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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Smith, Warner to serve out bans in full: Cricket Australia

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SYDNEY: Steve Smith and David Warner will serve out their one-year bans in full after a review of the punishments by the board of Cricket Australia (CA), the governing body said on Tuesday. Former test captain Smith and his vice-captain Warner were handed the bans from international and state cricket after the ball-tampering scandal that rocked Australian Cricket in March this year.


Batsman Cameron Bancroft was also banned for nine months for his role in trying to alter the condition of the ball during a test match against South Africa in Cape Town. He will be able to return to representative cricket at the end of December.


The players’ union, the Australian Cricketers’ Association (ACA), have always contested the bans were unduly harsh and had pushed for all three to be able to resume first class cricket immediately.


“The Cricket Australia Board has carefully considered all elements of the ACA submission and has determined that it is not appropriate to make any changes to the sanctions handed down to the three players,” CA’s chairman Earl Eddings said in a statement.


Calls for the bans to be looked at again intensified after an independent review into CA last month said the governing body had contributed to the ball-tampering scandal by fostering a “win without counting the costs” culture. That review led to the resignation of CA chairman David Peever, who had forcefully maintained that the players should see out the full terms of their suspensions.


“The original decision of the board to sanction the players was determined after rigorous discussion and consideration,” Eddings, Peever’s temporary replacement, added.


“CA maintains that both the length and nature of the sanctions remain an appropriate response in light of the considerable impact on the reputation of Australian cricket, here and abroad.”


“DISAPPOINTING”


The ACA said in a statement it “respectfully” disagreed with CA’s decision, which it regarded as “disappointing”.


“It remains the ACA’s view that a recalibration of these sanctions would have been a just outcome,” it continued.


“The ACA has done all it could in support of our submission, and now considers the matter closed.”


Eddings in any case made it clear that no further submissions for a review of the punishments would be heard by the CA board.


“We believe the ongoing conversation about reducing the sanctions puts undue pressure on the three players — all of whom accepted the sanctions earlier this year — and the Australian men’s cricket team,” he said. — Reuters


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