The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Paine’s brother-in-law ‘sent lewd messages and photo to same woman’

Quit his position after sexual harassment allegation ⮞leeds-born Inglis tipped to replace Australia captain

- Cricket By Jeremy Wilson

⮞coac⮞

The “sexting” scandal that has rocked Australian cricket took another extraordin­ary turn after it was alleged that the brother-in-law of Tim Paine, who resigned as Australia captain last week, sent lewd messages, including an “unwelcome and unsolicite­d” picture of his genitalia, to the same woman.

With the start of the Ashes less than three weeks away, fresh revelation­s and claims have appeared in the Australian media, including the allegation that Shannon Tubb, who is married to Paine’s sister, left his coaching position at Cricket Tasmania in 2018 following an investigat­ion into his conduct.

It follows the allegation­s in Friday’s Herald Sun that exposed Paine’s exchanges with the same woman and triggered his resignatio­n as Australia’s Test cricket captain. Shane Warne has since tipped

Josh Inglis, who was born in Leeds and played this summer for Leicesters­hire, to replace Paine in the squad.

New allegation­s of sexual harassment have now emerged about Tubb. The alleged messages contain various lurid and sexually explicit comments and include an “unwelcome and unsolicite­d … picture of his penis” sent to the woman in late 2017 on Snapchat.

Tubb had allegedly encouraged the female employee to use Snapchat, a phone applicatio­n that allows users to send and receive photograph­s, videos and messages, with the content disappeari­ng after the receiver has opened it. The messages can be kept if the recipient takes a screenshot.

It was reported that the woman first reported alleged sexual harassment by Tubb to her manager in mid-2017.

Asked whether it had been told about the investigat­ion into Tubb and its outcome, a Cricket Australia spokesman said: “The informatio­n was included as part of Cricket Australia’s

integrity investigat­ion. These were separate investigat­ions by Cricket Australia and Cricket Tasmania.”

Paine resigned as Australia’s Test captain less than an hour after it was revealed he sent messages to the woman in November 2017, at a time when his wife, Bonnie, had recently given birth to their first child.

He said that there was “no excuse” for his behaviour, which he suggested was down to stupidity or an inflated ego. He is adamant that there was never any physical element to the relationsh­ip.

In an interview with The Daily Telegraph in Australia, he said: “Although Bonnie and I have both known about all this for three years, to have it played out like this is really distressin­g, and upsetting, and I’m really embarrasse­d.”

His wife, Bonnie, said: “He and I went through all of this privately in 2018. It was horrific then… and is really hard. I have had my time of getting angry, and venting, and to get upset, and we fought and we talked, and then we both decided to move on with life, and do it together.

“Relationsh­ips are bloody hard. Whether it’s with your family, with your sister, your husband, your partner, you make mistakes. It’s hard enough to have that happen privately in your relationsh­ip, inside your own four walls, just the two of you, but it’s harder when everyone has an opinion, and everyone wants to know about your personal life.”

Cricket Australia cleared Paine of wrongdoing in 2018 but supported his decision to resign on Friday.

 ?? ?? Resigned: Tim Paine stood down as captain of Australia after the scandal was revealed
Resigned: Tim Paine stood down as captain of Australia after the scandal was revealed

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