Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull added his voice to the furious chorus demanding Steve Smith be stood down saying he is ‘shocked and bitterly disappointed’ and is looking for ‘decisive action’.
The Australian cricket team were caught ball tampering in South Africa with batsman Cameron Bancroft using dirt stuck to a piece of tape during the third Test against South Africa in Cape Town on Saturday.
Speaking about the incident which has thrown Australian cricket into to chaos, the prime minister said: ‘It seemed completely beyond belief that the Australian cricket team had been involved in cheating.’
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said the incident was wrong and called for decisive action from Cricket Australia
Australian cricket is a laughing stock after Cameron Bancroft insisted that he was in the wrong place at the wrong time when he was caught
He said the news beggared belief with the players role models for millions around the country.
‘The whole nation who holds those who wear the baggy green up on a pedestal — about as high as you can get in Australia, higher than any politician that’s for sure — this is a shocking disappointment.
‘It’s wrong and I look forward to Cricket Australia taking decisive action soon,’ he said.
Mr Turnbull said he had been in contact with the Cricket Australia chairman David Peever to express his disappointment ‘clearly and unequivocally’.
Australia’s Cameron Bancroft has found himself at the centre of ball-tampering controversy
The opening batsman was seen running his hand over the ball, before removing a yellow object from his pocket and placing it down the front of his trousers
A host of cricket legends have called for Australian captain Steve Smith to be sacked as skipper after he admitted the leadership had hatched a plan to cheat.
Adam Gilchrist branded Australia a ‘laughing stock of the world’ after Bancroft was caught on camera pulling sticky tape from his pocket and rubbing it on the ball to illegally gain an advantage.
Shane Warne said during coverage of the Test match on Fox Sports that ‘you just can’t do that’, adding: ‘I don’t care who you are.’
He later tweeted: ‘Very disappointed with the pictures I saw on our coverage here in Cape Town.
‘If proven the alleged ball tampering is what we all think it is – then I hope Steve Smith and Darren Lehmann do the press conference to clean this mess up.’
Adam Gilchrist branded Australia a ‘laughing stock of the world’ after the incident in South Africa
Shane Warne said during coverage of the Test match on Fox Sports that ‘you just can’t do that’, adding: ‘I don’t care who you are.’
Bancroft was spoken to by English umpires Nigel Llong and Richard Illingworth on Saturday
Former Australian batsman Simon Katich said Cricket Australia had ‘no choice’ but to sack Smith, vice-captain David Warner and coach Darren Lehmann.
‘This was premeditated and calculated at the break and those guys are in charge of Cameron Bancroft behaving the way he did,’ he said on SEN Radio.
‘It’s a bigger problem than that, he’s been instructed to do this and anyone in cricket knows the captain and coach are in control of what happens in the team.
‘I love Steve Smith but unfortunately he’s made a serious error and I think it’s going to cost him the captaincy of Australia.’
Gilchrist is due to appear on The Project on Sunday night but said on Channel 10 earlier in the day it was ‘black and white’.
‘Australian cricket now and the integrity of Australian cricket is the laughing stock of world sport,’ he said.
‘We’re very quick to damn nations that cheat in any way or go beyond the rules.
Smith insisted coaches were not involved in the plan in Cape Town and had no knowledge of it
Bancroft admitted he had panicked when he was sighted on the screens in the stadium
‘This clearly is against the laws of the game and we’ve just had our national captain admit they sat down, premeditated, pre-planned a way to cheat.’
Former captain Allan Border was among scores of outraged cricket legends.
Discussing the possibility of Smith being sacked, he wrote in his Fox Sports Australia column: ‘If the ICC and the Australian board decides that Steve Smith is free to play in the fourth Test, I would be comfortable with that.
‘But equally, if he has to pay a penalty for his leadership in going down this path I’d be just as comfortable.’
He added: It’s hard to explain your emotions when it comes to seeing the Australian team doing something like this – you just feel embarrassed and disappointed.’
England fans demonstrated the point made by Gilchrist and have already created a new song – despite their side being bowled out for just 58 on Thursday in their match against New Zealand in Auckland.
England fans are revelling in the controversy currently shrouding the Australian cricket team
The Barmy Army posted the lyrics on Facebook: ‘Steve Smith is an Aussie. He wears a baggy cap. And when he saw some sticky tape. He said I’m having that. He gave it Cameron Bancroft. Who rubbed it on the ball. Those cheating Aussie convicts. They’ll never change at all!’
In a press conference after play on Saturday, Smith admitted that he and senior players planned the ball-tampering at lunch on day three but said he won’t be stepping down as captain.
Millions of Australians woke up on Sunday to headlines they could scarcely believe as fans quickly bayed for blood, demanding ‘sack the lot of them.’
‘The leadership group knew about it’, Smith (right) admitted following Saturday’s action
Bancroft and Steve Smith admitted that ball tampering had taken place during the action
Former Australia captain Michael Clarke was among scores of outraged cricket legends who expressed their shock on Sunday morning.
Cricket Australia CEO James Sutherland was on the verge of tears as he told reporters at a press conference on Sunday morning: ‘This is a sad day for Australian Cricket.’
He has sent the head of integrity and head of team performance out to South Africa to investigate and said he will not decide on sacking any players until he has seen their report.
Another former captain, Michael Clarke called the cheating ‘blatant’ and ‘disrespectful’ during an interview on Nine News on Sunday morning in which he also refused to rule out a return as team captain, saying: ‘If I was asked by the right people, then I would think about my answer.’
He said: ‘I am pretty emotional about it all, to be honest. It is going to be quite hard for me to talk about. I think I have no doubt in my mind Steve Smith will be sitting in his hotel room right now in tears.
‘I have no doubt in my mind that every past Australian cricketer will be absolutely shattered with what we found out this morning,’ said Clarke
Clarke called the cheating ‘blatant’ and ‘disrespectful’ during an interview on Nine News today
Former Australia captain Michael Clarke has said Steve Smith ‘will be sitting in his hotel room right now in tears’ after the national cricket team was caught cheating against South Africa
‘I have no doubt in my mind that every past Australian cricketer will be absolutely shattered with what we found out this morning.’
He savaged Smith for apparently asking 25-year-old Bancroft to cheat, saying: ‘This is his eighth test match. I can’t believe if the leadership group has made a decision to do this, that they have gone and got the young kid who is playing his eighth test match to do that.
‘As a leader, you can’t ask somebody to do something you are not willing to do something you are not willing to do yourself.’
Former England captain Michael Vaughan led chorus of condemnation and criticism from other ex-players.
‘Steve Smith,his Team & ALL the management will have to accept that whatever happens in their careers they will all be known for trying to CHEAT the game,’ Vaughan tweeted.
The four-Test series between Australia and South Africa has been marred by a handful of ugly controversies, starting with a staircase clash between David Warner and Quinton de Kock.
Millions of Australians woke up on Sunday to headlines they could scarcely believe as fans quickly bayed for blood, demanding ‘sack the lot of them.’