Warne punished for dissent

In this file picture, Hampshire's Shane Warne speaks at a news conference at The Rosebowl cricket ground in Southampton, April 11, 2005. Warne was given six penalty points by the England and Wales Cricket Board on Tuesday for abusing an umpire after being given out LBW playing for Hampshire in a county match last week. REUTERS/Mike Finn-Kelcey

In this file picture, Hampshire's Shane Warne speaks at a news conference at The Rosebowl cricket ground in Southampton, April 11, 2005. Warne was given six penalty points by the England and Wales Cricket Board on Tuesday for abusing an umpire after being given out LBW playing for Hampshire in a county match last week.

Credit: Reuters/Mike Finn-Kelcey

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LONDON | Tue May 29, 2007 4:04pm BST

LONDON (Reuters) - Shane Warne was given six penalty points by the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) on Tuesday for abusing an umpire after being given out LBW playing for Hampshire in a county match last week.

Warne was reported by umpires Tim Robinson and Barrie Leadbeater for two separate Level 2 breaches of the ECB's discipline code - showing serious dissent at an umpire's decision by word or action and using language or gesture that is obscene or of a serious insulting nature to another player, umpire, referee, team official or spectator.

The Australian leg spinner, who retired from test cricket in January, made it clear to Robinson that he was unhappy with the LBW decision in the drawn match against Kent at Canterbury and uttered and "audible obscenity" as he approached the pavilion.

The six-point penalty remains on Warne's record for two years, during which time a further three-point penalty would earn an automatic suspension.

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