BSP-11 Cricket Australia chairman urged to quit after ball-tampering review

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CRICKET-AUS-REVIEW

Cricket Australia chairman urged to quit after ball-tampering review

MELBOURNE, Oct 30, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Cricket Australia chairman David
Peever faced growing calls to quit Tuesday after a damning review slammed the
body’s conduct leading up to a major ball-tampering scandal.

The independent review released Monday found that an “arrogant” and
“controlling” culture within Cricket Australia contributed to players
cheating in the pursuit of victory.

Peever has so far avoided an exodus of senior figures after the scandal,
when players were caught using sandpaper to alter the ball in a Test match
against South Africa in March.

Cricket Australia CEO James Sutherland, coach Darren Lehmann and team
performance boss Pat Howard all resigned. Then-captain Steve Smith and his
deputy David Warner were banned for 12 months, and batsman Cameron Bancroft
for nine months.

Peever, a former Rio Tinto mining executive who was reappointed for a
second term as chairman only last week, said on Monday that he wouldn’t step
aside.

“The work was never about wanting to dwell on negatives,” Peever told
national broadcaster ABC Monday night when asked why he and the CA board
should not resign.

“This is a very important day for cricket and we are moving forward from
here,” he added.

But former Australian bowler Geoff Lawson said the chairman should be
replaced by someone who played at the elite level.

“We need a serious cricketing figurehead, not a corporate cricket
figurehead,” he told Fox News.

“The business of cricket has overwhelmed the playing of cricket.”

– ‘Let these contrite men play’ –

Former prime minister Kevin Rudd also entered the debate, tweeting
#PeeverShouldResign.

“So let’s get this straight. #CricketAustralia, under David Peever, has
overseen the destruction of the intn’l image of our national game. But Peever
gets re-appointed as Chair last wk, 3 days before release of damning
Longstaff Report?”

The Australian Cricketers’ Association (ACA) said in light of the scathing
assessment, CA must share responsibility for the scandal, calling the bans on
Smith, Warner and Bancroft to be lifted.

“With this new information, common sense, common decency, basic fairness,
proportionality and natural justice demand that the punishment is reduced,”
ACA President Greg Dyer told reporters in Melbourne.

“The players have already lost time in the game, chances to play for
Australia, endured public humiliation and faced massive financial penalties.”

The CA review by the Sydney-based Ethics Centre accused Cricket Australia
of ignoring the spirit of the game, leaving players without moral guidance.

“My message to Cricket Australia is a simple one: These contrite men have
been punished enough. Let these contrite men play,” Dyer said.

ACA also called for the “urgent” implementation of all 42 recommendations
in the 145-page report, which also included complaints from those involved in
the sport of a bullying culture in elite men’s cricket.

Among the recommendations was an anti-harassment code to stop sledging, and
training to improve team leaders’ “moral courage”.

The team, who have struggled for form in the absence of batting stars Smith
and Warner, also released a “players pact” promising to respect the
traditions of the game.

Similar initiatives in the past, such as the “Spirit of Cricket” charter in
2003, had little impact.

BSS/AFP/MR/ 1045 hrs