DISTRAUGHT SMITH BREAKS DOWN AS HE ACCEPTS BLAME FOR CHEAT SCANDAL
Distraught former Australian cricket captain
Steve Smith accepted full responsibility Thursday for a ball-tampering scandal
that has shaken the sport, breaking down in tears while denying it had ever
happened before.
Cricket
Australia have banned Smith and David Warner from all international and
domestic cricket for a year while opening batsman Cameron Bancroft was exiled
for nine months over attempted cheating during the third Test in South Africa
Smith, a
golden boy compared to Donald Bradman for his batting exploits, was a broken
man at an emotional press conference on his arrival back in Sydney from
Johannesburg.
Australian cricket captain Steve Smith in tears as he accepts full responsibility for a ball-tampering scandal |
"I
take full responsibility, I made a serious error of judgement and I understand
the consequences. It was a failure of leadership," he said, choking back
tears as he was comforted by his father Peter.
"I
know I will regret this for the rest of my life. I am absolutely gutted.
Cricket is my life and hope it can be again. I'm sorry. I'm absolutely
devastated."
Smith's
fall from grace has been dramatic, and fast.
He was
jeered as he made his way through Johannesburg airport on Wednesday surrounded
by police and media with concerns over his mental state in the current rabid
climate and coach Darren Lehmann calling for all three men to be "given a
second chance".
Former
great Shane Warne, no stranger himself to controversy, offered the trio an
olive branch despite days of a harsh and judgemental Australian public baying
for blood.
"What
the public wants to see is change. They want to see you be a better
person," he wrote in a column for the Sydney Daily Telegraph.
"They'll support you if they see that, and they'll forgive you."
WARNER: 'STAIN ON THE GAME
Warner, a
divisive figure who was charged with developing the plot and instructing
Bancroft to carry it out, also broke his silence to say sorry and admit his
actions had been "a stain on the game".
"Mistakes
have been made which have damaged cricket," he told his 1.6 million
Instagram followers as he made his way back to Sydney.
"I
apologise for my part and take responsibility for it.
"It's
a stain on the game we all love and I have loved since I was a boy," he
added.
Divisive figure David Warner sits alone on th Australian team bus in Johannesburg before it was announced he is being sent back to Australia |
In handing
out their tough punishment, cricket chiefs bowed to uproar at home where
sportsmen and women are held in high esteem and expected to act in the best
interests of the game.
Authorities
also needed to act decisively to counter mounting concern from sponsors over
reputational damage.
CA's
response wasn't enough to save an estimated Aus$20 million (US$15 million)
partnership with naming rights sponsor Magellan which tore up its three-year
contract Thursday after barely seven months.
The
financial cost for the players is also growing with sporting goods company
ASICS ending its relationship with Warner and Bancroft. Electronics giant LG
axed Warner on Wednesday, while Weet-Bix and Commonwealth Bank dumped Smith.
Other team
sponsors, including Qantas, have voiced their deep disappointment over the
scandal but so far have taken no action.
BANCROFT: 'I ASK FORGIVENESS
An
emotional Bancroft said he was ashamed of himself when he arrived back in
Perth.
"All
I can do in the short term is ask for forgiveness," he said, while denying
he had ever tampered with a ball before, in comments echoed by Smith.
"I
have made a big mistake for allowing this to happen," said Smith.
"This
is the first time I have seen this happen and it will never be happening
again."
Smith --
the world's number one Test batsman -- was charged with knowledge of the
potential ball-altering plan, while Warner was charged with developing the plot
and instructing Bancroft to carry it out.
CA said
Bancroft, who has played just eight Tests, had illegally attempted to "artificially
alter the condition of the ball using sandpaper".
It added
that Smith had continued to try to cover up the cheating plot by issuing
"misleading public comments regarding the nature, extent and participants
of the plan".
In a
further blow, it ruled Smith and Bancroft would not be considered for team
leadership positions until a minimum of 12 months after the end of their
suspensions, and Warner will never lead again.
While they
are banned from top-level cricket, they can still play at club level in
Australia or in other countries.
Lehmann
remains in charge because Cricket Australia said he was unaware of what was
going on.
Wicketkeeper Tim Paine will take over the
Australian captaincy for the fourth and final Test starting in Johannesburg on
Friday, with Matt Renshaw, Glenn Maxwell and Joe Burns drafted in as
replacements.
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