The Borneo Post

Controvers­y clouds Ashes before a ball is even bowled

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SYDNEY: Cricket’s oldest rivalry pitting Australia against England always throws up onfield rancour, but the upcoming Ashes series has been engulfed by controvers­y before a ball is even bowled.

With the opening Test starting in Brisbane on December 8, Australia’s preparatio­ns have been consumed by a text-message scandal while English cricket is facing claims of institutio­nal racism.

First to Australia and Tim Paine, who quit as Test captain earlier this month when lewd text messages he sent to a female colleague in 2017 were about to be made public.

The 36-year-old, previously seen as squeaky-clean, had been appointed to repair Australia’s reputation after the 2018 “Sandpaper-gate” ball-tampering scandal which rocked cricket and cost Steve Smith the captaincy.

Paine has now withdrawn from the Australian Test squad completely, despite team-mates urging him to continue.

The way Cricket Australia (CA) handled a 2018 inquiry that cleared Paine, and the current administra­tion now throwing him under the bus in the eyes of some, has also been in the spotlight.

Former England skipper Alistair Cook said the drama would inevitably upset “team dynamic”.

“It is the kind of external noise that a team does not need going into such an important series,” he said in Britain’s Sunday Times.

“There has been speculatio­n that Paine’s absence will make Australia stronger.

“It’s possible that his replacemen­t... may be a better wicketkeep­er-batsman but the removal of an establishe­d captain, in such circumstan­ces, is a distractio­n that can only unsettle the team dynamic.”

Australia now head into the Gabba Test led by Pat Cummins, a fast bowler with little captaincy experience and whose tactical decisions will come under close scrutiny.

His appointmen­t was neverthele­ss broadly welcomed, but Smith becoming his deputy threatened yet more controvers­y. Spin legend Shane Warne said that Smith should never even have been considered after “Sandpaper-gate”.

“His second chance is getting to play for Australia again and in my opinion announcing him as vice-captain opens up CA for ridicule and criticism,” Warne told reporters.

While Paine’s downfall sent shockwaves through Australia, the British press rubbed their hands in glee.

“Career in Ashes,” Sky Sports screamed.

But the gloating was tempered by a racism storm rocking English cricket, sparked by allegation­s from Pakistan-born Azeem Rafiq.

Rafiq told a parliament­ary inquiry how racist language was “constantly” used during his two spells at English county club Yorkshire, where he played alongside England Test captain Joe Root.

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