Ball-tampering row: Steve Smith, David Warner could face life bans by Cricket Australia - report
The International Cricket Council may have suspended Australia skipper Steve Smith for just one Test over the ball-tampering scandal in the Cape Town Test, it appears Cricket Australia (CA) may take a much stronger view of it.
According to a report in ESPNCricinfo, the Australian board could even ban Smith and vice-captain David Warner for life for cheating under the Board’s code of behaviour.
The report said CA’s head of integrity unit, Iain Roy, and team performance manager Pat Howard have travelled to Cape Town to begin an investigation after CA Board were asked by the Australian Sports Commission to strip Smith and Warner of captaincy and vice-captaincy for the remainder of the third Test that ended in Australia’s 322-run defeat on Sunday evening.
NOT ALL INVOLVED?
While Smith admitted on Saturday that the team’s ‘leadership group’ was behind the decision to indulge in ball-tampering, it was later learnt the entire leadership, which also included Nathan Lyon, Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood, was not involved. This has put the focus purely on Smith and Warner.
The ICC suspended Smith for one Test and fined him his entire match fees. It fined Cameron Bancroft – the player caught trying to tamper with the ball during Saturday’s play -- 75% of his match fees while letting off Warner.
Earlier, CA chief executive James Sutherland had issued a public apology, saying “To our Australian cricket fans, we are sorry. We are sorry that you had to wake up this morning to news from South Africa that our Australian men’s cricket team and our captain admitted to conduct that is outside both the laws of our game and the Spirit of Cricket. This behaviour calls into question the integrity of the team and Cricket Australia.”
PRESSURE ON CRICKET AUSTRALIA
The Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull had lashed out at the team saying, “How can our team be engaged in cheating like this? It beggars belief. Our cricketers are role models and cricket is synonymous with fair play.”