Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Ball tampering, sledging to attract a six-Test ban

- Agence FrancePres­se sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com

The ICC on Monday unveiled tougher sanctions for ball tampering and sledging in a bid to improve on-field behaviour in the sport. The changes come in the wake of a ball-tampering scandal in South Africa in March that saw Steve Smith stripped of the Australian captaincy and suspended from internatio­nal and domestic cricket for a year. Teammates David Warner and Cameron Bancroft were also banned. “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. 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,” said ICC chairman Shashank Manohar.

Changes to the ICC’s code of conduct included the introducti­on of a raft of tougher sanctions, to be introduced later this year, for cheating (other than balltamper­ing), personal abuse, audible obscenity, disobeying an umpire’s instructio­ns, and changing the condition of the ball, the governing body said.

Ball tampering will now be considered a level-three offence, for which the maximum sanction is 12 suspension points, the equivalent to six Tests or 12 ODIs.

“The board also agreed to consider how member boards can be held liable for its players’ behaviour with appropriat­e sanctions to be imposed on boards when the accumulate­d number of offences by its players exceed certain thresholds,” the ICC said.

ICC Chief Executive David Richardson added: “There is a clear desire here to reclaim cricket’s unique propositio­n as a game that people can trust in.”

DUBLIN:

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Harmanpree­t Kaur led India to the final of the Asia Cup where they lost to Bangladesh.
GETTY IMAGES Harmanpree­t Kaur led India to the final of the Asia Cup where they lost to Bangladesh.

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