Would never have picked this response from you to be honest.
Ok, put it this way.Is anyone else lost here? Are we talking about the same 'mantra'? I.e. What happens on the field stays on the field?
That saying relates to people not complaining or talking about anything that occurs on the filed. How you've managed to draw a link I really have no idea.
I went to school there. I agree with you.............tbh, I'm not a fan of Adelaide, but its there and I can't do anything about it.
I think it was the nature of Clarke's threat.Ok, put it this way.
The only way Clarke as a public figure gets away with saying "get ready for a broken ****ing arm" without complete public condemnation is by the mantra that things happen on the field and that's where they stay. Most cricket players agree with this idea and won't condemn someone for saying something like that, whereas if he just said it anywhere else in public and was caught on camera it would be condemned. I think we have the same mantra here.
When a company pays his fine for such an indiscretion, what they're effectively saying is that they endorse that type of behaviour - they defend his right to say whatever he wants on the field. Fine. Whatever (still don't think it's a great idea for a company to be associated with swearing and violence, but I can see the appeal).
The problem is at that point for Clarke, he effectively has a become that brand's public advertisement for this type of behaviour. So for him, rather than just having said that stuff on the field, he is now the walking representative of sledging and/or swearing and violent threats in cricket.
How about you do something contstructive in this forum for once and not fill the forum with ****. You offer nothing.
This**** that if you're gonna play park cricket expect to cop it from the other teams supporters
Yeah, been there.**** that if you're gonna play park cricket expect to cop it from the other teams supporters
Probably, but a 20% match fee fine is hardly going to put anyone off is it?In the grand scheme of things, if this was going too far, then so is the vast majority of sledging that's been done.