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Saffers were sledging about ball tampering?This is what AB and the other Saffers were sledging about in the first two tests.
They obviously don’t do irony as the ****s are serial offenders
Saffers were sledging about ball tampering?This is what AB and the other Saffers were sledging about in the first two tests.
Not to mention that so many ex players and talking heads keep saying the coach must have known in this situation or the dressing room would have know/no one just does this randomly. Doesn't that imply that in other ball tampering cases other players would have known or planned as well?To an extent that is true but it comes back to the underlying offence and what they were conspiring to do
They were conspiring to commit a Level 2 offence (Level 4 is the worst)
It's why conspiring to commit a terrorist act and conspiring to steal a loaf of bread are dealt with differently under the law
It always and must come back to the underlying offence - in this case it is only a Level 2 offence
Mints and zipper pockets in 2013-2016 - it was a great time.Saffers were sledging about ball tampering?
They obviously don’t do irony as the ****s are serial offenders
Not necessarily.But it still has to come back to the underlying offence (only Level 2)
That's why life bans and multi year bans just won't happen
Legally it would be contested
As I said earlier, there's a reason why conspiring to commit a terrorist act and conspiring to punch someone in the head are dealt with differently under the lawNot necessarily.
Conspiracy theories about Smith being clueless and taking the fall for a newbie aside, what they owned up to accounts to conspiracy and a pre-planned crime. Pre-meditated murder vs crime of passion.
The third word in your third sentence is better applied to the sentiment that a six month/one year ban is a good idea when previous offences including South Africa's current captain twice have gotten zero or one matches.Not really. A six month ban wouldn't have sent the right signal. Given how idiotic the Aussie cricket boorishness has been even by their standards, it will do more good than harm long term.
Well to Cricket Australia the fundamental crime committed here is that their image has been tarnished. This is clearly so grave it requires severe punishment.But it still has to come back to the underlying offence (only Level 2)
That's why life bans and multi year bans just won't happen
Legally it would be contested
So someone throwing a match/playing for bookies by deliberately bowling a no-ball should come back to the underlying offence - bowling a no-ball?As I said earlier, there's a reason why conspiring to commit a terrorist act and conspiring to punch someone in the head are dealt with differently under the law
Because of the underlying offence
It must always come back to that
That's totally ridiculous.So someone throwing a match/playing for bookies by deliberately bowling a no-ball should come back to the underlying offence - bowling a no-ball?
Yup.There wouldn't have been much fallout if Smith hadn't tried to be a holier than thou captain all along.
What? You went off the deep end there. The underlying offence there is taking money to change the outcome of a game which is illegal. Your argument is like saying the underlying offence in shooting someone in the head is discharging a firearm.So someone throwing a match/playing for bookies by deliberately bowling a no-ball should come back to the underlying offence - bowling a no-ball?
Thanks for the condescending remark, but perhaps you shouldn't be looking for ways out for your beloved players based on a legal definition that's based on a falsehood to begin with.That's totally ridiculous.
Clearly you are out of your intellectual depth.
You're missing the parallelThat's totally ridiculous.
Clearly you are out of your intellectual depth.
No, that's the opposite of what I'm saying. Following howardj's line of thinking, that's the argument. Charge for what's happened (ball tampering/discharging a firearm), and ignore the fact they conspired to cheat to win (shooting someone in the head).What? You went off the deep end there. The underlying offence there is taking money to change the outcome of a game which is illegal. Your argument is like saying the underlying offence in shooting someone in the head is discharging a firearm.
Again, it's the WHO, not the WHAT. We're talking about the Australian test captain, VC and coach planning to cheat.To an extent that is true but it comes back to the underlying offence and what they were conspiring to do
They were conspiring to commit a Level 2 offence (Level 4 is the worst)
It's why conspiring to commit a terrorist act and conspiring to steal a loaf of bread are dealt with differently under the law
It always and must come back to the underlying offence - in this case it is only a Level 2 offence