The red and yellow cards are often in play during the body contact games like football, and former English cricketer David Lloyd thinks cricket needs that too. Lloyd recently attended the podcast show with Stick to Cricket, where, in a light-hearted conversation, Lloyd expressed that cards, after a little warning, can be brought into cricket. The context of this discussion was mainly the recently contested Anderson-Tendulkar Series. The five-match series had endless dramas and cold wars, with players from either side sometimes barging in with abuse. Mohammad Siraj, the Indian pacer, is infamous for his enthusiasm on the field and didn't lack even in the series. Especially the moment when his shoulders bumped a little with Ben Ducket after he dismissed him at the Lord's. According to Lloyd, the pacer deserves a yellow card. Lloyd said, “I was always on about yellow cards, red cards. Give them a yellow card. Give them a red card. Get them off. And they said, ‘No, you’ve got to try and get on the same wavelength over five days or a four-day game, whatever it is, and try to work with the players." It was Michael Vaughan who took the topic to the the England-India Test series, saying, “So let’s go back to Lord’s, right? So your yellow card, red card. So Mohammed Siraj gets a 15% fine, doesn’t he, for his little barge? He did, he barged Duckett. Duckett, little Duckett barged on him, didn’t he? So in your system, that’ll be yellow." Lloyd replied, "Just a yellow card. And everybody on the ground and watching on TV and radio knows exactly what’s happened. He’s on notice. If he steps out of line again, he’s off the field for the game…" Read also: Watch: Tony Munyonga’s Brilliant Catch Removes Shanaka in 1st T20I Red card for body contact and foul language England's second innings had the utmost drama as Zak Crawley was coyly trying to delay the game with his antics. This triggered Indian captain Shubman Gill, which made him say some words and even mockingly clap at the English opening duo Crawley and Duckett. And then Duckett came in and had a very thin gap of air with Shubman Gill! Well, Lloyd feels it's still a yellow card scene. And when he was asked about the trigger point behind a red card, he said, "Straight red for body contact… or foul, abusive language, audible. It’s dead simple."