Hawk-Eye

Hawk-Eye camera system at the Kremlin Cup tennis tournament on 20 October 2012, Moscow

Hawk-Eye is a computer vision system used to visually track the trajectory of a ball and display a profile of its statistically most likely path as a moving image.[1] It is used in more than 20 major sports, including cricket, tennis, Gaelic football, badminton, hurling, rugby union, association football and volleyball,[2]

The Sony-owned Hawk-Eye system was developed in the United Kingdom by Paul Hawkins. The system was originally implemented in 2000 for television purposes in cricket.[3] It works via the use of up to ten high-performance cameras, normally positioned on the underside of the stadium roof, which track the ball from different angles[4]. The video from the cameras is then triangulated and combined to create a three-dimensional representation of the ball's trajectory. Hawk-Eye is not infallible, but is advertised to be accurate to within 2.6 millimetres[5] and is increasingly used as an impartial review in sports. It has been accepted by governing bodies in tennis, cricket and association football as a means of adjudication. Hawk-Eye has been used for the Challenge System since 2006 in tennis and Decision Review System in cricket since 2009. The system is also used to determine whether the ball has crossed the goal line in football as a means of goal-line technology, implemented in the 2013–14 Premier League season and now present at many domestic leagues and internatlional competitions.

  1. ^ Two British scientists call into question Hawk-Eye's accuracy – Tennis – ESPN. Sports.espn.go.com (19 June 2008). Retrieved on 15 August 2010.
  2. ^ Boyo, Sydney (9 September 2023). "How Sony's Hawk-Eye electronic line-calling system transformed the U.S. Open". CNBC. Retrieved 23 September 2024.
  3. ^ Hughes, Simon (15 November 2000). "How's that then for hi-tech?". London: Telegraph. Retrieved 15 October 2022.
  4. ^ "Wimbledon Hawk-Eye | Is it accurate? How it works | Radio Times". www.radiotimes.com. Retrieved 23 September 2024.
  5. ^ "Hawk-Eye's Accuracy and Reliability" (PDF).