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1.Michael Atherton, 1994
In the "dirt in pocket" affair, then england captain Michael Atherton was accused of ball tampering during a Test
match with South
Africa at Lord's in 1994 after television cameras caught
Atherton reaching into his pocket and then rubbing a substance on the ball.
Atherton denied ball tampering, claiming that he had dirt in his pocket which
he used to dry his hands. He was also accused of lying to the match referee.
Atherton was summoned to the match referee and was fined £2,000 (£3,700 today)
for failing to disclose the dirt to the match referee.
2.Waqar Younis, 2000
Waqar Younis of Pakistan became the first player to receive a suspension for ball-tampering after a match in July 2000,
and was fined 50% of his match fee.
3.Sachin Tendulkar, 2001
In the second Test match of India's 2001 tour of South
Africa,
at St George's Park, Port Elizabeth, match referee Mike Denness suspended Sachin Tendulkar for one game in light of alleged ball
tampering. Television cameras picked up images that suggested Tendulkar was
scuffing the seam of the cricket ball, though Tendulkar he claimed he was
actually just removing the piece of grass stuck in the seam of ball.
The incident escalated to include allegations
of racism, and led to Denness being barred from entering the venue of the third
Test match. Subsequently, the International Cricket
Council revoked the status of the match as a Test as the teams rejected
the appointed referee.
The charges against Tendulkar, and Virender Sehwag's ban for excessive appealing, triggered a
massive backlash from the Indian public.
The ICC later cleared Tendulkar of ball
tampering charges.
Rahul Dravid of India rubbed a cough lozenge on the shiny
side of the ball at Brisbane during an Australian Tri-Series match against Zimbabwe. India won the match, but footage emerged of
Dravid tampering with the ball, and he was fined 50% of his match fee.
5.England cricket team, 2005
Marcus Trescothick admitted in his autobiography Coming Back
to Me, that he used mints to shine the ball to produce more swing: "It was my job to keep the shine on the
new ball for as long as possible with a bit of spit and a lot of polish. And
through trial and error I finally settled on the type of spit for the task at
hand. It had been common knowledge in county cricket for some time that certain
sweets produced saliva which, when applied to the ball for cleaning purposes,
enabled it to keep its shine for longer and therefore its swing." He found
Murray Mints worked the best.
The admission came 3 years after the
conclusion of the 2005 Ashes series, in which England beat Australia 2–1.
6.Pakistan cricket team, 2006
In 2006, an alleged ball-tampering issue
overshadowed a Test match between Pakistan and England, whereby Pakistan
refused to take to the field for the evening session after being penalised for
ball-tampering in the afternoon. Television cameras caught the umpires
discussing the condition of the quarter seam. Paksitan are believed to have intended a
protest against the decision by delaying their return after tea; however, while
they were refusing to play, the umpires awarded the game to England in accordance with the
laws of cricket.
The
controversy arose when the umpires, Darrell Hair and Billy Doctrove, ruled that the Pakistani team had been
involved in ball tampering. They awarded five penalty runs to England and a replacement ball was selected
by England batsman Paul Collingwood. Play continued until the tea break, without
any Pakistani protest. After the tea break, the Pakistani team, after having
agreed amongst themselves that no ball tampering had taken place and given
consideration to the severity of the implication, refused to take the field.
The umpires then left the field, gave a warning to the Pakistani players, and
returned once more 15 minutes later. After waiting two more minutes the umpires
removed the bails and declared England winners by forfeiture. A deal was
brokered between the English and Pakistani cricket boards to allow the match to continue,
and the Pakistani team did take to the field 55 minutes after the umpires first
took to the field for the resumption of play. Hair and Doctrove, however,
declined to continue the game maintaining their decision that Pakistan had
forfeited the match by refusing to play.
The impasse continued late into the evening. Pakistan captain Inzamam ul-Haq claimed that Darrell Hair did not inform him or the rest of his side of
the reasons why the ball was replaced, and that Hair had implied that Pakistan
were cheating. At 19:50 UTC it was finally announced at a press conference that
the Test was called off. The ECB's statement said that England were awarded the
match by the umpires as Pakistan refused to take the field after being warned
that under law 21.3, failure to do so would result in them forfeiting the game.
This is the first time a Test match has been decided this way.
The England and Wales Cricket Board refunded
fourth-day spectators 40% of their ticket price (after deduction of an
administration fee), and gave an automatic 100% refund to those with tickets
for the fifth day. It later asked the Pakistan Cricket Board to pick up the
£800,000 (£1.06 million today) costs of doing this, which the PCB refused to
do. In March 2007, the PCB and ECB reached a settlement where Pakistan would
play a Twenty20 International in England and waive their fees.
As a result of Pakistan's forfeiting of the
game, Inzamam was charged and found guilty of "bringing the game into
disrepute", though he was cleared of the charges relating to
"changing the condition of the ball". In January 2008, Pakistan's cricket board
asked the International Cricket Council to change the official result to
"match abandoned" or "match drawn" on the basis of having
been subsequently cleared of ball-tampering by an ICC tribunal. In July 2008, the International Cricket
Council (ICC) changed the result of the match to a draw, though in October 2008 the Marylebone Cricket
Club (MCC) released the statement "The ICC has no power under the laws of
cricket to decide that results should be altered, whether it feels it's
‘inappropriate’ or otherwise," The decision also angered former players
including Michael Holding who at the time was a member of the ICC
cricket committee. Holding felt that Pakistan's refusal to play should not go
unpunished even though they were not guilty of ball-tampering,
"I have just written my letter of
resignation to the ICC cricket committee because I cannot agree with what
they've done," Holding said while commentating for Sky Sports during a
domestic match in England. "That game should never, ever be a draw. When
you take certain actions, you must be quite happy to suffer the
consequences."
On 1 February 2009, the ICC reversed their
earlier decision, and changed the match result back to a win for England.
7.James Anderson and Stuart Broad, 2010
In January 2010, England bowlers Stuart Broad and James Anderson were accused of ball tampering by rubbing the
ball on the ground with their spikes in the third
Test Match against South
Africa. Broad maintained that he was just being lazy,
because it was 40 degrees Celsius in Cape Town that day. Andy Flower said in his defence that "the scoreline
suggested that there was obviously no ball tampering." Nasser Hussain, who had captained Anderson, said:
"Stuart Broad and James Anderson were wrong to behave in the manner they
did and I've no doubt that if a player from another country did the same we'd
have said they were cheating." No charges were formally placed by South
Africa even though they made the accusations at a press conference.
8.Shahid Afridi, 2010
Shahid Afridi, standing in as the Pakistani captain,
received a two T20 international match ban for ball-tampering in a match
against Australia
in January 2010. He was caught on camera biting the cricket ball in a bizarre
attempt to re-adjust the seam of the ball. The ball was eventually replaced. He told the Hindustan Times that he was trying to smell the ball but he pleaded guilty for ball tampering.
9.Australia vs Sri Lanka, 2012
10.Faf du Plessis, 2013
While fielding on during the third day of the
second Test, in Dubai, cameras captured footage of South Africa fielder Faf du PlessiS scuffing the ball against the zip on his
trousers. The on-field umpires penalised South Africa by adding 5 runs to
Pakistan's total, and changing the ball. The match referee imposed a 50% match fee fine
on du Plessis after the fielder pleaded guilty, although the team manager Mohammad
Mosajee maintained that penalty was "harsh", and the team
decided not to challenge to finding as it may have led to heavier sanctions.
Despite the "guilty" plea, team vice-captain AB de Villiers maintained that "we are not cheats"
and team captain Graeme Smith denied that their participation in ball
tampering tainted the series-levelling win as South Africa went on to record an
innings-victory during the Dubai test, to tie the series 1-1.
During the same match, footage of South
African medium-pace bowler showing Vernon Philander apparently scratching the ball with his
forefinger was also brought under scrutiny, but ultimately was not considered
by the match referee to have constituted any illegal ball-tampering.
11.South Africa vs Sri Lanka, 2014
For the second time in nine months, the South
African Test side found itself in a ball-tampering scandal, this time with
medium-pace bowler Vernon Philander found guilty of tampering with the ball during
the third day of the Galle test against Sri Lanka in 2014. Philander was found
to have breached clause 42.1 of the Laws, "scratching the ball with his
fingers and thumb", and was fined 75% of his match fee. South Africa were
to go on and win the test by 153 runs.
This incident followed speculation by
Australian test batsman David Warner in February 2014 over the South African team's
practices in altering the state of the ball during Australia's tour to South
Africa. Speaking to Sky Sports Radio, Warner commented on the South African
fielders' more "obvious" use of throwing the ball into the ground on
return throws after fielding, and South African wicket-keeper AB de Villiers' habit of getting "the ball in his hand
and with his glove wipe the rough side every ball." Warner was later fined
15% of his match fee for the comments he made, under an ICC Code of Conduct
breach.
Another South African was charged with ball
tampering on 18 November 2016 after their victory in the second Test against Australia in Hobart. Proteas skipper Faf du Plessis was alleged to have tampered with the
condition of the ball after TV footage appeared to show him applying saliva
onto the ball from a mint or a lolly. The charge was made by the ICC, although
Cricket Australia did not file a complaint. Du Plessis was found guilty of ball tampering
on 22 November and fined his match fee from the second Test.
Australian batsman Cameron Bancroft was charged with ball tampering on 24 March
2018, when videos emerged that showed him rubbing, and later concealing, a
suspicious yellow object during day three of the Third Test against South Africa, at Newlands Stadium. Bancroft later claimed the object was a
short length of yellow adhesive tape to which dirt and grit had adhered,
forming an abrasive surface – though Cricket Australia later confirmed that this was actually
sandpaper. Captain Steve Smith and Bancroft attended a press conference at
the end of that day's play. Bancroft admitted to ball tampering in front of Andy Pycroft, the match referee, and the press. Smith then
said that the tampering was planned by an unnamed "leadership group"
during the lunch break. Smith and vice-captain David Warner stood down from the team leadership the
morning after the incident, but still played on, with wicketkeeper Tim Paine taking over as captain for the rest of the
Test match.
The ICC banned Smith for one test match and he
was fined 100% of his match fee, while Bancroft was fined 75% of his match fee.
As well as a public outcry, especially in
Australia, the Australian Sports
Commission, the Prime Minister of Australia Malcolm Turnbull, many famous international cricketers and
commercial partners of both the Test side and Cricket Australia universally condemned Smith for his actions.
On 27 March 2018, Sutherland announced that as
a result of the preliminary investigation, Steve Smith, David Warner and
Bancroft have been charged with bringing the game into disrepute, suspended,
and will be sent home. He said that further sanctions against the trio would be
announced within 24 hours. Smith and Warner were banned from the Australian
cricket team for twelve months while Bancroft received a nine months ban.
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