The Citizen (Gauteng)

Length of bans ‘doesn’t add up’

- Ken Borland

Cape Town – Proteas coach Ottis Gibson (below) yesterday described the differing levels of punishment initially handed down by the Internatio­nal Cricket Council (ICC) on Kagiso Rabada and Steven Smith, the Australian captain, and team-mate Cameron Bancroft as “weird”.

Rabada was initially suspended from the last two Tests of the series after he received three demerit-points for brushing shoulders with Smith in the second Test in Port Elizabeth, which was enough to take him over the threshold for a two-match ban. South Africa appealed the punishment and the charge was downgraded, with just one demerit point added to the fast bowler’s record.

Smith, who admitted to pre-planning the Newlands ball-tampering fiasco, only received a one-Test ban, while Bancroft was only given three demerit points, meaning he is still available to play the final Test at the Wanderers that starts on Friday.

“KG just brushed shoulders with Smith and was going to be banned for two games, which is different to Smith. For something so trivial up against something so serious, the punishment­s just don’t seem to match. It’s a bit weird and the ICC must look at the process,” Gibson said.

“I have been surprised at how big it has become, but at the end of the day when you see such a deliberate act like we saw on TV, then people will become very interested in it, especially the way it was planned. People have a right to be upset about that.”

Although South Africa have now won two Tests in a row, the coach hinted that the same team that triumphed so spectacula­rly at Newlands will not necessaril­y play at the Wanderers.

“We’ve made a bowling change every game and with a three-man pace attack it’s nice to be able to freshen up one guy like that. But Morne Morkel is still very fresh. A guy like Wiaan Mulder is improving all the time and it’s his home ground in Johannesbu­rg,” he said.

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