Townsville Bulletin

CALLS FOR WARNER BAN TO BE LIFTED

- MARCO MONTEVERDE

ALLAN Border has called for David Warner’s lifetime leadership ban to be lifted, claiming ball tampering was rife in cricket worldwide.

Warner (pictured) continues to be punished for his role in the sandpaper scandal that rocked Australian cricket during a 2018 tour to South Africa.

While former Test skipper Steve Smith, who was also punished over the incident, had his leadership ban lifted two years after the incident, Warner’s lifetime leadership suspension remains intact, despite recent suggestion­s CA might be considerin­g a change of heart.

Cricket legend and former Australian captain Border wants Warner’s leadership ban dissolved, saying the 35year-old New South Welshman has “paid his penance” for an action that is common in all forms of cricket.

“It was a harsh penalty in the first t place … let’s get on n with it; they’ve served their time,” ” Border said.

“I know that every other side’s s doing exactly what at we were caught doing. (If) all the captains put their r hand on their heart and say ‘I wasn’t doing anything similar’, , they’d be telling ‘porky pies’ (lies).

“The bans those boys copped were a bit over the top for the crime, given the knowledge around the cricket fraternity where this has been going on. They all had to change the way they went about their cricket.”

Border suggested “natural” ball tampering, as opposed to using bottle tops and sandpaper, was needed to help bowlers dismiss batsmen on flat pitches.

“Reverse swing is a huge weapon to have at your disposal. On the flattest of wickets, you can still get people out,” he said.

“There’s one line of thought that you’re not allowed to touch the ball, but there’s also the school of thought that you should be allowed, if you get the ball in your hand … just scratching the ball and working on it over a period of time, and you get the ball reverse swinging … what's wrong with that?

“It’s not a bad idea because on flat wickets you need something, otherwise the scores are just going to blow out, and that’s what happens now when we start preparing result wickets, because it’s very hard to get good players out on very flat tracks.”

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