Mercury (Hobart)

COME CLEAN DAVE

- COMMENT ROBERT CRADDOCK

NOT for the first time in his career, David Warner has become the most feared man in world cricket.

The difference is that this time it is not his ultra-large bat that is the weapon of concern — it is his tongue that could truly become a weapon of mass destructio­n.

Warner will face the media in Sydney at 11am today and Cricket Australia officials have never been more nervous about what a player could say. That is understand­able, but let’s just make one key point.

This is no time for coverups. However much it hurts the wider world, Warner must tell the truth, no matter how sordid and chastening that truth may initially seem.

Warner went rogue earlier in the week following the ball tampering affair in South Africa when he took himself off the team app and has had minimal contact with his teammates since.

Apart from a few words on his arrival home, Warner’s only public utterance came via social media.

“Mistakes have been made, which have damaged cricket,” Warner wrote. “I apologise for my part and take responsibi­lity for it.’’

It is this final sentence — or at least the first five words of it — which has created immense concern at Cricket Australia. When Warner said he apologised “for my part’’ it started to worry Warner could name names who have not already been identified. Its best case scenario was for Warner to man up and take responsibi­lity for the whole thing.

For hatching the plan. For asking Cameron Bancroft to do it. For even telling him how to do it.

But he didn’t. When he said “my part’’ the suspicion was there were other parts and the worry is they will stretch further than Bancroft and Steve Smith.

The involvemen­t of any other players remains a vexed mystery.

A CA investigat­ion found all other players were in the clear but no one knows the full story like Warner.

Will he incriminat­e others or just take a bullet? And if he appeals against his sentence will he go down firing at his appeal hearing and blow up the whole show? It is easy to say that Warner, for the national interest, should hold his tongue today, but there has been enough of that already. Australian fans want him to tell the truth.

If other players or coaches knew of the scandal he must identify who they were. And what of the wider culture of ball tampering?

Barring the press conference being hijacked as Steve Smith’s was with some faceless imbecile from a low- rent FM radio show, there is a key question that needs to be asked.

It is “David, given that you taught Bancroft how to use sandpaper on the ball, please tell us how, when and why you developed this technique ... obviously there’s no need to do it in the dressing room and training because the balls you use in a game cannot be accessed off the field. So did you develop it in the middle?’’

The truth can set Warner free.

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