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kumar_tarak

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Ee bokklo discussion lo King enduku vachadu.. Okadi downfall ni chusi memu happy gaa feel avvam.. mavodi rise ni chusi feel avutham

 

king :no1:

 

RR vallu captain ni pikaru ee SRH vallu eppudu pikutharu..Series chustunte aa Smith kanna ee warner gadi over action ekkuva ayindi..

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9 minutes ago, sagarkurapati said:

Thappu ledhu kaani no doubt if unte mathram gurantee ga konni records create chesthadu undoubtedly no1 test batsman at present generation

Tappudu margam lo velthe karnudu laaga nasanam avvalsindhe......

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On 3/24/2018 at 9:42 PM, Kiran Edara said:

On that note, here's a look at the most controversial incidents related to ball-tampering in cricket.
- In 2016, during a Test match in Hobart, South Africa captain Faf du Plessis was found guilty of ball tampering by the ICC for using mints to alter the condition of the ball, but was cleared to play the next match. On that occasion, television footage had showed him shining the ball with a mint in his mouth. He pleaded not guilty to the charge but was fined his entire match fee for 'changing the condition of the ball in breach of Law 42.3'.


- In 2001, during India's acrimonious tour of South Africa, Sachin Tendulkar was fined 75 per cent of his match fee and suspended for one Test after the match referee Mike Denness alleged that he had tampered the ball. While TV cameras showed Tendulkar working on the seam of the ball during a Test match it was suggested that he had been merely cleaning some mud off the seam. However, Denness did not buy that logic and suspended Tendulkar. A storm ensured, with the Indian team threatening to quit the tour if the decision was not reversed. The BCCI boycotted the final match which was played and deemed an 'unofficial Test'.


- In 2002, Waqar Younis became the first bowler to cop a ban for ball tampering after footage showed him lifting the seam of the ball during an ODI in Sri Lanka. Waqar was handed a one-match ban while Azhar Mahmood, who was also seen gouging the side of the ball with thumbnails, was charged 30% of his match fee. Waqar was banned because of an earlier incident during a Test match on the same tour.


- In 1994, then England captain Michael Atherton was fined 2,000 pounds after TV pictures appeared to show him putting his hand into his pocket and then applying an illegal substance to the ball. Atherton denied doing so while saying that he was drying his hands on a hot and humid day, and was subsequently cleared from the charges. However, he later admitted that he had failed to inform the match referee that he had dried his hands on dirt which he was carrying in his pocket. Atherton was fined 1,000 pounds for 'using dirt' and other 1,000 pounds for 'giving incomplete information to the match referee'.

- In 2010, Shahid Afridi was handed a two-match ban after he was seen on TV chewing on one side of the cricket ball during an ODI in Perth. Afridi, leading Pakistan in that match, apologised after being caught biting the ball.

okasari old incidents kuda chadukondi... manaki evadaina fine esthe.. matchlu boycott chestham.... verevallu chesthe meeru donga cheaters antam... aapandi ee logics..

life time bans ese antha mistake em kadu ball tampering... every team tries to change the condition of the ball... konni ee aussie athi thelivigalla chestalavalla ala dorukutha untaru.. it doesn't mean other players are pathithis... 

as already said.. as per ICC rules.. one match ban anthe..

other bans emaina avi complete ah country cricket board decision meedha depend ayyi untadi.. since Australian prime minister himself asked to remove smith from captaincy.. yes we may see ban for short period but not life time ban..

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A round-up of what some of the biggest names in cricket have said about the ball tampering scandal in Cape Town

The fallout from Australia's ball tampering scandal continues on Monday, with a host of names associated with the game weighed in with some very forthright opinions

Fanie de Villiers, former South African cricketer / SuperSport commentator

"I said earlier on, if they can get reverse swing in the 26th, 27th, 28th over then they are doing something different from what everybody else, de Villiers told RSN.

"We actually said to our cameramen 'go out, have a look boys, they are using something, if it's possible for the ball to get altered like that on a cricket wicket where we knew there was a grass covering – not a Pakistani wicket where there's cracks every centimetre.

"We're talking about grass-covered wickets where you have to do something else to alter the roughness of the ball on one side.

"With the Australian team getting reverse swing before the 30th over, they had to do something.

"They searched for an hour and a half until they saw something, and then they started following Bancroft and they actually caught him out in the end."

Jeff Thomson, former Australian cricketer

"I know there's been some sort of tampering going on. In our day, you had the ball, you spat on it, sweat, shine it that was it.

"They should not get a match penalty they should just get flicked. I don't care who they are, they should be just see ya later,” Thomson told Nine's A Current Affair

"It's a slur on everyone who's ever played cricket.

"They're like spoilt brats if it doesn't go their way, they spit the dummy, whine about it, carry on stupidly.

"How do they get off the plan when they come back, they're going to get an absolute pizzling. I even got my hair cut so nobody would recognise me as an ex-cricketer."

Jason Gillespie, former Australian cricketer

"Steve Smith's time as Australia's captain is surely up. It is impossible to envisage a scenario where he stays in the job. This is a train wreck," Gillespie wrote in the Guardian.

"When Smith fronted the media on Saturday to explain his role in the ball-tampering scandal, one that has taken an already distasteful encounter with South Africa to new depths, he did not appear to grasp the severity of what he was owning up to. "That simply beggared belief.

"This was pre-planned cheating. It may have been implemented by a junior player in Cameron Bancroft but it came with the backing and knowledge of "the leadership group", a core of senior guys in the Australian set-up. The reputation of a team who were already drawing scorn for their behaviour has been torched."

Stuart Broad, England cricketer

"I saw Steve Smith in his press conference say it's the first time they've tried it – which to me, it's surprising why they'd change a method that's been working," Broad said.

"Look at the Ashes series we've just played, all those Test matches, and they've reverse-swung the ball sometimes in conditions you wouldn't expect it to. I don't understand why they've changed their method for this one game.

"There was no evidence that they were doing this in the Ashes series, from what I've seen."

Tim Paine, acting Australia captain

"It's been a horrible 24 hours to be perfectly honest," Paine said on SuperSport.

"I'd like to take this opportunity to apologise to all the people back home and the Australian fans who have come out here to support us, they did not deserve this from us."

Faf du Plessis, South Africa captain

"I can understand it's a really tough time for him to be in right now," du Plessis said after the Proteas smashed Australia by 322 runs in the third Test.

"Obviously the situation I was in was really difficult for me as well. Because people were attacking me, my personality and my character.

"And I felt it was wrong. It wasn't fair.

"I don't know how he feels about his own situation.

"Ball shining versus ball tampering, they're two very different situations. One is definitely much more serious than the other."

Chris Lynn, Australian cricketer

"I reckon every cricketer has probably done it throughout their career in grade cricket or whatever level to an extent. I think Faf du Plessis said when he got done last year, his was more of a ball shining not tampering. There's a fine line between all that stuff," said Lynn.

"The cricket has been interesting of late. It's keeping Test cricket on the map, isn't it? It's been interesting. Not exactly positive, but what's happened has happened and the guys are going to do what they're going to do.

"As a part of the Australian cricket team, I can't really say too much. The ICC have sanctioned the boys already and obviously Cricket Australia will have their say. But they haven't murdered anyone. They'll deal with it and move on. Hopefully we can win this last Test because at the end of the day, they're there to play cricket. Besides the spotlight being on other things, they're there to win a Test series which is the most important thing."

Moises Henriques Australian cricketer

NSW allrounder Moises Henriques took to Twitter today to share his views, claiming Smith had "made up" the line about a leadership group meeting in a bid to deflect attention from the most junior member of his playing XI.

" In my uneducated opinion, I dare say there was never a senior players meeting to discuss cheating – Smith made that up to take the heat off a young Cameron Bancroft not realising the outrage that would follow," Henriques tweeted.

He later added: "Ps. Not saying no one was aware of Cameron doing it, just highly doubt there was a ‘senior players meeting’ to decide to cheat.

"I think it was the captain attempting to protect a young player. They had 10 mins of panic between end of play & press conference."

Henriques, who was part of the Australia Test squad during the so-called 'Homework' fiasco on the 2013 tour of India, was at pains to stress on twitter it was just his opinion.

He would have close ties to fellow NSW players in the Australian team, including bowlers Mitch Starc and Josh Hazlewood who have been reported to be upset at being implicated by the term 'leadership group' Smith used in his press conference.

Ian Botham, former England captain

"How deep does it go? The players are saying that the management weren’t involved, which I hope is true," Botham told Sky Sports News.

"I don’t think this decision was made by Smith and Warner, so who else was involved?

"The groundswell over here is quite amazing, it is almost bordering on hatred at times. The players, it will be very tough for them and I think it puts everything about Australian cricket under question.

"People are now talking over here, how long has it been going on for? When else has this been done? There is going to be a lot of questions to be answered."

Nasser Hussain, former England captain

"The problem with ball tampering is, once you get done like this and found out, it's a little bit like match-fixing in that you start to question every other game. People start to question the Ashes," Hussain told Sky Sports.

"It's why the ICC should clamp down harder on it.

"This is a very good Australian bowling line-up, and has been for a while. But people will start questioning whether they're a good cricketing side because they scratch the ball better than opposition sides. Or are they just better?

"I thought Smith underplayed it when he went into that press conference straight after it happened. 'We will learn from this and we will move on', he said. Well, I'm afraid it's not that simple, you're the captain of Australia, a very proud cricketing nation, and to say you blatantly cheated, it's very difficult for you to stay in your job as captain."

Greg Matthews, former Australian cricketer

"Australian cricket is in the doldrums now, one of our lowest moments ever," Matthews said on Nine's A Current Affair.

“(Steve) Smith loves the game, trains more than anyone else, thinks about it more than anyone else, he’s not sleeping well at night thinking about cricket, he’s not going to be sleeping too well for a while now,” he said.

“Clearly the greatest punishment Smith will face is that for the rest of his life, this will haunt him. (But) if everyone involved tells the truth no matter what the cost, this wound will heal."

Michael Clarke, former Australian captain

"I couldn't think of anything worse than Steve Smith coming back to Australia and being too scared and too embarrassed to be able to leave his house or to have paparazzi and media at the front of his door 24/7," Clarke told Channel Nine on Monday.

"I can tell you now there's no worse feeling when you're driving to a service station or a Woolworths and you're too embarrassed to get out of the car because you feel like everyone's staring at you and everybody is looking at you.

"That's my fear for Smithy at the moment. I feel for him and I don't want to see that happen."

John Buchanan, former Australian coach

"I think there are other things potentially happening in there, but maybe this particular issue could be one of those things that could be very helpful to the Australian team, the Australian team culture, and possibly down through the High Performance area," Buchanan told SEN Breakfast.

"I find it hard to believe that this sort of thing is almost something that has just happened completely out of the blue.

"I think there's always a whole lot of reasons why you get to a point either good or bad that things happen.

"In a dressing room, and the Cape Town dressing room isn't one of your biggest dressing rooms, it does have areas where you can escape, but nonetheless it just seems very difficult to me, how players, coaching staff didn't know what was going on."

Allan Border, former Australian captain

"How do they bounce back?" Border wrote on Fox Sports News' website.

"It's going to be so tough given the circumstances — not knowing who will make up the Australian team, likely under the interim captaincy of Tim Paine.

"It's one thing to lose a Test match, but to have everything else thrown into it makes it difficult. The mood in the side would be terrible. How you lift that is the million-dollar question.

"The support staff have a role to play and then obviously the rest of the guys really have to rally around. They have a cricket match to play. They've done the wrong thing and have to cop the punishment, but now's the time to go out and show some good old-fashioned Aussie spirit."

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16 minutes ago, KING007 said:

Ippudu migatha vallu prathivrathulu ani evvaru anatledu ga.......

lol every country nundi oka ball tamperining case ayina undi... england ollu.. south africa vallu.. india vallu itla prathodu banlu cheyyali ani question chese right ae ledu first of all.. 

paina article lo players opinion chudu... south africa nundi duplesis gadu worng anatam comedy kakapothe.. last year vadu chesindi endi gum tho.. appudu vaadu ban face chestha ani accept chesada leka south Africa vadni ban chesinda...england nundi nassir hussain gadu wrong anatam.. loll.. Indian players like bhajji wrong anatam twitter lo... pathithis kaadu annadi vellani.. :laughing:

ball tampering ki life bans esthe.. I feel injustice done to past players who enjoyed long terms in their careers.. 

it is upto australian cricket board to decide on banning.. which they did in past to even players like andrew symonds.. based on conduct..

 

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.@harbhajan_singh referred to the 2008 Sydney Test against Australia, infamously described as Monkeygate, where he was banned for three Tests for an alleged racial slur against Andrew Symonds and asked why Cameron Bancroft and #SteveSmith got off lightly. http://read.ht/Bj4Y 

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