Tendulkar opens up on ball-tampering, says CA made 'right decision'
Sachin Tendulkar feels that Cricket Australia has taken the "right decision" in banning the national team captain Steve Smith and his deputy David Warner for one year after being found guilty of ball tampering against South Africa during the just-concluded third Test in Cape Town.
New Delhi: Cricket Australia’s decision to send Steve Smith and David Warner on a 12-month ban for their involvement in the ball-tampering incident has attracted varied responses from both former and current cricketers and now one of the greatest cricketers of all tim, Sachin Tendulkar has also voiced his opinion.
Sachin, who is not known to comment on controversial matters, surprisingly, termed it the "right decision".
"Cricket has been known as a gentleman's game. It's a game that I believe should be played in the purest form. Whatever has happened is unfortunate but the right decision has been taken to uphold the integrity of the game. Winning is important but the way you win is more important," Tendulkar wrote on his twitter page.
Cricket has been known as a gentleman's game. It's a game that I believe should be played in the purest form. Whatever has happened is unfortunate but the right decision has been taken to uphold the integrity of the game. Winning is important but the way you win is more important
— Sachin Tendulkar (@sachin_rt) March 28, 2018
Smith and Warner have also been barred from playing the cash-rich IPL while young opener Cameron Bancroft has been suspended for nine months. Earlier, ICC had banned Smith for one Test match and fined his full match fee.
While Tendulkar feels that the ban is the right decision, his longtime on-field competitor Shane Warne felt that the quantum of punishment didn't match the crime.
"Let's take the emotion out of it. We are all feeling angry and embarrassed. But you need a level head and you shouldn't destroy someone unless they deserve to be destroyed.
Their actions were indefendable, and they need to be severely punished. But I don't think a one-year ban is the answer," Warne wrote in his column.
Incidentally, Tendulkar was accused of ball tampering back in 2001 during the South Africa series when match referee Mike Denness felt that he was trying to scruff up the seam of the ball during the second Test at Port Elizabeth.
Tendulkar always maintained that he was trying to clean the dirt which had accumulated on the seam. The BCCI was firmly behind its icon player and Denness was removed by the South African Cricket Board when the late president Jagmohan Dalmiya threatened to call off the series.
The final Test match at the Centurion was declared "unofficial" by the ICC after its match-referee Denness was sent back home.