How many teams keep yelling at umpires till they give the right decision? How many teams publicly remonstrate an umpire in the middle of the field for not giving the decision in their favour? How many captains have said demeaning things to an umpire on the cricket field? How many teams appeal for a hit wicket when one of their own players throws a bail off the batsman's stumps? How many teams indulge in personal sledging on the cricket field at every given opportunity?
Look, I have had the opportunity to meet a lot of these Australian players in person and some of them are really really nice guys, some of the best blokes one can meet. Very down to earth for famous sportspersons. But somehow a lot of them just seem to think thatin the field, they can do whatever they want to do and get away with it.
And as far as Windies not being saintly when compared to this Australian side, I reckon the way the rest of the world talked about them then (and even now for that matter) shows it all. I am not sure if you will find too many kind words towards this Australian bunch. And its not like that West Indies side lacked aggression in the field. There is a difference between playing aggressively and just being spoilt brats on the field. And Australia have been on the other side far too many times. On the one hand you have nice blokes like Gilly, Martyn (perhaps Langer) etc. (Brett Lee against most sides is rather nice, but isn't the same against England or New Zealand for some reason). So many past players wont rave about the 80s Windies side this much if they weren't pretty nice guys. I guess the fact that they didn't shoot out too many personal insults on the field helped them get this reputation.
Mate, the answer to your questions in this post is - every team has done it at some stage or another and most still do. Look at the question of appealing for one - how many times have we watched teams operating on days 4 and 5 in the subcontinent with 4 men around the bat and there are four or more appeals an over, even as the ball speeds through wide mid-on to the fence?
Plenty of captains have said demeaning things about umpires, Hansie Cronje speared a stump into the umpires' room at Adelaide Oval when he walked off because he was unhappy with a decision. A certain Pakistan captain recently refused to bring his side back onto the field because of what two umpires did. Gavaskar himself, who now seeks to be portrayed as some paragon of virtue, tried to take Chauhan off the field with him when he was given out in 81. the act of a three-and-a-half year old child whose lollipop spilt on the ground and got all dirty.
Not sure about the hitwicket reference you're referring to, but how many captains take an obvious half volley which came off the batter's abdomen and went to 1st slip in a world cup final and apepal vigorously as if it's obviously out (that would be Ganguly in 2003, wouldn't it, from Gilchrist off Harbarjan's bowling?); how many teams have players who deliberately scuff up the pitch during a drinks break and then get suspended for what is balatantly cheating (that would be Afridi v England in Pakistan last time wouldn't it?) How many teams have captains who are caught tampering with the ball? That would be England with Mike Atherton wouldn't it?
Plenty of teams indulge in personal sledging on the cricket field. Lara sledged Mark Waugh on the WI tour to Australia in 1992-93 because Waugh backed away and played upper cuts in a one day game - he called him gutless; McDermott was called a "white c..." according to his book; Harbarjan never shuts up; neither does Paul Nixon the England 'keeper; Collingwood started the banter with Warne in Sydney, but Warne ended it; Tony Greig was a massive sledger as footage of any game where he took a wicket would demonstrate; Dwayne Bravo sledged Flintoff on WI last tour of England (with hilarious results); the Saffers are as renowned for it as the Aussies; Parore and Ian Smith were both great at it for NZ. Not sure about Pakistan because they speak Urdu all the time on the field, but when they do speak it, they seem to be looking at the batsmen a lot as they make their comments with less than friendly looks on their faces. Draw your own conclusions.
But yeah, as these examples obviously show, the Aussies are evil and have an appalling record of cheating and ill-discipline compared with every other side in the world. They are the only side which behave like spoiled brats, the only side which take losing poorly - I mean look at their disgraceful behaviour when they lost in India in 2001 or the Ashes in 2005 - oh that's right, they congratulated their opponents both times and in the latter case had the temerity to spend most of the series having a beer with them and having the whole world say what a great spirit the series was played in. In the former case, their captain in the great spirit of Aussie spoilt-brattedness spent his own money after the series building an orphanage for young female lepers in India.
Yep, no doubt the Aussies really are the biggest problem facing world cricket at the moment. Never mind match fixing, never mind drug taking, never mind the ICC is an organisational joke, never mind the tragedy of Zimbabwe and the under-resourcing of Bangladesh and Kenya by a world body rolling in money - some bloke has a verbal chop at another fella on the field and the world will cave in. It really is appalling. That's why so many of this Aussie team are always up on disciplinary charges, always being suspended, always surrounded in scandal on the field. Not.
We'll just keep hearing all the old examples - Ponting makes one inappropriate comment to an umpire in Malaysia therefore he's a prat and it's a disgrace and he's unfit to be a captain; McGrath's comment to Sarwan - we've only had that dredged up 14 million times as an example; what next - Lehmann's indefensible rant vs Sri Lanka about 5 years ago- will that be brought up again as an example of how these Aussies "cross the line" so often?
One last thiing - which captain was it who went to every other country's captain and asked them to accept a fielder's word on catches carrying? That would have been Ponting, wouldn't it? What a disgraceful, ill-tempered, unsportsmanlike gesture that was.
By the way, every other captain said no.
Let's have some perspective please.