Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Hawk-Eye Technology

The most recent will definitely be Ian Bell’s LBW decision of the India VS England match. The home camp – including the fans, thought that it should have been out. Guess what, even Hawk-Eye said so. But anyways, keeping controversies aside, let’s see the different aspects of Hawk-Eye.



What is Hawk-Eye?

This question is strictly aimed at those born yesterday! Well not exactly, but there are scenarios where you’ve heard about it so much, but not really known what it actually meant. So do you know that Hawk-Eye has been bought by Sony and that it’s not officially used by the ICC? Yeah, it’s quite surprising, but that’s exactly what the official Hawk-Eye website says. Anyways, Hawk-Eye is a technology used in cricket which gives you a virtual understanding of the angle and distance of where a ball travels once it pitches. One very common use of Hawk-Eye are the LBW decisions, where the viewers can see the virtual future path of the ball after it’s being pitched and in conclusion get an idea of whether the batsman should actually have been adjudged LBW or not.

How does it work?

The whole setup involves six high speed vision processing cameras along with two broadcast cameras. When a deliver is bowled, the position of the ball recorded in each camera is combined to form a “virtual” 3D positioning of the ball after its being delivered. The whole process of the delivery is broken into two parts, delivery to bounce and bounce to impact. Multiple frames of the ball position are measured and through this, you can calculate the direction, speed, swing and dip of that specific delivery.

That's how it functions

That’s how it functions

Different Features of Hawk-Eye

Now that we’ve read about Hawk-Eye and its’ working, there are some other features that this technology brings along with the standard LBW appeals.

Wagon Wheels

So when you see Yusuf Pathan blast his way to a quick fire 50, it’s also exciting to see the various directions on which he must have sent every bowler packing! The Wagon Wheel gives you an idea of the different areas where the batsman has been targeting to score singles, doubles, boundaries or sixes. Plus, looking at the trajectories of the shots you easily know why Dhoni is one of the most feared batsman in cricket!

Now where did that six go?

Now where did that six go?

DeSpin

Only if we could see the angle of deviation of the ball of the century! Yeah we’re talking about Shane Warne’s leg-break delivery that left Mike Gatting spellbound! But let’s not deviate from the topic here, it’s still about a virtual system of checking the angle of turn or deviation of a ball after it has pitched. The blue trajectory shows the actual deliver had it not spun or seamed and the red trajectory shows the actual delivery.

Lemme despin that for you

Lemme despin that for you

Pitch Maps

This consists of a virtual map of the various areas of the pitch where the bowler has bowled a delivery. It shows you how consistent a bowler is, in terms of line and length. There’s a split-screen format where you can see a particular bowler bowling to left and right-handed batsman. Last but not the least, it also clearly indicates why although being extremely fast, Shoaib Akhtar might just not be the best choice for a bowler in comparison to Glenn McGrath!

Pitch it right!

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