The Citizen (Gauteng)

Cricket Australia is not smelling of roses

- @KenBorland

There were many inspiring individual performanc­es in the Proteas’ 3-1 win over Australia in what was an incredible series, but the events in Durban on the fourth afternoon of the first Test may have been the most important catalyst for the impressive comeback.

It’s fair to say the Proteas probably weren’t in the good books of their fans after they were walloped 5-1 in their ODI series against India and lost the T20 rubber as well, and then they were decidedly flat at Kingsmead as Australia put themselves in an unassailab­le position.

And then David Warner behaved as if he had a hornet in his pants, never mind sandpaper, after AB de Villiers was run out in the second innings, with an unhinged display of angry, crass celebratio­n in the face of young Aiden Markram. It was clear Australia’s attack dog in chief had lost control, but insipid umpiring ensured nothing was done.

Much of the afternoon session was spent verbally abusing Markram and Quinton de Kock, who eventually decided to respond to all the personal taunts with a verbal volley of his own. Of course, according to the Australian team rules, that crosses the line and Warner was now threatenin­g physical harm.

All of this drama had the effect of making the Proteas angry, as captain Faf du Plessis admitted, and from that moment on they were a different beast, and the South African public rallied behind their cause. It was like an unstoppabl­e wave and all because of Warner’s sledging, a tactic which Du Plessis considers counter-productive, due to its motivation­al effects on the opposition.

The Australian­s were also angry, Warner’s exposure, Kagiso Rabada winning his appeal in

Ken Borland

Port Elizabeth and then the crowd in Cape Town making them feel more and more victimised. Warner, who was made vice-captain to bring positive energy into the camp, then crossed over onto the dark side because of how unfair he felt it all was. Ironically, it was he who had set all this in motion.

On the outside, Cricket Australia have seemingly been very upfront in dealing with the issue. But, as the dust has settled, it has become clear they have merely stage-managed the whole fiasco, they have been doing their utmost to control the narrative and ringfence themselves from any major damage.

They have their three scapegoats in Smith, Bancroft and Warner, who have now accepted major penalties, but what of the organisati­on itself which has promoted the win-at-all-costs attitude in crass social media posts and that awful gloating podium presentati­on set-up after the Ashes?

Cricket Australia have not made the whole truth accessible, leaving questions unanswered such as how was it possible that not a single bowler knew what was going on? South African media were deliberate­ly excluded from Darren Lehmann’s first press conference after the scandal and I was effectivel­y banned from asking questions at Australian press conference­s – whenever my hand was up, a firm shake of the head by their media manager would follow.

It should also incense South Africans that Cricket Australia came to this country, which holds democratic ideals so dear after our dark past, and tried to interfere in the rights of free speech of spectators.

In Cape Town, several spectators were evicted for using abusive or foul language, the kind that is commonplac­e in Australia, at the behest of the tourists’ management, who had their security manager practicall­y on the field of play.

There has, however, been a lot of soul-searching in Australian cricket these past two weeks, which is a positive, and in Tim Paine they have a captain who can lead them into the new brand of cricket they say they want to play.

But there are already murmurs in Australia that perhaps some leniency should be shown to the culprits, so whether they really do head in a new direction is by no means certain.

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