‘Sandpaper’ scandal overshadows cricket year

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AFP, London :
A ball-tampering scandal involving Australia provided the backdrop to a 2018 where Afghanistan and Ireland were elevated to Test status, England rebuilt under Joe Root and India’s Virat Kohli cemented his position as one of the best batsmen of his generation.
In an age where international players’ every onfield move is subject to intense television scrutiny, it defied belief that Australia’s Cameron Bancroft tried to hide the tape with which he had deliberately scuffed up the ball during a Test against South Africa in Cape Town down his trousers.
The ensuing fall-out was dramatic with then Australia captain Steve Smith, his deputy David Warner and Bancroft all sent home.
Smith and Warner were then both banned for a year by Cricket Australia, with Bancroft given a nine-month ban.
But while Smith and Warner had solid records behind them, Bancroft now risks being remembered above all for his role in the scandal, just as another Australian Trevor Chappell is immediately associated with his brother Greg’s controversial decision to have him bowl underarm at the end of a one-day international against New Zealand in 1981.
“For me in the (changing) room, I walked past something and had the opportunity to stop it and I didn’t do it and that was my leadership failure,” Smith said Friday, indirectly confirming reports Warner had been the instigator of the plan.
“It was the potential for something to happen and it went on and happened out in the field,” he added.
Darren Lehmann, the Australia coach, resigned and was replaced by fellow former Test batsman Justin Langer in May, with long-serving Cricket Australia chief executive James Sutherland also standing down.
And that was not the end of it, with CA chairman David Peever resigning last month soon after being elected for a second term when a review into team culture found it “arrogant”, with CA accused of doing nothing to curb a win-at-all-costs culture.
One good thing to emerge from the scandal was a growing realisation it was possible to play competitively without resorting to crude verbal abuse.
As Tim Paine, thrust into the Australia captaincy following Smith’s banishment, put it after a narrow defeat by India at Adelaide in the first match of a Test series currently level at 1-1: “We fought really hard and never gave up, and you don’t have to talk rubbish and carry on like a pork chop to prove that.”
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