Australians accused of losing moral compass

Wed Jan 9, 2008 2:20am GMT
 
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By Rob Taylor

CANBERRA (Reuters) - A trio of Australian sporting icons accused the country's cricket side on Wednesday of having lost its "moral compass" in a row over a ban on Indian spinner Harbhajan Singh for racial abuse.

As cricket authorities moved to defuse a two-day standoff and Indian threats to abandon their tour, Sport Australia Hall of Fame head John Bertrand said the home team had grown arrogant through success, and needed more respect for opponents.

"Sport is only sport. It's not war," Bertrand, a former champion yachtsman, told the Herald Sun newspaper.

The Australian team has been accused of unsportsmanlike, "boorish" behaviour in its second test victory over India, with captain Ricky Ponting accused of encouraging an overly aggressive approach on the field.

Bertrand said his concerns were echoed by Hall of Fame colleagues Herb Elliott, an Olympic gold winning middle distance runner, and marathon champion Robert de Castella, a former director of the Australian Institute of Sport.

"We believe Australia's test team moral compass needs to be retuned," said Bertrand, who skippered the yacht Australia II to America's Cup victory in 1983.

The Indian cricket board on Tuesday said the Australian tour would continue on condition Singh eventually be cleared of the racial abuse charge and a three-match ban issued by the International Cricket Council (ICC) be dropped.

The Indian board held an emergency meeting after the ICC removed umpire Steve Bucknor for the third test in Perth and appointed a mediator between the two teams.  Continued...

 
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