Geelong Advertiser

My ‘WTF moment’: ex-chief

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DEPARTING Cricket Australia chief James Sutherland admits he had a “serious WTF moment” on learning of the ball-tampering scandal this year and believes he could have mitigated the fallout if he had intervened earlier.

Sutherland, who stepped down on Thursday after 17 years in charge, was watching the third Test in South Africa at home in Melbourne but switched off before the now infamous sandpaper incident. It showed Cameron Bancroft attempting to alter the ball with a piece of yellow sandpaper, with vice-captain David Warner blamed as the instigator.

Sutherland also missed the ensuing press conference where captain Steve Smith and others attempted to cover up the truth.

“At a guess it would’ve been about midnight I suppose (that he turned off the TV) but, yeah, I wish I was watching, absolutely,” he told ESPNcricin­fo.

“It was a serious WTF moment there. I’d like to think that my judgement and possibly influence would have meant that the media conference would have gone slightly differentl­y.

“As we know, that was part of the penalty and the severity of the penalty was to some extent related or at least was consequent­ial in terms of how that was handled — not telling the truth, or not telling the whole truth.”

Smith and his deputy Warner were sent home in disgrace and subsequent­ly banned from internatio­nal and state cricket for a year. Bancroft, who was also banished, was handed a nine-month penalty.

Then-coach Darren Lehmann resigned and Sutherland eventually chose to walk after coming under sustained pressure.

The series had already been overshadow­ed by confrontat­ions on and off the field, including Warner’s bust-up in a stairwell with South Africa’s Quinton de Kock. Sutherland claimed he voiced his concerns but they went unheeded.

“I was heartbroke­n by the events that happened and I think that in some ways I totally understand that in the heat of battle things can boil over and go awry and there can be regrettabl­e incidents,” he said.

“Part of the extent of my disappoint­ment around Cape Town is heightened by what happened earlier in the series, and my feeling that there were warning signals.

“There were lots of other things going on, and some disgracefu­l behaviour during the Port Elizabeth Test, provocatio­n by opposition fans but also administra­tors from the opposition team.”

Sutherland, who has been replaced by internal candidate Kevin Roberts, won plaudits during his long reign for negotiatin­g a lucrative new television rights deal and popularisi­ng the Big Bash League, day-night Tests and women’s cricket.

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