, or anywhere, people debate them. That’s normal in modern sport.
Questioning processes does not mean denying a team’s ability.
It simply means fans want consistent standards.
Fair cricket, transparent technology, and neutral production standards should benefit every team, not just one.
If that basic idea is controversial to some people, that says more about them than it does about the discussion