Please register to access this content.
To continue viewing the content you love, please sign in or create a new account
Dismiss
This content is for our paying subscribers only

De Villiers: Australia bowlers must have known about ‘Sandpaper Gate’ ball tampering

Former South Africa bowler alerted TV crew which led to Bancroft being caught by cameras



Australia captain Steve Smith (right) and Cameron Bancroft admitting to ball tampering in Cape Town on March 24.
Image Credit: AFP

Former South Africa fast bowler Fanie de Villiers said that it is “absolutely impossible” that Australia’s bowlers did not know about the ball tampering tactics employed in the third Test against South Africa in Cape Town in 2018.

De Villiers was part of the commentary team for the match and alerted the television crew which eventually led to Cameron Bancroft being caught by the cameras using a foreign object on the ball.

“It’s absolutely impossible for bowlers not to know what’s going on the ball, because you are the person that scrutinises it, you are the person that’s looking at it, you are the person that’s cleaning it, you are the person that knows exactly that one side looks this way because of looking after (the ball) and the other side doesn’t look a specific way because of the grass on the wicket. So it’s absolutely nonsense,” De Villiers, who played 18 Tests and 83 ODIs and took 180 international wickets, told The Indian Express.

Bancroft was caught on the third day of the Test, at the end of which he and captain Steve Smith admitted to tampering with the ball in a press conference. It led to Bancroft, Smith and vice-captain David Warner being slapped with lengthy bans from all forms of cricket. The incident came back in the news recently after Bancroft indicated that the bowlers may have also been in on the tactics.

Advertisement

Pat Cummins, Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood and Nathan Lyon, who formed Australia’s bowling line-up in that Test, said in a joint statement on Tuesday that they were not aware that the ball had been tampered.

“I think from start it was obvious that they knew, and from start, the Australian system didn’t handle it properly. They should have handled it differently, and they tried to cover everything by just making two (three actually) people the culprits. It was a combined effort… The coach knew; everybody knows in a system, because you don’t hide these things in the team firstly, and secondly, it’s impossible for a bowler not to know because he can see the difference,” said De Villiers.

Advertisement