Australia wicketkeeper Alex Carey was given a controversial reprieve on day three of the fifth Ashes Test in Hobart when Chris Woakes was adjudged to have overstepped by third umpire Paul Reiffel.
Woakes thought he had bowled Carey for 19 to leave Australia teetering at 91-7, with the 30-year-old playing a poor shot and dragging the ball onto the stumps.
However, replays showed that Woakes was very tight on the front line and Reiffel took a long look at multiple camera angles before deciding it was a no ball.
The decision proved a controversial one, with it difficult to tell whether any part of Woakes' foot was behind the line.
On commentary for BT Sport, former Australia bowler Glenn McGrath suggested the benefit of the doubt should have been given to the bowler and the wicket should have stood.
"A little bit stiff I think," McGrath said. "As a bowler I'd be disappointed with that being given a no ball."
Former umpire Simon Taufel also disagreed with the decision, telling Channel 7: "I'm sitting at home looking at those pictures and if they're the pictures the third umpire is seeing, I don't think that I'd overrule that and call that a no-ball."
Ex- England captain Michael Atherton, however, told SEN radio: "I don't think you could say definitively on any replay that a part of the foot was behind the line."
Ian Botham, meanwhile, told Channel 7: "I do not see that as conclusive in any way, shape or form. That boot there is on the ground and that for me is just behind."
It was the third time in the series that England had taken a wicket off a no ball, with Ben Stokes bowling David Warner for 17 in Brisbane and Ollie Robinson getting Marnus Labuschagne caught behind for 102 in Adelaide.