
Theunderarm bowling incident of 1981 is a sporting controversy that took place on 1 February 1981, whenAustralia playedNew Zealand in aOne Day Internationalcricket match, the third in the best-of-five final of the1980–81 World Series Cup, at theMelbourne Cricket Ground.[1]
With one ball of the finalover remaining in the match, New Zealand required asix to tie the match. To ensure that New Zealand were unable to achieve this, the Australian captainGreg Chappell instructed his bowler (and younger brother)Trevor Chappell to deliver the last ball to batsmanBrian McKechnieunderarm along the ground. Trevor did so, forcing McKechnie to play the ball defensively, meaning Australia won. This action, although legal at the time, was nevertheless widely perceived as being wholly against thetraditional spirit of cricketing fair play.
The outrage caused by the incident eventually led to an official amendment to theinternational laws of cricket to prevent it from occurring again.
The series was tied 1–1, New Zealand having won the first match and Australia the second. The two umpires for this match wereDonald Weser andPeter Cronin, both Australian.
The third match had already seen another moment of controversy, also involving Greg Chappell: with Australia batting, New Zealand'sMartin Snedden claimed a low outfield catch off a hit by Greg Chappell when Chappell was on 58.[2] In his live television commentary on Australia'sChannel Nine, former Australian cricket captainRichie Benaud exclaimed: "That is one of the best catches I have ever seen in my life". However, Snedden's catch was ruled not out by the umpires. This was some years beforeTV replays could be used in umpiring decisions; the Channel Nine broadcast did show viewers slow-motion replays of Snedden's catch from various camera angles, including a close-up of Snedden diving to fairly claim the catch. After reviewing several TV replays, Benaud re-affirmed what he had initially seen live, saying: "There is no question in my mind that that was a great catch – clearly caught above the ground, a superb catch."[3]
Some commentators believed that Chappell should have taken Snedden's word that the catch was good, as had been a time-honoured tradition. Chappell maintained he was not sure about the catch and was within his rights to wait for the umpires to rule. Chappell went on to score 90 before he was caught byBruce Edgar in a similar fashion. This time, Chappell walked after he clearly saw the fielder had cupped his hands under the ball.
Lillee had bowled the penultimate over to complete his allocated 10 overs with his final involvement being the dismissal of John Parker, caught inside the circle by Trevor. CommentatorRichie Benaud's post-game commentary accused Greg Chappell of having "got his sums wrong" by not having Lillee, his best bowler, take the final over.Graeme Beard was the other bowler involved in the mix-up, closing out his allocated 10 in the 43rd and 45th overs after a players meeting involving Greg Chappell, Lillee,Kim Hughes andRod Marsh was unable to count the overs out correctly usinghand calculations.
Trevor then bowled the final over (his 10th of the innings) with New Zealand requiring 15 to win.
Bruce Edgar, who was on 102not out, was stuck at the non-striker's end the entire over. His innings has been called "the most overlooked century of all time".[4]
The first five balls of the over produced a 4, the dismissal of Hadlee via a plumb LBW, 2, 2 and Ian Smith dismissed bowled trying to heave the ball to the outfield. This left New Zealand requiring 7 to win, or 6 to tie off the final ball.[1] In the event of a tie, under rules at the time of the game, the match would have been replayed;[5] incidentally, this later occurred in the finals of the1983–84 Australian Tri-Series.
New Zealand needed 6 runs to tie the match from the final ball, with eight wickets down. Greg Chappell, the Australian captain, instructed the bowler (his younger brotherTrevor) to bowl underarm in a bid to prevent the Number 10 New Zealand batsman (Brian McKechnie) from getting under the delivery with sufficient power and elevation to hit asix. Bowling underarm was within the laws of cricket at the time (although specifically against the rules in certain one-day competitions around the world, such as theBenson & Hedges Cup tournament in England), but was universally considered as archaic, uncompetitive, and not a bowling style that would ever be used seriously at even junior levels of the sport.[6][7]
In accordance with cricket protocol, the umpires and batsmen were informed that the bowler was changing his delivery style and that the final ball would be delivered underarm. Trevor Chappell then rolled the ball along the pitch, in the style ofbowls.
McKechnie blocked the ball defensively, then threw his bat away in a show of angry frustration. Australia had achieved victory by 6 runs. The New Zealand batsmen walked off the field in disgust.[8] The New Zealand captain,Geoff Howarth, ran onto the field to plead with the umpires. Howarth believed underarm bowling to be illegal in the competition, as per the rules in the English one-day tournaments with which he was very familiar, specifically theBenson and Hedges Cup.
In the confusion before the final ball was bowled, one of the Australian fielders,Dennis Lillee, did not walk into place, meaning that technically the ball should have been ano-ball on the grounds that Australia had one too many fielders outside the field restriction line.[9] Had the umpires noticed this, New Zealand would have been awarded one run for the no-ball, and the final ball would have had to be re-bowled.
As the ball was being bowled,Ian Chappell (elder brother of Greg and Trevor, and a former Australian captain), who was commentating on the match, was heard to call out "No, Greg, no, you can't do that"[10] in an instinctive reaction to the incident, and he remained critical in a later newspaper article on the incident.[11]
Commentating forChannel 9 at the time, former Australian captainRichie Benaud described the act as "disgraceful" and said it was "one of the worst things I have ever seen done on a cricket field".[12]
New Zealand team memberWarren Lees recounted the underarm incident on New Zealand's20/20 current affairs show in February 2005. He said that immediately after the match there had been a long silence in the New Zealand dressing room, which was broken suddenly and unexpectedly by fellow playerMark Burgess throwing and smashing a tea cup against a wall. "That summed up how we all were feeling, too angry for words. We felt we'd been cheated. We were livid", Lees stated.
After the incident, the thenPrime Minister of New Zealand,Robert Muldoon, described it as "the most disgusting incident I can recall in the history of cricket",[13] going on to say that "it was an act of true cowardice and I consider it appropriate that the Australian team were wearing yellow".[14] ThePrime Minister of Australia,Malcolm Fraser, called the act "contrary to all the traditions of the game".[13]
In later years, Greg Chappell claimed that he had been exhausted and stressed after a demanding season of cricket and that, in hindsight, he was not mentally fit to be captain at the time.[15][16] He had also been on the field through the majority of the match that had been played in stifling hot conditions. At the 40-over mark of the New Zealand innings, Chappell (who had scored 90 in the Australian innings and then bowled 10 overs to the New Zealanders) told wicketkeeperRod Marsh that he wanted to leave the field. Marsh, who described Chappell as being physically spent and exhausted, said that was not possible, and that Chappell had no choice but to see out the match. Despite being captain and arranging bowling changes and field placings, Chappell spent several overs fielding on the boundary because he felt overwhelmed by the conditions and the pressure of the situation.
As a direct result of the incident, underarm bowling was banned by theInternational Cricket Council as "not within the spirit of the game".[8][17]
The following year, the Australians went on tour to New Zealand. There was a boisterous crowd of 43,000 atEden Park, Auckland, for the first One Day International of the tour. As Greg Chappell came out to bat, acrown green bowls wood was rolled from the crowd on to the outfield, mimicking what had happened at the MCG the previous year. That day, he scored a century in a losing cause.[18]
Although both Chappell brothers have publicly stated their embarrassment, McKechnie bears no ill-will over the incident.[19] Greg Chappell says "All my frustrations boiled over on that day", while Trevor Chappell is reluctant to talk about it.[20] Trevor Chappell remains best remembered for the "Underarm '81" incident.[21]
The incident was later used to inspire aninstant kiwi lottery ad that humorously depicts a rematch in which exactly the same conditions had arisen and Australia were again bowling the underarm. However, Brian McKechnie instead places hisbox in the way and subsequently hits a six as the ball deflects off it, resulting in embarrassment for the Australian players.[22]
In 1993, SirRichard Hadlee bowled the ball underarm during theAllan Border tribute match inBrisbane, causing much laughter from the crowd.
On 17 February 2005, over 24 years after the original underarm delivery, Australian fast bowlerGlenn McGrath light-heartedly revisited the incident in the first everTwenty20 international, played between Australia and New Zealand. In the last over of the match, a grinning McGrath mimed an underarm delivery toKyle Mills, which prompted New Zealand umpireBilly Bowden to produce a mockred card.[23] As New Zealand needed more than 44 runs to win off the last delivery, the outcome of the game was never in doubt, so it was positively received in the spirit it was intended by the crowd.
In the 2013 Australian movieBackyard Ashes, Spock rolls a can of beer along the ground to Shep before a backyard cricket match as an allusion to the incident.
Cheating? It wasn't against the rules – but it certainly wasn't cricket.