AFP, Johannesburg :
Australia cricket coach Darren Lehmann said Thursday he would quit after the final match of the scandal-tainted Test series in South Africa after the team’s former captain Steve Smith broke down in tears and accepted complete responsibility for the ball-tampering incident.
Smith was deeply emotional as the man at the centre of a storm that has rocked world cricket arrived back in Sydney from Johannesburg after being banned for a year from the sport.
“I take full responsibility, I made a serious error of judgement and I understand the consequences. It was a failure of leadership,” Smith said, choking back tears as he was comforted by his father Peter.
“I know I will regret this for the rest of my life. I am absolutely gutted. Cricket is my life and I hope it can be again. I’m sorry. I’m absolutely devastated.”Within hours, Lehmann said he was standing down despite Cricket Australia saying he had had no knowledge of the plot to alter the condition of the ball in the third Test in Cape Town.
“This will be my last Test as head coach of the Australian cricket team,” Lehmann, who also had tears in his eyes, said.
“Saying goodbye to the players was the toughest thing I have ever had to do.”
Lehmann said “the feeling is that Australian cricket needs to move forward and this is the right thing to do”.
Even Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has condemned the team, describing fielder Cameron Bancroft’s attempts to tamper with the ball by using sandpaper as a “shocking affront to Australia”.
Roughing up one side of the ball would have given Australian bowlers an advantage by producing more swing.
Cricket Australia have banned Smith and vice-captain David Warner from all international and domestic cricket for a year while Bancroft was exiled for nine months.
Smith’s fall from grace has been dramatic, and fast.He was jeered as he made his way through Johannesburg airport on Wednesday surrounded by police and media with concerns over his mental state in the current heated climate.
Former Australia great Shane Warne, no stranger himself to controversy, offered the trio an olive branch despite days of the Australian public baying for blood.