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Steve Smith and David Warner were banned for 12 months on Wednesday after an investigation into the Australian cricket team's cheating scandal identified Warner as the instigator of the ball-tampering plan that unraveled in South Africa.
Cricket Australia said Warner "instructed" young batsman Cameron Bancroft to carry out the tampering on the field with a piece of sandpaper – even showed Bancroft how to do it – then misled match officials and tried to cover up his role in the cheating.
Smith, the top Test batsman in the world and the star of Australian cricket, knew about the plan. But the captain failed "to take steps to seek to prevent the development and implementation of that plan," Cricket Australia said as it released the findings of the investigation by its head of integrity that dragged in all the players, coaches and backroom staff for questioning.
Smith and Warner were banned from playing for Australia, or any high-level cricket in Australia, for a year. Bancroft, maybe because he's an impressionable newcomer in the team, received a nine-month ban.
Here’s how some of the greats of the game reacted to the ban imposed on the players.
Sachin Tendulkar feels that Cricket Australia has taken the “right decision” in banning the national team captain Steve Smith and his deputy David Warner for one year after being found guilty of ball-tampering against South Africa during the just-concluded third Test in Cape Town.
Smith and Warner have also been barred from playing the cash-rich IPL while young opener Cameron Bancroft has been suspended for nine months. Earlier, ICC had banned Smith for one Test match and fined his full match fee.
“Cricket has been known as a gentleman's game. It's a game that I believe should be played in the purest form. Whatever has happened is unfortunate, but the right decision has been taken to uphold the integrity of the game. Winning is important but the way you win is more important,” Tendulkar wrote on Twitter.
Former Australia captain Ian Chappell doesn't see Steve Smith leading the national team again and said the country's cricket board was right to ban him and David Warner for 12 months.
Spin legend Shane Warne feels that the punishment handed out to the captain Steve Smith and his two teammates after their involvement in ball tampering was a bit too harsh.
Former England captain Michael Vaughan feels that the 12-month bans for Steve Smith and David Warner are harsh, but Cricket Australia had to set a precedent and send a strong message.
Former England captain Kevin Pietersen expressed that he is gutted for Smith, Warner and Bancroft.
However, Pietersen was quite surprised to know that coach Darren Lehmann didn’t know about the ball-tampering plan.
(With inputs from AP and PTI)
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