Jamaica Gleaner

Paine steps down as Australia captain after ‘sexting’ scandal

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TIM PAINE took over t he Australian Test cricket team captaincy following one of the country’s biggest and most embarrassi­ng internatio­nal scandals.

He has lost it following a more personal indiscreti­on.

Paine quit as Test captain yesterday after being investigat­ed by Cricket Australia ( CA) for sending explicit text messages to a female co-worker four years ago.

Veteran wicketkeep­er Paine was named in a News Corp report as being at the centre of the sexting scandal. The 36-yearold Paine appeared before media yesterday in Adelaide to announce he was resigning the captaincy but wanted to remain a member of the Test squad.

The announceme­nt comes less than three weeks before the December 8 start in Brisbane of the five-Test Ashes series against England.

Paine, who underwent surgery in September to repair a pinched nerve in his neck and is not a certainty to be a starter in the Ashes series, became Test captain in March 2018 after Steve Smith lost the role following the sandpaper ball-tampering scandal in South Africa.

CAUGHT ON CAMERA

During the third Test match against South Africa at Newlands in Cape Town, Cameron Bancroft was caught by television cameras trying to rough up one side of the ball with sandpaper.

Smith and vice-captain David Warner were found to be involved and all three received sanctions from CA.

When Smith was dumped as captain, Paine took charge. Until yesterday.

“It’s an incredibly difficult decision, but the right one for me, my family and cricket,” Paine said. “As a background on my decision, nearly four years ago, I was involved in a text exchange with a then colleague.

“At the time, the exchange was the subject of a thorough CA integrity unit investigat­ion, throughout which I fully participat­ed in and openly participat­ed in. Although exonerated, I deeply regretted this incident at the time and still do today.”

The messages date to 2017, months before Paine was recalled to the Test team after a seven-year absence.

CA’s statement said its board had accepted Paine’s resignatio­n and will look to appoint a new Test captain.

“Tim felt it was in the best interests of his family and Australian cricket to take this decision to step down as captain,” CA board chairman Richard Freudenste­in said. “While the board acknowledg­es an investigat­ion cleared Tim of any breach of the code of conduct regarding this matter some years ago, we respect his decision.”

CA said Paine “will continue to be available for selection in the Test team through the Ashes summer”.

He was among the 15 players named earlier this week for the Ashes.

“I spoke to my wife and family at the time and am enormously grateful for their forgivenes­s and support,” Paine said. “We thought this incident was behind us and that I could focus entirely on the team, as I have done for the last three or four years.

“However, I recently became aware that this private text exchange was going to become public.”

Cricket Tasmania released a statement Friday saying the allegation­s against Paine were only raised when the female employee was charged with theft. Chairman Andrew Gaggin said no complaint was made until mid-2018 following the message exchanges in November 2017.

“As soon as Cricket Tasmania was made aware, it undertook an investigat­ion that determined the interactio­n was consensual, private, occurred on the one occasion only, was between mature adults, and was not repeated,” Gaggin said.

 ?? AP ?? In this image made from video, Australia Test cricket captain Tim Paine announces that he is standing down as cricket captain during a press briefing yesterday in Hobart, Tasmania, Australia.
AP In this image made from video, Australia Test cricket captain Tim Paine announces that he is standing down as cricket captain during a press briefing yesterday in Hobart, Tasmania, Australia.

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