Millennium Post

OUTPOURING OF SYMPATHY FOR SMITH

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Dear Australia, that’s enough now. This was balltamper­ing, not murder . British daily The Times

SYDNEY: A wave of sympathy for disgraced Australia skipper Steve Smith gathered pace on Friday after his heart-wrenching apology and as opposition grew to the severity of bans handed out in a ball-tampering scandal.

Smith's tearful appearance in front of media helped trigger the resignatio­n of coach Darren Lehmann and also prompted calls to rein in criticism which has verged on hysterical during an extraordin­ary week for Australian cricket.

Both Smith and vice-captain David Warner were banned for 12 months and Cameron Bancroft for nine months for ball-tampering during

the third Test in Cape Town.

Lehmann -- who had earlier warned about the players' mental state -- said he was convinced him to step down by the emotional apologies of Bancroft and Smith, which also drew messages of support.

“Dear Australia, that's enough now,” ran a headline in British newspaper The Times. “This was ball-tampering, not murder.”

The ball-tampering scandal has unleashed a torrent of vitriol against Smith and Warner in particular, and heavy criticism of a team long perceived as arrogant and out of touch.

Australia's leg-spin great Shane Warne wrote in Sydney's Daily Telegraph: “We are all so hurt and angry and maybe we weren't so sure how to react. We'd just never seen it before.

“But the jump to hysteria is something that has elevated the offence beyond what they actually did, and maybe we're at a point where the punishment just might not fit the crime.”

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