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CA, Victoria meet over ball tampering

Cricket Australia and Victorian officials met on Monday night after the Bushrangers were penalised five runs in the Sheffield Shield final for ball tampering.

Cricket Australia officials have met with their Victorian counterparts after the Bushrangers were hit with a five-run penalty for ball tampering on Sunday.

While the outcome of the meeting is not expected to be announced until early on Tuesday, Victorian bowling coach Mick Lewis could face further sanctions after footage appeared to capture him damaging the ball during the third day of the Sheffield Shield final against South Australia in Glenelg.

The former Australian one-day international bowler kicked the ball under a picket fence after it had been hit to the boundary by Mark Cosgrove in the 10th over of the South Australian second innings.

He then appeared to scrape it on the edge of the concrete gutter, before picking it up and returning it to a South Australian fielder.

The ball was changed on inspection by umpires Paul Wilson and Mick Martell after another boundary was hit two overs later, and South Australia awarded five penalty runs in their second innings.

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"The umpires had determined that the condition of the ball had been deliberately altered," match referee Steve Bernard said.

"Under the laws of cricket they imposed the five-run penalty against the Victorian side and replaced the ball."

Former South Australian and Australian players Greg Blewett and Jason Gillespie took to social media to slam Lewis after the incident.

"Very poor from anyone let alone a member of the support staff," Gillespie tweeted.

"Disgrace!" posted Blewett.

In 2005, current Victorian coach David Saker was cleared of any wrongdoing after an investigation into alleged ball tampering during a Second XI match did not uncover enough evidence. Saker had been coach of the team at the time.

Aaron Finch, who captained Victoria at times this summer, was fined with ball tampering while playing a Sheffield Shield match for the state in 2010.

It is the second time controversy has hit the match, after the Redbacks appealed for obstructing the field against Victorian Peter Handscomb on Sunday when he hit away a return throw to the wicketkeeper.

"I knew I was within my rights to hit the ball if it was coming at me," Handscomb said of the incident on Monday evening.

"So I wasn't too worried about what was going to happen."


3 min read

Published

Source: AAP



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