Cultures collide when cricketers clash

“What happened was un-Australian. We play hard but fair. Always have, always will.” – an Australian on Sandpapergate.

Telford Vice / Cape Town

TWO days before it became a blaze of light and sound befitting last month’s men’s T20 World Cup final, the MCG sprawled and soared silently into the night. Less than 5km away along the tram route, in a common or garden pub nestled on a corner in Hawthorn, last rounds were called above the rattle of chatter.

Plenty of beer had been soaked up by three young Australian men leaning heavily on one of the pub’s tall tables. They were cricket people but, importantly, not T20 people: “Nah mate. Not that crap.” So a World Cup final happening down the road in the coming days mattered less to them than where their next drink might come from, and not only because Australia weren’t involved. And even if England might be beaten.

What did matter? “Test cricket mate. Boxing Day, we’re there.” This December 26 Australia’s opponents will be South Africa, who haven’t played a Boxing Day Test in Melbourne for 14 years. The series, which starts at the Gabba next Saturday, will mark the first time the teams have clashed in the format since their momentous rubber in South Africa in March 2018.

That drama started with David Warner and Quinton de Kock almost coming to blows in a stairwell at Kingsmead. It spun off kilter at St George’s Park, where spectators degraded Warner’s wife in cowardly fashion. That was also where Kagiso Rabada’s shoulder made what was initially adjudged to have been illegal contact with Steve Smith. The ban that decision triggered was overturned on appeal. At Newlands, Cameron Bancroft, in a plot masterminded by Warner with Smith’s knowledge and acquiescence, was caught applying sandpaper to the ball. Australians, including their then prime minister, took the dimmest view of the latter.

That that should stoke the ire of a certain kind of Aussie the most said more about them than they should want being said. They seemed less disturbed by the behaviour of one of their senior players. And by the shameful treatment of one of their citizens — who was blameless into the bargain — by boors in the bleachers. What swept them into high dudgeon was the exposure of their hagiography for what it was. Their hubris couldn’t stand up to scrutiny.

The shock in Australia that their players could do such a thing — “Ball-tampering?! Us?! But we’re Australians! We don’t do that!” — was met everywhere else by a dearth of surprise: “Ball-tampering? You? Of course: Australians are born cheats.” More than four years on, at least some of those feelings are undiluted, even by a long day’s drinking. Asked what he had made of Sandpapergate, one of the three young Aussies in the pub in Hawthorn said: “I was disgusted. I still am. What happened was un-Australian. We play hard but fair. Always have, always will.” It seemed cruel to disabuse him of the notion, despite the open and shut case to the contrary.

That thread stretched to Brisbane on Monday, when Dean Elgar gave his first press conference of South Africa’s tour. Most of the engagement focused on what one reporter termed “the infamous 2018 series”, perhaps to seek from Elgar an acknowledgement that the Australian response to Sandpapergate was justified. That was not forthcoming. Many South Africans considered the hue and cry a massive over-reaction, and sat back and watched smug with schadenfreude.

Or maybe Monday’s prize was a line from the famously combative Elgar that could be barbed and baited and hooked into a headline ahead of the first Test at the Gabba, which starts next Saturday. Or both. Fair dinkum: that’s what reporters do, whether or not they’re Australian. That, too, was not achieved.

Did the South Africans harbour ill feelings towards the home side? “None at all,” Elgar said. “It was a very tough time for all of us, even though we weren’t the guys who took the brunt of everything. But we were part of that. They were sad events, but I don’t have animosity towards the players involved or CA. They were unfortunate scenes but that period has long elapsed and we’ve moved forward.

“I wish things could have been a lot different. The history, when it comes to Test cricket between South Africa and Australia, is so rich. The competitive nature [between the teams] is very similar. We both want to go out and play a brand of cricket that our countries can be proud of. It was extremely juicy, even building up to that game in Cape Town. They were interesting times.”

What did he want to see this time? “Hopefully there’s no antics going on on the field that anyone gets busted for. But there’s always a bit of spice. We love playing against Australia. We’ve got a heap of respect for Australian cricket.”

Was he peeved at the players who had served their bans and resumed their careers? “Not at all. Smith and Warner are two cricketers I’ve played against for over a decade. There’s definitely no bad blood.”

On Tuesday, at an exclusively South African press conference, Sandpapergate came up again. Once. Malibongwe Maketa, who was South Africa’s assistant coach in 2018 and is now in charge on an interim basis, said: “A handful of us were involved in that series. I know it changed people’s careers but for us, on the other side of the spectrum, it was an unfortunate incident. And, where we are now, it’s way back then.”

Not in Australia, where it’s big news again. On Wednesday Warner abandoned his attempt to have his life ban from serving in leadership positions overturned because the hearings would not be held in private, which would amount to a retrial. “They want to conduct a public spectacle to, in the [independent review] panel’s words, have a ‘cleansing,” Warner wrote in a statement. “I am not prepared for my family to be the washing machine for cricket’s dirty laundry.”

Maybe Australians should listen to Elgar and Maketa, who essentially told them they aren’t special. That they had and would again stoop to the same sillinesses as the rest of us, in sport and everything else. That sometimes they would advance fair, other times not. South Africa, for instance, were done for ball-tampering three times between October 2013 and November 2016.

On each occasion CSA and most of the public defended the players involved — Faf du Plessis, twice, and Vernon Philander. There was no thought of punishing them to a greater degree than the ICC, as CA did to Smith, Warner and Bancroft, or even of castigating them.

Du Plessis’ second infraction happened in Australia, and the resultant storm elicited an amused awe from the South Africans that their hosts could take the issue so seriously. “The media attention and aggression multiplied exponentially,” Du Plessis wrote in Faf: Through Fire. “People attacked my character and my faith.”

There was a suspicion that things might have been different had an Australia player been the target. With the benefit of the hindsight provided by events at Newlands less than two years later, the South Africans’ wry smiles of 2016 would have broken into guffaws of astounded agreement that those supremely sanctimonious Australians really had suspended their disbelief enough to consider their players better than that.

The culture clash doesn’t end there. South Africans are amazed at what looks from afar like Australian cricket’s determination to inflict self-harm. There’s the Warner situation, and there’s Justin Langer commanding one pole of opinion on how things should be done — the old, bloodyminded, get on with it way — and Pat Cummins representing the other — the new, empathetic, be part of the modern world way. In South Africa, bitter and twisted former players and coaches disappear into putrid but petty puddles on social media. In Australia they become powerful media figures, as Langer has.

At a presser with the South African media on Thursday, Rassie van der Dussen admitted to surprise at Australian cricket’s apparent enthusiasm for undoing itself. He also offered what could be considered a cynical thought: “I see there’s a season two of ‘The Test’ being released, so maybe there’s a bit of that involved. Controversy sells and people want to stay relevant. Actions speak louder than words, and there’s a lot of words going around.” The documentary will hit screens in January, and will deal with Cummins becoming captain and the messy end of Langer’s tenure as coach. 

Not that the game in South Africa is free of internecine damage, as was painfully made clear last year by CSA’s Social Justice and Nation-Building project. If anything, agendas compete more fiercely in the country than anywhere else in the cricket world. Every facet of South Africa’s society is afflicted by racism and racially based economic and social inequality, and that despite apartheid ending in 1994. Conflicts over race are never far from erupting regardless of the issue ostensibly at hand.

Because Mark Boucher was among a slew of whites appointed to powerful positions in December 2009, when several black and brown figures were swept aside, he was dogged by criticism throughout his tenure as coach. When South Africa lost, it was his fault. When they won, he was denied the credit. Boucher’s voluntary departure with a middling record after the T20 World Cup led to Maketa being installed in, at this stage, a temporary capacity.

Elgar has made plain that he pushed for Maketa’s elevation, and was satisfied to have “got that right”. When Graeme Smith, as CSA’s then director of cricket, appointed Boucher, he was slammed for favouring a friend. How was Elgar’s support for Maketa different? “Due to the short-term nature of this appointment, it was important for the director of cricket to get the input of the captain,” Pholetsi Moseki, CSA’s chief executive, told Cricbuzz. “So I don’t think it’s the same as the Graeme Smith-Mark Boucher situation as that was a permanent appointment.” 

That’s the right answer for now. But if Maketa, a highly qualified and popular coach, lands the job permanently would he also have to endure mindless hate? Probably not, because the circumstances are beyond the blunt binary narratives that divide and damage debate in South Africa depressingly often. Elgar is white and Maketa black, and that means the usual poisonous nonsense would have nowhere to grow.

Australians who struggle to understand that should know South Africans can’t make sense of Cummins raising concerns about a major sponsor, Alinta Energy. They know fossil fuel industries have a disastrous impact on the planet, and that Cummins is a vocal advocate for action on the climate crisis. They also know CA have said the Test captain’s views aren’t why the company will part ways with cricket when their current agreement expires at the end of next year. What’s difficult for South Africans to fathom is that this could happen to a sponsorship reportedly worth AUS$40-million — the equivalent of almost two-and-a-half times the loss CSA declared at their annual meeting on November 26.

The space where Alinta’s logo sits on Australia’s playing shirts has been blank on South Africa’s kit since December 2019, when sponsors deserted CSA as push came to shove for a delinquent board. The suits who replaced that sorry bunch have exponentially more credibility and real world expertise and experience, but serious corporate backing has not returned for reasons ranging from what Covid did to South Africa’s already failing economy, to a perceived lack of confidence in CSA’s rehabilitation. So any player in South Africa who objected to the kind of money Alinta is pumping into the game in Australia would likely be told, by his teammates, administrators and the cricketminded public, to shut up and sit down regardless of what the company doing the pumping was selling.

In 2004, when Hashim Amla refused to wear, on religious grounds, logos advertising alcohol on his playing kit, his choice was accepted by many South Africans not of his faith. Given how impoverished the game in South Africa has become in the ensuing 18 years, if Amla had to make the same decision today it might be significantly less well received. Comparatively affluent Australian cricket wouldn’t have to confront that scenario.

Series between Australia and South Africa are said to produce compelling cricket because the cultures of cricket in their countries are similar, as Elgar argued. Closer to the truth is that differences between those cultures, and in the wider realities in which they exist, fuel fires on the field. The similarities are limited to superficial echoes. Or a means to an end, as Du Plessis wrote, “I realised early on that the only way to win against [Australia] was to match their aggression in order to neutralise their attempts at bullying you into submission.”

Doubtless the fires will burn again in the coming weeks, and with an intensity that startles neutrals. How high will the flames climb this time? 

Cricbuzz

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Nothing lasts forever, even David Warner’s life ban

“The amendment would allow a person to request a penalty that they had accepted be reviewed after an appropriate period of time.” — Cricket Australia prepare for Warner’s return to leadership.

Telford Vice / Geelong, Victoria

NON-AUSTRALIAN cricket followers won’t be pleased to hear this, but they wouldn’t be surprised: David Warner, who was banned from leadership positions for the rest of his career for masterminding the ball-tampering disgrace that erupted in South Africa in 2018, could soon be granted the suits’ blessing to captain a team.

Cricket Australia’s board decided on Friday to change the organisation’s code of conduct to allow ongoing disciplinary sentences to be reviewed on appeal by an independent commissioner and, if deemed worthy, commuted.

“The amendment would allow a person to request a penalty that they had accepted be reviewed after an appropriate period of time,” a CA statement said. “Currently the code states that once a charge and penalty is accepted, there is no avenue for review. The onus would be on the applicant to prove they had undergone genuine reform relevant to the offence they were sanctioned for.

“Any review would not revisit the original sanction, other than suspension of a penalty in recognition of genuine reform. The board has requested that the CA head of integrity propose an amendment to the code for consideration. It was agreed that should an amendment in respect to long-term sanctions be adopted, any review of a penalty would be heard by an independent code of conduct commission.”

Warner is the only Australia player serving a life ban. He is less than five years into that sentence, but he could be back in charge of a side before Christmas: Cricket New South Wales asked CA to reconsider Warner’s case because the Sydney Thunder are in the market for a stand-in captain for the BBL that starts on December 13.

Aaron Finch, who retired from ODIs last month and turns 36 next month, has led Australia in 128 white-ball games and is clearly reaching the end of his career. He and Test captain Pat Cummins have voiced their support for Warner’s return to formal leadership — he was appointed as Smith’s Test and ODI vice-captain in August 2015 and was at the helm in a dozen ODIs and T20Is from 2016 and 2018 — and nevermind that Warner is three weeks older than Finch.

CA will thus have to live with non-Australians thinking the decision to revisit Warner’s starring role in Sandpapergate reeks of expediency. Now that Australian cricket needs him in a managerial capacity, he’s OK. From polecat to prodigal son. No further questions, your honour.

That’s a sweeping u-turn from 2018, when CA decided after an investigation that Warner had misled poor, innocent Cameron Bancroft into using sandpaper to roughen the ball and that Warner had dominated poor, gormless Smith into allowing that to happen. The plot was discovered by broadcasters SuperSport — otherwise known as South Africa’s 12th-man — during the Newlands Test in March 2018.

How long the Australians had deployed their dark art by then is not known. All three players lied about their cheating under mounting pressure, some of which came from the highest office in the land. Malcolm Turnbull, then Australia’s prime minister, said he was “shocked and bitterly disappointed” and demanded Smith’s removal as captain. Sandpapergate duly cost Smith and Warner their positions, and Darren Lehmann his job as coach. James Sutherland would have wanted a better farewell to his 17 years as CA’s chief executive than this mess. CA chair David Peever and board member Mark Taylor resigned.

Smith and Warner were banned from playing for a year and Bancroft for nine months. Smith was precluded from captaining for an additional year after he had served his suspension. Warner wasn’t afforded any such favour. South Africans looking on at the time were caught between schadenfreude at their bitter rivals being torn apart from within and bemusement that Australians could take the matter so seriously.

Faf du Plessis and Vernon Philander had been caught in the same ball-tampering act three times in the previous five years, and not once did Cricket South Africa take action against them. They left that to the ICC, who banned Smith for the last match of the 2018 series, merely fined Bancroft, and didn’t even charge Warner. Besides, it wasn’t as if Aussies had a reputation for fair play: Warner himself had behaved abominably on the field and off in the first Test of the 2018 series at Kingsmead, where he had to be restrained from physically confronting Quinton de Kock in a stairwell after submitting the South African to a sustained verbal attack while he was batting. 

Might the vocal stance Warner took in the players’ protracted salary dispute with CA in 2017 have been a factor in the special treatment meted out to him by his home board seven months after agreement on salaries had been reached? Might the fact that he will play in the BBL for the first time since 2013, and the star quality he will lend the tournament, have helped manufacture his seeming redemption? Either way, there will be cynical smiles at the impending completion of Warner’s rehabilitation. Where, the smilers will ask, was the support for him in 2018 from Cummins — who was also part of the Newlands Test XI — and Finch, who by then had led Australia 11 times.

Gideon Haigh, Australia’s bard of bat and ball, addressed the issue in this weekend’s edition of The Australian: “It is anomalous and disproportionate in a world that pardons and winks at so much to impose a lifetime sentence for anything. It is holding cricketers to higher standards than public officials; it is mindless obstinacy to insist on the continuation of anything because it has been decided once. Justice needs to be tempered by mercy.”

There was little mercy for Warner to be seen, heard nor read in 2018. There was mostly loathing, in the press and seemingly everywhere else including the prime minister’s office, and shattered silence from within the dressing room. As for the problem of sticking to decisions made just the once, good luck telling an umpire — after you choose to bat and your team are bowled out for 47 — that the toss should be taken again and the game restarted.

Not that South Africans have a square centimetre of moral high ground to claim. They squandered it all in the way some of them reacted to Warner’s altercation with De Kock in Durban. To stoop to taking to the stands at St George’s Park wearing masks made from photographs of the face of Warner’s wife was the lowest point of shame and cowardice reached in this saga. Worse, most of their compatriots didn’t deplore their behaviour.

Of course, that didn’t stop dark chuckling in November last year when Tim Paine, who had emerged as a seeming beacon of decency, a rare and shining unugly Aussie, after taking over the captaincy from Smith from the last Test at the Wanderers in 2018, was undone by a sex scandal.
But that would be dangerously short-sighted. Because, even in a world as strewn with stats as cricket, sleaze and scandal don’t keep a scorecard for long. Just ask David Warner.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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Du Plessis back at scene of triumph and trial

“When it happened we thought that was harsh on the players ’cause there’s been so many players who have been in similar boats.” – Faf du Plessis on ball-tampering bans.

TMG Digital

TELFORD VICE in London

AUSTRALIANS won’t want to know this, but the most successful active batsman in one-day internationals between their team and South Africa is again in their midst. And he’s not one of theirs.

Already they don’t like him for all sorts of reasons. For batting for more than a day to deny them a Test victory. For the tightness of his shirts. For what he has done to the ball while he has had a mint in his mouth.

Now he’s back in Australia, and if he leads South Africa to victory in the second ODI on Friday the Aussies will have another reason to sneer as they say his name: Faf du Plessis.

He led South Africa to success in their Test series there in November 2016, and his team are one win away from engineering their second series triumph among the people who love to despise him.

Better yet, Du Plessis is back in Adelaide — where he made his debut in 2012 and batted for more than 11 hours for his scores of 78 and 110 not out, where he came under massive pressure in 2016 after footage emerged of him and the mint and the ball during the previous Test in Hobart, and scored an undefeated 118.

The shirts? They’ve always been tight, and not only in Australia.

“It was a bit different to this; there were a few more cameras around,” Du Plessis told reporters with a smile in Adelaide on Thursday, remembering what he was up against in the beautiful southern Gothic city two years ago.

“But I love coming to Adelaide. This ground is probably my favourite in the world when it comes to playing cricket here. I’ve got some extremely good memories here.”

Ever the diplomat, he hastened to add: “This and Newlands are my two favourite grounds.”

Actually, that could go for most grounds on which he has clashed with the Aussies. Du Plessis is the highest runscorer among current players in ODIs involving South Africa and Australia, and he has the highest average. He is one of only three players to have scored three centuries in games between these teams. 

The others are Herschelle Gibbs, who is long gone as a player, and David Warner, who is serving a ban for masterminding a ball-tampering plot during the Newlands Test in March.

That punishment was handed down not by the International Cricket Council but by Cricket Australia (CA).

So it’s worth wondering where Du Plessis’s career might be had he been Australian, considering he has twice been done for the same offence as Warner.

Did he think Warner and cohorts Steve Smith and Cameron Bancroft, who were banned by CA for between nine months and a year, had been hard done by?

“It’s difficult for me to comment on that,” Du Plessis said. “When it happened we thought that was harsh on the players ’cause there’s been so many players who have been in similar boats.

“But I wasn’t [in Australia] to understand how the people were affected by it or offended by it. The backlash that we saw in South Africa was massive.

“We could see it’s probably bigger in Australia than it has been or will be anywhere else in the world.”

Du Plessis had his own taste of how big this kind of thing can get the last time he was in Adelaide, when the South Africa players were hounded by a large media pack at their hotel and at the ground, and the team’s over-zealous security staff brutally manhandled reporters at the airport. But, on Thursday, he spoke into only three microphones. 

“My character was tested through that week,” he said of his previous visit. “It was good to learn that I had resilience.

“My outcome for that week was to tell myself that if I get through this it will prove a lot about my character.”

It also proved to Du Plessis that the Australian press take no prisoners.

“As good as the press are [to Australia’s team] when they’re playing well, when the performance is not there there’s the same amount of hype around that.”

That means South Africa can count the Aussie press as allies on this tour, what with them asking all sorts of awkward questions about a team who have lost 17 of their last 19 completed ODIs.

“Perth flop points to a long, lonely summer of Australian cricket,” ran the headline in the Melbourne Age after South Africa won the first ODI by six wickets on Sunday, and the reporting on the ructions that have followed the Newlands Test has been unflinching.

But some Australians will take as the ultimate sign of decline Du Plessis’ answer to the standard question on what changes South Africa might make for Friday’s game.

“We’re still looking at combinations,” he said. “The obvious thing would be to play the same team, but we’re constantly thinking about how we can get guys more experienced for the World Cup.

“We’re still fine-tuning that balance.”

What? Using mighty Australia, five times the World Cup champions, including currently, to experiment? How bloody dare the man?

Perhaps. But the more relevant question is about how far the Australians have fallen.

Du Plessis gets his wish as ICC hike ball-tampering sanctions

TMG Digital

TELFORD VICE in Lisbon

FAF du Plessis got his wish on Monday when the International Cricket Council (ICC) exponentially increased the punishment for ball-tampering.

Those who fall foul of “illegally changing the condition of the ball” in future could be banned for six Tests or a dozen one-day internationals. The current maximum suspension is one Test or two ODIs.

That’s the upshot of the heaviest sentence for a level three offence being increased from eight to 12 suspension points. 

The new measures were approved at the ICC’s 75th annual conference in Dublin, which ended on Monday, and will come into force in October once they have been formalised in the next version of the code of conduct.

Asked on Sunday whether the ICC should hike the penalties for ball-tampering, Du Plessis said: “They have to. It’s happening too often. They need to do that [change the regulations] as quickly as possible.

“The penalties need to be harsher for ball-tampering.”

Du Plessis makes an unusual advocate for harsher sanctions considering he has been found guilty of ball-tampering twice in less than five years.

The ICC’s hand was no doubt forced by Cricket Australia’s (CA) serious punishment of Steve Smith, David Warner and Cameron Bancroft after the exposure of their plot to roughen the ball using sandpaper during the Newlands Test against South Africa in March.

CA immediately sacked Smith and Warner as Australia’s captain and vice-captain and banned them for a year, while Bancroft was suspended for nine months.

Warner will not be considered for leadership positions in future, and Smith and Bancroft not for two years.

The ICC docked Smith his match fee and banned him for a match and Bancroft lost 75% of his fee and earned three demerit points. Warner got away Scott free.

Cricket’s code of conduct will include three new offences, according to an ICC release: “personal abuse”, uttering an “audible obscenity”, and “attempting to obtain an unfair advantage” by “cheating other than ball-tampering”.

“It is vital that there is a strong deterrent to both players and administrators to ensure we have high standards of conduct in our game,” the release quoted ICC chair Shashank Manohar as saying.

“We have more than a billion fans and we must not give any of them any reason to doubt the high levels of integrity within our sport.”

Stump microphones will be allowed to remain live even when the ball is dead; a departure from the current guidelines, which suggest they be turned down between deliveries.

That has allowed teams who sledge their opponents — primarily Australia — to get away with verbal abuse.

The ICC will consider how a national board could “be held liable for its players’ behavior with appropriate sanctions to be imposed on boards when the accumulated number of offences by its players exceed certain thresholds”.

That could force a rethink of most boards, Cricket South Africa included, opting to support and defend their players when they get into trouble with the ICC.

Appeals of disciplinary decisions will in future attract an advance fee that will be refunded if the challenge succeeds.

“There is a clear desire here to reclaim cricket’s unique proposition as a game that people can trust in and for us all to live the spirit of cricket in a way that is relevant in the 21st century,” the release quoted ICC chief executive David Richardson as saying.

“ … the board agreed that members should treat each other with respect as well as ensuring that their teams respect each other, the game and the match officials.”