DARRELL Hair says he hopes to communicate better with the players when he returns to Test cricket umpiring after an absence of nearly 18 months.
"I've always been a little bit ... stand-offish in that I've always preferred to let them play the game themselves and only get involved when things go overboard," Hair said in Sydney yesterday.
Hair, reinstated as a Test match umpire this week
by the International Cricket Council, had been banned since November 2006 because of his conduct during a Test between Pakistan and England that led to the first forfeit in Test cricket's 129-year history.
"I won't say my whole attitude to umpiring has changed, but I think I have picked up a few things that are going to be very helpful to me in the future," he said. "Probably just ... having a broader understanding of what everybody else is thinking and the old communication issue of making sure that what you say and what you want is understood by the other people."
His return comes after he completed a so-called "rehabilitation programme" handed to him in September when he agreed to drop a claim of racial discrimination by the ICC.
Hair accused Pakistan of ball tampering and, when the team refused to take the field after a break, he and fellow-umpire Billy Doctrove awarded the forfeit.
The ICC declined to say if the 55-year-old Australian could umpire any match involving Pakistan. Yesterday, Hair said the incident "caused me a lot of stress. I suppose it caused a lot of people some stress along the way. The laws now have been changed to take those decisions out of the hands of the umpires and I fully support the way that that's going to happen in future. It's time to move on."
Hair said he would be available to umpire in Pakistan,
though it is believed he could return to international cricket in England's three-Test series against New Zealand starting at Lord's on 15 May.
The full article contains 342 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.