Daily Dispatch

Oz bring in an ethics guru after scandal

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CRICKET Australia yesterday appointed an ethics guru to review the sport’s culture in the wake of the cheating scandal that has rocked “the gentleman’s game”.

The governing body said it wanted to ensure there was never a repeat of the conduct during the third Test against South Africa in March that tarnished Australian cricket’s reputation.

“We understand and share the disappoint­ment of fans and the broader Australian community,” CA chairman David Peever said in a statement. “The board is determined to do all we can to prevent such events from ever happening again.”

During the match in Cape Town, captain Steve Smith, vice-captain David Warner and batsman Cameron Bancroft plotted to tamper with the ball using sandpaper, earning themselves lengthy bans.

Coach Darren Lehmann also resigned amid criticism he allowed a win-at-all-costs attitude to flourish that gave rise to the cheating scandal.

CA has acknowledg­ed cultural issues within the team and yesterday said Simon Longstaff would conduct a wide-ranging review into the sport.

Longstaff is head of Sydney-based nonprofit organisati­on The Ethics Centre, which aims to promote ethical decisionma­king in business, government and everyday life.

He is expected to quiz current and former players, administra­tors, media and sponsors about ethical issues facing the sport before making recommenda­tions.

Longstaff did not comment in the CA statement, but said last month that those involved in the scandal had lost their “internal compass”.

“(It’s) essentiall­y good people making bad decisions with sometimes calamitous effects,” he told the Australian Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n.

“It’s an inability to recognise the small things that start to change the seeds of some deeper corruption of a core set of values and principles... a type of deviance becomes normalised.”

Longstaff’s review will run in tandem with a separate probe announced last month into player behaviour headed by former Test batsman Rick McCosker.

McCosker will work with former players to formulate a charter on player behaviour, balancing the demands of elite cricket with public expectatio­ns about the way such role models should act.

Peever said CA wanted to implement recommenda­tions from both the Longstaff and McCosker reviews in time for the 201819 season. — AFP

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