Australia's on-field leaders have been banished, but this is just the beginning

By Glenn Mitchell / Expert

Australian cricket has begun its slow journey to redemption. And, for the moment, we are all on a drip feed, awaiting the full extent of the sanctions that will be meted out to those guilty of shaming the game over the weekend.

But one thing we know for certain, the Australian Test team is currently a cancerous environment.

The on-field leadership of the side has been eviscerated, underlining the seriousness of their actions in the eyes of Cricket Australia.

More on ball-tampering sanctions
» Smith, Warner, and Bancroft to be sent home as Lehmann found innocent
» “Australian cricket is in deep s***”: Michael Clarke not satisfied with CA response
» Matt Renshaw must replace Cameron Bancroft permanently

The governing body had no option following the pre-meditated cheating at Cape Town that left many Australians – even those who are not cricket fans – feeling as flat as a week-old glass of lemonade.

CA had to cauterise the wound before it turned septic and when you hear some of the claims being made this week by those in the know there is an air of toxicity within the changeroom, which has been steadily manifesting over time.

Skipper Steve Smith, his deputy, David Warner, and the man who actually executed the deed, Cameron Bancroft, are all heading home ahead of Friday’s final Test at Johannesburg.

Wicketkeeper Tim Paine will officially become Australia’s 46th captain when he leads the side onto the Wanderers.

It will be fascinating to know if the three returning players all sit together on the flight, given the stories in the last two days of acrimony and factional infighting within the squad.

As they head east, Matt Renshaw, Joe Burns and Glenn Maxwell will fly west to join the squad – a trio who have all felt the axe in the past.

The returning trio will learn the full extent of their bans in the next 24 hours. CA CEO James Sutherland confirmed the final sanctions will “reflect the gravity of the situation”.

Smith and Warner relinquished their leadership duties heading into Day 4 of the third Test, but Smith was the only player who was already ineligible for the last match following the ICC’s investigation, having been hit with a one-Test ban.

It is impossible to think that either Smith or Warner will ever hold an official leadership role again.

Speculation continues that the pair may be sidelined for 12 months. We will soon know.

Sutherland was eager to maintain that the trio of players were the only ones in the tour party to have been aware of the ruse but, despite pressuring for the media, refused to use the word “cheats”.

Coach Darren Lehmann has been cleared of any wrongdoing.

Given the way events played out on that now infamous third day at Cape Town and the vision that we have all seen, Lehmann’s greenlight will no doubt cause much discussion.

Just what he said into the walkie talkie to 12th man Peter Handscomb immediately following the airing by the host broadcaster of vision that raised eyebrows about Bancroft’s actions we do not know. It did, however, result in Handscomb going onto the field to speak to Bancroft minutes ahead of the yellow tape he was using on the ball disappearing into the latter’s trousers.

Sutherland did not finger who carried the offending item onto the ground, merely saying, “I suspect some of that will come out in due course.”

The Australian team is now looking to move forward from the largest reputational scandal in its history.

It will do so under the glare of the most intense scrutiny it has ever endured, akin to the unblinking stare of a stuffed animal firmly affixed on each and every player.

Every move in the short term will be analysed for impropriety. And it is for that very reason that the Australian cricket team must change the way it operates.

Ahead of South Africa’s last tour of Australia, in 2016-17, Nathan Lyon outlined his side’s tactics, saying, “We know where the line is. We headbutt it, but we don’t go over it.”

There was open talk pre-series of targeting Kagiso Rabada verbally in an endeavour to push his demerit points to the point of earning him a suspension. Is that really where the team focus should lay?

The mystical ‘line’ was again spoken of publicly early in the series.

In the end, Australia crossed the Rubicon – after deliberation among members of the leadership group in the changeroom – with what it did on the third day at Cape Town.

At that moment, which will live in infamy within the sport, the team went from headbutting the line to leaping over it like Bob Beamon in his prime.

Worse still, it was done with a calculated, premeditated, devil-may-care attitude.

Over time, the behaviour of the Australian team has become increasingly boorish, alienating fans of all persuasions in the process.

Steve Waugh’s well-publicised tactic of ‘mental disintegration’ has been expanded, sullying the reputation of the national side.

It was made clear to me many times during my travels to cover overseas series that many of the Australians were respected for their playing talent but not for their behaviour, some to the point of being reviled.

Likewise, teams from other parts of the cricketing world have also pushed the envelope with respect to on-field verbal abuse, but it is fair to say that on balance Australia has remained the ‘market leader’.

Quinton de Kock’s shaming of Warner’s wife at Durban was indefensible but it came as a result of the verbal haranguing he was receiving from Warner and others on the ground. Had the latter not occurred, the former would likely not have either.

While the authorities – namely the umpires – must take a level of responsibility for the way verbal attacks have escalated in recent times, in the end, it is a team’s leadership that governs what level it attains.

This current side has been pious at times in its damnation of other teams and their fans.

Warner’s comments – trotted out again in the media in recent days – after Faf du Plessis’ ball tampering conviction on South Africa’s last tour of Australia have shown a complete double standard.

That type of evangelical moralising now looks ridiculous, as Australia has transgressed in a fashion far worse than any other recent example of ball tampering.

The holier-than-thou mindset is now shown to be totally disingenuous and fanciful.

Nobody can rightly expect the Australian team to suddenly display the Corinthian values of good sportsmanship, for the nature of 21st century sport is well past that. But they need to tone it down significantly to be able to distance themselves from this latest fiasco.

Every on-field incident where umpires are forced to intervene and each subsequent visit to the match referee’s room will produce a chorus of “there you go, the cheats are at it again” from opposing fans.

It will likely draw a similar response from many a fan in Australia.

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There has seemingly been more fall-out from this episode than there was with the Manhattan Project. From the Prime Minister to the man in the street, the response has been damning.

Of equal concern for CA has been the comments made by some of the sport’s major corporate sponsors.

There are some people questioning whether any of the players should cop lengthy bans, although they are in the minority. They use the punishments – primarily fines – that have been handed out to players from other nations who have been found guilty of ball tampering as a way of saying CA has overreacted.

This case is different. This time it was a captain instructing and condoning another player’s actions with the direct knowledge of other members of the squad.

There is an age-old adage with respect to leadership – never ask anyone to do something you wouldn’t. Unlike du Plessis and earlier, Mike Atherton, Smith chose someone else to do the deed after a period of deliberation and consultation.

In the end, it is actually refreshing to see CA hold those involved to a higher standard than other nations have.

For now, Smith, Warner and Bancroft are gone – for how long we will soon know. The game will march on in their absence.

How it does from an Australian perspective, however, will depend on the character displayed by this new-look team. That will be driven by Paine and the remaining senior players.

And also Lehmann, who in most people’s eyes bears a lot of responsibility for the slide in player behaviour.

Now is the time for authoritative and decisive leadership. The sport and the fans are demanding it.

It has been sadly lacking and it cannot continue to be the case.

The Crowd Says:

2018-03-29T02:18:08+00:00

Marlin

Guest


one could extend this attitude to many of the TV commentators, too. In what way do they contribute to the general acceptance of the on-field behaviour? Do they have any responsibility to call it out? IMO Sutherland, Howard and Lehman should all resign and save us all the trouble...

2018-03-29T02:08:21+00:00

Akkara

Roar Rookie


Agree! The strategy to handle this issue seems to be working, but was probably thought out on the flight to Africa. Define a clear but minimal boundary of bad apples, based on only what was already know by the public; give them harsh punishment, and withhold any further implicating information until things subside. The idea that the coach and no bowler is involved, will hold, unless some clear visual or sound evidence out of their control appears. No bowling group would ever let a batsman touch a ball, without knowing exactly what they were doing! The truth will become evident once they return home! It will be Warners bargaining chip.

2018-03-28T21:03:50+00:00

TC123

Guest


So Lehmann wants Australia to be more like NZ in the way they play and respect the opposition. This will be hard to swallow for some of you.

2018-03-28T19:29:13+00:00

Bamboo

Guest


Thank you Jason. The sad thing is holding this view and being Anti-Australian are two completely different things, but thats gone over most peoples heads.

2018-03-28T19:22:28+00:00

Rob

Guest


No problem with QDK giving the verbal back to Warner. Faf is a little confused about the legalities of ball polishing and also handling the ball whilst batting in IMO. Rabada is a hot head. He should have missed a Test for making contact with Smith because of his bad record and it's also unacceptable behaviour on the cricket field.

2018-03-28T11:52:08+00:00

OJP

Guest


I understand your angle rock, but wouldnt it play out like this... 1) over the top sanction gets handed down 2) win on appeal; get sanction reduced 3) become available for selection again 4) not get selected for the team(s) in any event 5) appeal the decision of the selectors........... to where ?

2018-03-28T10:44:44+00:00

Keeper

Roar Rookie


I agree onside. I'm so disappointed to see Glenn and the abc as torch bearers at the front of the lynch mob!

2018-03-28T09:26:02+00:00

jayrigg

Guest


Spot on Perry, to me the major blame in all this lies with the accountability of Leehman, or apparent non-accountability as it seems.

2018-03-28T08:38:30+00:00


I think part of the reason why CA are holding their players in this debacle to a higher standard is due to the angelic and innocence portrayed by the holier than thou players. Had they not put themsleves on this pedestal of honesty and integrity the backlash might have been more lenient.

2018-03-28T08:37:02+00:00

Bob

Guest


I agree to a point but I think that Sutherland has to go too. When they sacked Micky Arthur they got it wrong from a leadershippand culture perspective. In doing so the allowed the players to believe they could do anything the liked and if the coach didn’t like it they could get them fired. Lehman and the side in behaviour to this point is symptomatic of the culture that Sutherland created by sacking Arthur. The true tragedy is that in the wake of Phillip Hughes, none of the team nor CA learnt the lesson that was staring them in the face - shame on the lot of ‘em.

2018-03-28T08:20:48+00:00

FunBus

Roar Rookie


I think you’re right to an extent, Bamboo. Regarding the other poster’s question about ‘did England football supporters’ behavior shape how England as a country and people were viewed?’ The answer is -yes. Particularly, in the 1980s and 1990s. The English encounter Aussies in a variety of situations, speak the same language, and have a lot in common, so the relationship is more nuanced. However, there are two sport related issues where I’ve seen English people broaden sport criticism to ‘Aussies’ more generally. The first relates to the treatment the England rugby team faced at the 2003 RWC from the Aussie media and fans, culminating in John Howard hurling the winners medals at the team with a face like a bulldog chewing a wasp. The other is the cricket team. Particularly, the last few years. Win lose or draw they’re seen as arrogant, hypocritical, boorish tools, and you sometimes see it linked to Aussies in general. I suspect it’s worse for the country’s image in other countries where they don’t have such a broad relationship.

2018-03-28T08:18:43+00:00

Gordon Smith

Guest


Bancroft may not have starred but he is currently Australia's top run scorer after 3 tests.

2018-03-28T07:55:19+00:00

FunBus

Roar Rookie


You mean examples such as Lehmann encouraging Aussie crowds to hurl abuse at Broad for the crime of not walking (something virtually no Aussie has ever done apart from Gilchrist, and certainly something Lehmann never did in his career), then clutching his pearls because Warner got a bit of stick from the crowd? Or Warner’s long, pompous, stomach-churning speeches about how he’s glad no-one on his team would ever ball-tamper? They’re now the go to examples of hypocrisy.

2018-03-28T07:44:28+00:00

KenoathCarnt

Guest


Alot of these players aren't in the starting lineup but i would like to this this team going forward. Renshaw Burns Doran S Marsh Maxwell Paine Wildermuth Agar Cummins Starc Hazelwood

2018-03-28T07:44:08+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


These charts have been doing the rounds, showing the amount of swing the bowlers have been getting between overs 25-80 https://m.sport24.co.za/Cricket/Proteas/graph-shows-how-oz-have-got-the-ball-to-talk-in-sa-20180326

2018-03-28T07:27:33+00:00

David

Guest


Too much evangelical moralising from you Glenn and in fact from most of Australia including the PM - I think mainly to get some political advantage by jumping on the bandwagon. Don't put the boot in too hard - it may come back to hurt you. You don't even know the full circumstances but you seem to want to be judge, jury and executioner all at the same time. The ICC has already given its verdict taking into account what you say above. Every country in the World except Australia tries to reduce the penalties for their players. Here we seem to take pride in having half the country wanting to attack the other half but of course not us. I find it very sad that Steve Smith in particular has gone from hero to villain in a matter of hours and probably he was very frustrated as a result of the Rabada appeal going into the match - another example of where other countries defend their players not try to impose even stronger penalties. Steve Smith was not even consulted when the appeal was held but Rabada had a good lawyer apparently and the support of SA.

2018-03-28T07:03:44+00:00

KenoathCarnt

Guest


Just look at Philander and Du plessis both charged in 2014 and 2013 both still playing today.

2018-03-28T06:51:00+00:00

Dave.SA

Guest


At the risk of hijacking the thread I listened to a radio interview with Neil Manthorp, the English cricket writer/commentator living in Cape Town. I have met him once or twice. Nice chap. He was talking about how it all went down from the commentary box. It all started during the 2nd test when Australia started reverse swinging a relatively new ball on a ground with a lush green outfield. The amount of swing was far greater than they had gotten over the last year. In Cape Town the cameramen all worked together. It apparently took many hours and even once they had worked it out it took a few hours to get the incriminating footage. Manthorp lauded the quality of the cameramen. It does go to show that whilst it is dumb to tamper in front of cameras it is still incredibly difficult to get footage despite a determined effort

2018-03-28T06:42:46+00:00

Rupesh

Guest


When Kohli was caught???

2018-03-28T06:33:52+00:00

G

Guest


They played terribly under him; the homework saga was utterly ridiculous. It's no surprise they started winning again after he got the @r$e. The positive out of this whole shebang is Renshaw, Burns and Maxi all get another crack.

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