Was a mistake to keep Tim Paine: Cricket Australia chairman

21 November,2021 08:02 AM IST |  Sydney  |  AFP

Allowing Tim to continue as captain in 2018 sent a wrong message of CA accepting such behaviour, says present chief Freudenstein

Wicketkeeper-batsman Tim Paine. Pic/AFP


Cricket Australia chairman Richard Freudenstein on Saturday admitted the governing body should have axed Tim Paine as Test captain in 2018 after a sexting scandal that "sent the wrong message that this kind of behaviour is acceptable."

Paine abruptly quit on Friday, just weeks ahead of the Ashes series against England, over a series of lewd text messages with a female colleague in 2017 that he had learnt was about to be made public.

The incident was investigated in 2018, but Paine was cleared by Cricket Tasmania and CA's integrity unit of breaching their code of conduct and was able to stay on. Freudenstein, who was elected to the board in 2019, insisted Paine would not have survived as captain in 2018 under the sport's current administration. "While I cannot speak about the original decision-making in 2018...with the benefit of all relevant information about this matter, Cricket Australia would not make the same decision today," he said at a press conference.

"I acknowledge that the decision clearly sent the wrong message to the sport, to the community and to Tim - that this kind of behaviour is acceptable and without serious consequences. "The role of Australia captain must be held to the highest standards," he added.

Paine took over the Test captaincy in March 2018 in the wake of the Sandpapergate scandal that rocked Australian cricket. Then-captain Steve Smith and his deputy David Warner were forced to step down for their roles in trying to alter the ball with sandpaper during a Cape Town Test and were suspended for a year. Freudenstein said that since 2018 CA had put in place better education for players over acceptable behaviour and social media use, including the exchange of sexually explicit material. "But what is clear is that there are lessons to be learnt and we, as an organisation, have more to do and will do more in this area," he added.

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