Marlborough Express

Crowe must defuse stoush: Katich

- ROB FORSAITH

Zac Guildford is heading back to France, signing for second-division side Nevers.

The former All Black winger has been a standout for Waikato in the Mitre 10 Cup, but no Super Rugby offers came his way in 2018.

The 29-year-old had a previous stint in France, with national champions Clermont during the 2014-15 season, but he left halfway through his two-year deal.

A player with well-documented past issues, Guildford has been unable to regain the full trust of New Zealand Rugby stakeholde­rs, hence not finding a Super Rugby deal.

He played 10 games for the All Blacks between 2009 and 2012, while playing 86 Super Rugby matches for the Crusaders, Hurricanes and Waratahs. The conduct of everybody involved in the spiteful first test between Australia and South Africa in Durban is under the microscope, including the umpires.

Steve Smith’s side will travel to Port Elizabeth with a 1-0 lead in the four-match series, but the vast majority of the post-match analysis is centred on something that didn’t happen on the field.

David Warner and Quinton de Kock’s extraordin­ary altercatio­n, in which Australia’s enraged vicecaptai­n was physically restrained by team-mates at tea on day four, remains the talk of the cricket world.

The Internatio­nal Cricket Council has not yet revealed if it has applied any sanctions for the incidents at the game, with the exception of Nathan Lyon being fined 15 per cent of his match fee for his send-off of AB de Villiers.

However, Warner remains in hot water as match referee Jeff Crowe has until tonight (NZ time) to level charges.

The sport’s governing body can also charge players, as ICC chief David Richardson did du Plessis for using a mint to shine the ball in Hobart.

Crowe has already warned both camps about the need to play the game in the right spirit.

Warner and de Kock are obviously under the pump to behave better, but former Australian batsman Simon Katich is among those pondering whether umpires Sundaram Ravi and Kumar

Dharmasena could have done more to extinguish the blowup when it was starting to catch fire.

‘‘This is where the umpires need to step in as soon as they start to hear stuff,’’ former Australia opener Katich told ESPNcricin­fo, having called the match.

‘‘Give the warnings to the skippers and get the skippers to control it.

‘‘That obviously hasn’t happened, and now it is tit for tat,

with the teams blaming each other for who started it.

‘‘It’s a shame because what happened on the field obviously lit the fuse for then what has happened off the field. It has overshadow­ed what was a fantastic test.’’

Du Plessis expressed similar sentiments to Katich in his postmatch press conference.

Ravi and Dharmasena delivered few lectures in the first

test, with the exception of rebuking Kagiso Rabada for his send-off of Warner on day three.

Katich noted it was important Crowe now ‘‘nips this in the bud’’.

‘‘If it is allowed to keep going on, then things are going to get out of control as we saw in the tunnel,’’ he said.

‘‘I look back on my time and I think things might have been pretty tame compared to this stuff.’’

 ?? PHOTO: GALLO IMAGES ?? South African batsmen Quinton de Kock, left, and Morne Morkel leave the field as Australian players celebrate their first-test victory in the background.
PHOTO: GALLO IMAGES South African batsmen Quinton de Kock, left, and Morne Morkel leave the field as Australian players celebrate their first-test victory in the background.
 ??  ?? Match referee Jeff Crowe, right, must take swift action to ensure trouble is nipped in the bud.
Match referee Jeff Crowe, right, must take swift action to ensure trouble is nipped in the bud.

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