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The series was tied 11, with New Zealand having won
the rst match, and Australia the second. At the end
of the third match, the batsman at the non-strikers end,
Bruce Edgar, was on 102 not out, and his innings has been
called the most overlooked century of all time.[2]
The match had already had a moment of controversy
earlier. During the Australian innings, Martin Snedden
claimed a low outeld catch o the batting of Greg Chappell when Chappell was on 58.[3] It was ruled not out by
the umpires. It was some years before TV replays could
be used in umpiring decisions. Viewers watching replays
had divided opinions: some thought it was a clean catch,
while others say it passed through the elders ngers to
1
REFERENCES
Legacy
4 References
[1] Cricinfo scorecard of the match. Aus.cricinfo.com. Retrieved 23 January 2013.
[2] "Most overlooked century-maker victim of SSgA overhaul, Investment Magazine, 9 March 2009
[3] Wisden Cricketers Almanack 119th edition (1982)
[4] The Underarm Ball That Changed Cricket, Abhishek
Raghunath, Forbes India, 11 February 2011
[5] Top ten sporting cheats: 8. Greg Chappell. Sport. Virgin Media. Retrieved 12 July 2008. Cheating? It wasn't
against the rules but it certainly wasn't cricket.
[6] Knight, Ben (30 January 2004). Underarm incident was
a cry for help: Greg Chappell. ABC Local Radio: The
World Today. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 12 July 2008.
[7] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ybe0wXQHe0Q
[8] http://www.espncricinfo.com/australia/content/story/
141691.html
[9] http://www.sportsaddaindia.com/
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