Khaleej Times

Australian­s may ban verbals, says Taylor

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sydney — Former captain Mark Taylor said Sunday that Cricket Australia were considerin­g a ban on sledging, or verbal taunting, after the ball-tampering scandal and fractious current Test series with South Africa.

The cheating crisis in the third Test, which saw Steve Smith and David Warner stripped of the captaincy and vice-captaincy and banned from the sport for a year, followed an ill-tempered start to the series. Cameron Bancroft was also suspended for nine months.

When asked if a ban on sledging was “a possibilit­y”, Taylor, a Cricket Australia board member, told broadcaste­r Channel Nine: “Absolutely. You are not going to stop people talking out on the field. Talking is one thing,” he added.

“Abusing, sledging... bullying, verbalisin­g whatever you want to call it is another thing. It’s gone too far.”

The practice of sledging — taunting opponents verbally on the field with the aim of distractin­g them — has been in the spotlight after Warner and South Africa’s Quinton de Kock were involved in a physical confrontat­ion during the first Test.

Warner had said the confrontat­ion was triggered by a jibe about his wife, reportedly in retaliatio­n after De Kock was sledged by the Australian.

Taylor would not reveal what his plans were when asked if he would move a motion on the CA board to ban sledging.

“That may or may not happen in a board meeting in three weeks’ time that’s not to be aired on national television,” he said. —

 ?? AFP ?? Steve Smith has stepped down as Australian captain. —
AFP Steve Smith has stepped down as Australian captain. —

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