Aussie Ball Tampering Scandal.

Cricket Australia Statement

The Cricket Australia Board has received preliminary findings of the investigation into last weekend’s events in Cape Town involving the Australian Men’s Cricket Team.

Following this, Cricket Australia CEO James Sutherland has officially reported Steve Smith, David Warner and Cameron Bancroft for breaching article 2.3.5 of Cricket Australia’s Code of Conduct.

All three players reported will depart South Africa tomorrow. The replacement players will fly to Johannesburg over the next 24 hours to join the squad for the Fourth Test against South Africa.

The three replacement players are Matthew Renshaw, Glenn Maxwell and Joe Burns.

The Cricket Australia Board has endorsed Tim Paine as Captain of the Australian Men’s Test Team.

Sanctions are expected to be announced within the next 24 hours.

The preliminary findings have confirmed that prior knowledge of the incident in Cape Town was confined to only the three players reported.

Cricket Australia Chairman, David Peever said:

“We understand and share the anger of fans and the broader Australian community about the events that unfolded in Cape Town on Saturday.

“This issue goes beyond the technical nature of the offences and various codes of conduct. It is about the integrity and reputation of Australian Cricket and Australian sport.

“Ultimately, it is about whether Australians can feel proud of their national sporting teams.

“That depends as much on the way the players conduct themselves, as it does about winning or losing.

“It is about how we play the game,” Peever concluded.

Cricket Australia CEO, James Sutherland said:

“In view of the broader reputational and integrity issues involved, the sanctions that will be contemplated are significant. The process must therefore be thorough to ensure that all relevant issues have been examined.

“I understand the appetite for urgency given the reputation of Australia as a sporting nation has been damaged in the eyes of many. However, urgency must be balanced with due process given the serious implications for all involved.

“In addition to sanctions for individuals, Cricket Australia will initiate an independent review into the conduct and culture of our Australian men’s teams.

“We will have more to say about this review in the coming days, but it will be conducted by an expert panel who will report to the Cricket Australia Board,” Sutherland concluded.

Mr Sutherland also indicated strong support for ICC Chief Executive Officer David Richardson’s comments on Sunday that the game needs to have a hard look at itself, to improve standards of behaviour across the board.

http://www.cricketaustralia.com.au/media/media-releases/cricket-australia-statement/2018-03-28
 
"The preliminary findings have confirmed that prior knowledge of the incident in Cape Town was confined to only the three players reported."

Damage control!!!

Looks like there's 3 people going under the bus.
 
It turned out that it was a piece of sandpaper, not an adhesive tape like Bancroft and Smith claimed. It was Davy who came up with a plan to tamper the ball. Smith knew it but looked away.
 
Warner and Smith axed from IPL 2018

Steven Smith and David Warner will not be allowed to play in IPL 2018 because of their roles in the pre-meditated plan to tamper with the ball on the third day of the Cape Town Test against South Africa.

The decision from the BCCI - announced by IPL chairman Rajiv Shukla - came as news broke that Cricket Australia was banning the players for 12 months, in the wake of tremendous outrage over the incident at Newlands from the Australian public, the Australian government and sponsors.

Smith and Warner had already stood down as captains of their IPL franchises - Rajasthan Royals and Sunrisers Hyderabad - on Monday and Wednesday morning, but their non-participation in this season was only confirmed after they were banned by CA.

http://www.espncricinfo.com/story/_/id/22939978/david-warner-steven-smith-axed-ipl-2018
 
Cricket Australia Statement on investigation

Following the announcements made yesterday in Johannesburg, the Cricket Australia Board has met again today to consider the report of the investigation into the incident in Cape Town.

The key finding from the investigation was that prior knowledge of the incident was confined to three players, Steve Smith, David Warner and Cameron Bancroft.

Key findings:

Steve Smith, David Warner and Cameron Bancroft have been charged with a breach of Article 2.3.5 of the CA Code of Conduct, namely that their conduct:

(a) was contrary to the spirit of the game;
(b) was unbecoming of a representative or official;
(c) is or could be harmful to the interests of cricket; and/or
(d) did bring the game of cricket into disrepute.

In respect of the individual players concerned, Cricket Australia advises the following:

Steve Smith was charged with a breach of Article 2.3.5 of the CA Code of Conduct based on:

(a) knowledge of a potential plan to attempt to artificially alter the condition of the ball;
(b) failure to take steps to seek to prevent the development and implementation of that plan;
(c) directing that evidence of attempted tampering be concealed on the field of play;
(d) seeking to mislead Match Officials and others regarding Bancroft’s attempts to artificially alter the condition of the ball; and
(e) misleading public comments regarding the nature, extent and participants of the plan

David Warner was charged with a breach of Article 2.3.5 of the CA Code of Conduct based on:

(a) development of a plan to attempt to artificially alter the condition of the ball;
(b) instruction to a junior player to carry out a plan to take steps to attempt to artificially alter the condition of the ball using sandpaper;
(c) provision of advice to a junior player regarding how a ball could be artificially altered including demonstrating how it could be done;
(d) failure to take steps to seek to prevent the development and/or implementation of the plan;
(e) failure to report his knowledge of the plan at any time prior to or during the match;
(f) misleading Match Officials through the concealment of his knowledge of and involvement in the plan; and
(g) failure to voluntarily report his knowledge of the plan after the match

Cameron Bancroft was charged with a breach of Article 2.3.5 of the CA Code of Conduct based on:

(a) knowledge of the existence of, and being party to, the plan to attempt to artificially alter the condition of the ball using sandpaper;
(b) carrying out instructions to attempt to artificially alter the condition of the ball;
(c) seeking to conceal evidence of his attempts to artificially alter the condition of the ball;
(d) seeking to mislead Match Officials and others regarding his attempts to artificially alter the condition of the ball; and
(e) misleading public comments regarding the nature, extent, implementation and participants of the plan

Summary of sanctions

The range of sanctions available to Cricket Australia under Article 2.3.5 are extensive. The CA Board determined sanctions that would be appropriate in each player’s case, following their review of the report.

The Board has considered the recommendations and determined that the following sanctions will be offered to each player in accordance with the CA Code of Conduct process.

[table="width: 100%"]
[tr]
[td]Steve Smith[/td]
[td]Suspension of 12 months from all international and domestic cricket[/td]
[/tr]
[tr]
[td]David Warner[/td]
[td]Suspension of 12 months from all international and domestic cricket[/td]
[/tr]
[tr]
[td]Cameron Bancroft[/td]
[td]Suspension of 9 months from all international and domestic cricket[/td]
[/tr]
[/table]

All three players will be permitted to play club cricket and will be encouraged to do so to maintain links with the cricket community.

In addition, all three players will be required to undertake 100 hours of voluntary service in community cricket.

Leadership

Steve Smith and Cameron Bancroft will not be considered for team leadership positions until a minimum of 12 months after the conclusion of their respective suspensions from international and domestic cricket. Any consideration of future leadership would be conditional on acceptance by fans and the public, form and authority among the playing group. David Warner will not be considered for team leadership positions in the future.

Cricket Australia Chairman, David Peever said:

“As I indicated yesterday, the CA Board understands and shares the anger of fans and the broader Australian community about these events.

“They go to the integrity and reputation of Australian Cricket and Australian sport and the penalties must reflect that.

“These are significant penalties for professional players and the Board does not impose them lightly. It is hoped that following a period of suspension, the players will be able to return to playing the game they love and eventually rebuild their careers.”

Cricket Australia CEO, James Sutherland said:

“As the Chairman has noted, the sanctions we have announced are significant for the individuals involved. That is why the process has had to be thorough to ensure that all relevant issues have been examined.

“I am satisfied that the sanctions in this case properly reflect a balance between the need to protect the integrity and reputation of the game and the need to maintain the possibility of redemption for the individuals involved, all of whom have learned difficult lessons through these events.

“As indicated, Cricket Australia will provide more details of an independent review into the conduct and culture of our Australian men’s team in due course.” Sutherland concluded.

APPENDIX


Summary of CA Code of Conduct process

By way of summary, the Code of Conduct process in this instance is as follows:

  1. A report is lodged by the CEO with the Head of Integrity;
  2. A review is completed by the Head of Integrity;
  3. A Notice of Charge (in conjunction with the report) is provided to the player which includes a specific charge under the Code of Conduct and offers the proposed sanctions;
  4. If the player accepts the charge and proposed sanctions, the matter is completed;
  5. If the player disputes either the charge or sanction/s, there is a hearing before a CA Commissioner;
  6. The player may appeal the outcome of that hearing, and if so there is a hearing before an Appeals Commissioner (who is selected from the remaining CA Commissioners).

http://www.cricketaustralia.com.au/...cricket-australia-statement-update/2018-03-28
 
Broken Smith takes weight of blame

An utterly broken Steven Smith has taken the weight of the Cape Town ball-tampering scandal on his shoulders, admitting full responsibility as captain of the Australian team for the conspiracy to use sandpaper in an attempt to gain reverse swing, and then the cover-up that followed.

Having arrived home in Sydney after his ban from playing for 12 months and from captaincy for two years under the Cricket Australia code of behaviour, Smith struggled to hide his grief at what had unfolded since he allowed the vice-captain David Warner and the young opening batsman Cameron Bancroft to put together a scheme to tamper with the ball.

"To all of my team-mates, to fans of cricket all over the world, and to all Australians who are disappointed and angry, I'm sorry," Smith said in his statement at Sydney airport. "What happened in Cape Town has already been laid out by Cricket Australia. Tonight, I want to make clear that as captain of the Australian cricket team, I take full responsibility. I made a serious error of judgment, and I now understand the consequences. It was a failure of leadership, of my leadership. I'll do everything I can to make up for my mistake, and the damage it's caused.

"If any good can come of this, if there can be a lesson to others, then I hope I can be a force for change. I know I'll regret this for the rest of my life. I'm absolutely gutted. I hope in time, I can earn back respect and forgiveness. I've been so privileged and honoured to represent my country and captain the Australian cricket team. Cricket is the greatest game in the world. It's been my life and I hope it can be again. I'm sorry and I'm absolutely devastated."

http://www.espncricinfo.com/story/_/id/22951048/broken-steven-smith-takes-weight-blame
 
Smith's tears force Lehmann to step down as Australia coach

Steven Smith's anguished arrival was the final straw. A day after vowing to stay on and drive cultural renewal, Australia's coach Darren Lehmann bowed to the inevitable on Thursday and chose to resign at the conclusion of the Wanderers Test match after five years at the helm of the national team, saying the former captain's tears had convinced him it was the only course of action.

His public announcement, a matter of minutes after he told an already shell-shocked Test squad, was followed by a surreal training session, where the touring party engaged mainly in football and fielding drills while the Wanderers public address system belted out classic Australian songs such as How to Make Gravy by Paul Kelly, Into My Arms by Nick Cave, Reckless by Australian Crawl, Don't Dream It's Over by Crowded House and Wide Open Road by The Triffids.

Lehmann confessed to not being able to sleep since Saturday night following the team's exposure for ball tampering. While maintaining his lack of knowledge of the plot between David Warner and Cameron Bancroft, with the approval of Smith, Lehmann conceded it was impossible for him to stay on as coach while the team and Cricket Australia continued to be under attack. The home Test series sponsor Magellan cancelled its deal on Thursday, while longtime broadcast partner Channel Nine looked the other way in signing a new five-year deal with Australian tennis.

http://www.espncricinfo.com/story/_...ars-force-darren-lehmann-step-australia-coach
 
ICC to review code of conduct, ball-tampering set to be bigger offence

Ball tampering, currently a level 2 offence, will most certainly be considered a graver indiscretion as ICC reviews its code of conduct following recent poor behaviour from players, which culminated in the ball-tampering scandal in the Cape Town Test between South Africa and Australia. Like other things, handling of the ball and what is considered legal will go through a thorough reassessment and will be defined more clearly. The review of the code of conduct will seek to clearly define what the spirit of the game is, identify what is acceptable behaviour, and assess whether the offences are being dealt with with appropriate seriousness and handed appropriate penalties.

Player behaviour has been an issue for years of late with ICC introducing a demerit points system, which stick to a player's record for 24 months. It has clearly not been a big enough deterrent. A review of the code, the ICC CEO David Richardson said, was imminent but the recent events have necessitated urgent action. The matter was supposed to be discussed at ICC meetings in April, but will be dealt with alacrity now. This was an appropriate time and a great opportunity for the ICC to draw a line in the sand, Richardson said.

"We have seen a number of incidents of poor player behaviour in recent weeks including things like some ugly sledging, abusive language, send-offs, dissent against umpire decisions, we had a walk-off in the tri-series in Sri Lanka, and now this ball-tampering episode in the latest series," Richardson said. "In fact player behaviour and player conduct was already on our agenda for the April meeting, but I think what happened in Cape Town has certainly created an additional sense of urgency that something needs to be done."

http://www.espncricinfo.com/story/_...ode-conduct-ball-tampering-set-bigger-offence
 
Steven Smith accepts CA sanctions, will not appeal

Former Australia captain Steven Smith will not appeal against his 12-month ban from international and domestic cricket, and his 12-month ban from leadership positions thereafter, imposed by Cricket Australia for his role in the ball-tampering incident in the Cape Town Test against South Africa.

"I would give anything to have this behind me and be back representing my country," Smith said on Twitter on Wednesday afternoon. "But I meant what I said about taking full responsibility as captain of the team. I won't be challenging the sanctions. They've been imposed by CA to send a strong message and I have accepted them."

http://www.espncricinfo.com/story/_/id/23023344/steven-smith-accepts-ca-sanctions-not-appeal

UPDATE: Cameron Bancroft has made the same decision; no news yet on David Warner.
 
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David Warner’s explosive next moves could include challenging ban and $1 million tell-all
http://www.news.com.au/sport/cricke...s/news-story/c48f861955fd34d81a893c9ff490f72f

SYDNEY PR queen Roxy Jacenko has denied claims she’s spearheading a lucrative damage control campaign for David Warner and labelled the rumours “pathetic”.

“Next I’ll be blamed for providing the sandpaper — that’s about the only thing left!” Jacenko told The Australian after her presence at Warner’s Saturday press conference was slammed as a “PR stunt”.

“Candice is a dear friend, thus my support, but I am not their PR.”

While Jacenko insists she’s not advising the family in the wake of the scandal, veteran journalist David Penberthy told Adelaide radio station FIVEaa he had been told by “senior media and PR circles in Sydney” the Warner camp planned to recoup some of the millions of dollars he will lose during a 12-month cricket ban by selling his story to a commercial station.

“It’s worth noting that he had the high profile Sydney PR woman Roxy Jacenko with him on the day sitting with his wife Candice at the press conference,” Penberthy said.

“One of the reasons apparently that Warner didn’t answer so many questions is that he’s keeping his powder dry for a tell all interview — part of the strategy that is being spearheaded by Roxy Jacenko.

“He’s taken a six million dollar hit in terms of his earnings. He can recoup at least a million of that from the Nine network or Seven network.

“That’s apparently why he’s keeping his mouth shut when he’s being asked obvious questions.”
 
He is accepting the penalty...

...might not have been so if the others hadnt already accepted theirs
 
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-australia-46013631

A scathing review into Australian cricket has condemned a "winning without counting the costs" culture that left players in a "gilded bubble".

The independent report was commissioned by Cricket Australia (CA) after a ball-tampering scandal rocked the Test team in South Africa in March.

The review found that CA was partly to blame, and viewed more widely as "arrogant and controlling".

The governing body said it would accept most of the report's recommendations.

The ball-tampering incident shocked Australia and led to 12-month suspensions for team leaders Steve Smith and David Warner, and a nine-month ban for batsman Cameron Bancroft.

It also hastened the departures of coach Darren Lehmann and CA chief executive James Sutherland.

"Responsibility for that larger picture lies with CA and not just the players held directly responsible for the appalling incidents at Newlands [in South Africa]," said the report released on Monday.

The 145-page review was conducted by not-for-profit organisation The Ethics Centre. Its other findings included:
  • that players were frequently pushed to "play the mongrel", often against their nature,
  • they operated in a bubble "disconnected, for much of each year, from families, friends and the grounding influence of community",
  • CA reverted "to bully tactics or worse, ostracising" when situations went "against them", according to one unnamed insider.
Among 42 recommendations, the review proposed setting up a new ethics committee and selecting players based on character in addition to ability.

CA said it would accept 34 recommendations and consider seven more. It had rejected one proposal that would excuse players from taking part in T20 cricket.

"We are very committed to moving the game forward and using this review as a platform to do that," chairman David Peever said.

However, he also described it as "at times difficult to read and in some instances, difficult to agree with".
 
Warner's and Smith's bans officially end today. They are going to have to have skins of leather to deal with the english crowds, not only during the upcoming CWC but more importantly the Ashes. Will be fascinating viewing.
 
Warner's and Smith's bans officially end today. They are going to have to have skins of leather to deal with the english crowds, not only during the upcoming CWC but more importantly the Ashes. Will be fascinating viewing.

Warner's looking in great form for the IPL so far. I think he'll be more driven if the crowd antagonises him. Smithie's response remains to be seen.
 
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