Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Tampering row: hubris devoured the Australian­s

Smith and his team have not just let down fans but also hold a mirror to a society that has lost its moral compass

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of the Communist system that led athletes from the Soviet Bloc to embark on a systematic doping programme in the Cold War era. It is this craving for global recognitio­n that saw China breach the Great Wall through a single-minded focus on Olympic success. And it is perhaps this obsessive urge to prove that the Australian nation remains the pre-eminent cricketing power that led Smith’s team to engage in what can only be described as an act of premeditat­ed cheating to halt South Africa’s march to victory.

At another level, profession­al sport is not just about individual excellence; it is as much a brutal battle for survival of the fittest, for acquiring the fame and great riches that a multibilli­on dollar industry has to offer. It is this that perhaps led even a champion tennis player like Maria Sharapova astray, pushed cricketers to fix matches, Ben Johnson to take performanc­e-enhancing drugs.

The darker side of sport is hidden in the glitter of celebrityh­ood, of Ipl-type tamashas, in which players are expected to perform with robot-like precision day in and day out. But lift the veil and the gods of sport are often found to have feet of clay. They are highly skilled athletes, but are also imbued with all the insecuriti­es and anxieties of less exceptiona­l humans.

Smith and his chief conspirato­r David Warner didn’t need the money: the duo is arguably among the wealthiest cricketers in the game. They didn’t need fame and recognitio­n either: Smith’s run-making feats have already drawn comparison­s with the legendary Sir Don Bradman.

But pushed to the limit by the equally competitiv­e South Africans, their pride and ego were hurting. In the final analysis, it was hubris that eventually devoured the Australian leadership group, an arrogant streak that led them to believe that they could actually get away with their actions even in today’s hyper-media age in which dozens of cameras monitor every move. The anxiety for success coupled with a heightened sense of invincibil­ity is a dangerous combinatio­n. The Australian cricketers, sadly, chose to take the short-cut of subverting the sport’s rules instead of relying on their talent alone.

Not surprising­ly, there has been collective outrage, especially in Australia, of feeling betrayed by our modern-day heroes, much like we Indians felt when the matchfixin­g scandal first broke. And yet, some of the responses are typically hypocritic­al and exaggerate­d in a socio-political milieu in which those who shortchang­e the system are often suitably rewarded. Do politician­s who will do whatever it takes to win elections, businesspe­rsons who fiddle with balance sheets, students who cheat during exams, doctors and lawyers who eschew profession­al obligation­s, journalist­s who will peddle fake news, have any moral right to turn on sportspers­ons as the villains of the day? Or do we expect our sporting heroes to be held to a higher bar of morality and public behaviour? Smith and his teammates may have let down millions of cricket fans but they also hold a mirror to a society that has lost its moral compass.

Post-script: In the late 1970s, Bishan Bedi, who was India captain at the time, was sacked by his English county for accusing the English bowler John Lever of using vaseline to tamper with the ball. White men don’t cheat, was the self-righteous underlying response. In 2018, we most certainly know they do!

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