The Asian Age

Over The Top

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should have been involved in this, revolted not just the cricket administra­tion Down Under, but people at large. It held up a mirror to the national psyche.

The cricket captaincy is arguably the most venerated position in the country, and the captain is appointed only after rigorous study and deliberati­on over a player’s credential­s and integrity.

That Warner has been barred from any leadership position in the future, and Smith can perhaps regain the captaincy — which seems remote at this point in time — only if fans, sponsors and public at large don’t object shows how much prestige is vested in the person who leads the side.

The stiffness of the ban also reflects the administra­tion’s anger at its own inability to assess and arrest the cultural decadence in Australian cricket. There have been telltale signs for some while now, which were ignored.

Micky Arthur, who coached the team briefly before Darren Lehman took over ( he was in charge when Australia toured India in 2012- 13), mentions about the decadent culture in a scathing blog ( www. players. voice. com) last Friday.

“The Aussies have played the victim when they deem the other team has oversteppe­d the mark. And when they’ve been in the ascendancy and behaved badly, everything is OK because they have determined as much,” says Arthur.

Those who track such things closely will find an echo of this in the ‘ brain fade’ Steve Smith purportedl­y suffered during the Bengaluru Test against India in 2016 when he seemed to signal to the dressing room whether he should go in for a decision review.

In some quarters, Australia’s current travails are being passed on to coach Darren Lehman who had often tom- tommed that his side plays to “win, win, win”. But Lehman wasn’t the man who promoted sledging, only it’s latest vendor, so to speak.

Former captain Steve Waugh, for instance, had made ` mental disintegra­tion’ ( read sledging and bullying) of opponents seem a virtue. And he too was one in a long chain of illustriou­s players who believed in this.

For decades, the Aussies have prided themselves for ‘ playing tough, but fair’ and knowing where to ‘ draw the line’. In this, they had the support of the cricket administra­tion and even fans, everyone regaling in the exploits and triumphs of their players, believing this was a justifiabl­e benchmark.

Astonishin­gly, nobody did a reality check on whether sledging, bullying, disrespect­ing opponents, skirting on the edge with the laws — which may have worked earlier — was paying the team dividends now. It definitely wasn’t going by results of the past five years, particular­ly playing overseas.

Something had to give. The much- touted ‘ play tough, but play fair’ credo was shown up as sanctimoni­ous claptrap at Cape Town where the Australian­s were, literally and metaphoric­ally, caught with their pants down.

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