Ball-tampering: Smith will not challenge 12-month ban handed by CA
Ball-tampering: Smith will not challenge 12-month ban handed by CA
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Former Australia skipper Steve Smith, deputy David Warner and Cameron Bancroft will challenge the punishment from Cricket Australia after they were involved in tampering the ball during the Cape Town Test against South Africa. But Smith has made it clear that he will not challenge the punishment. The Australian cricketers' union said on Tuesday that the bans on Smith, Warner and Bancroft should be reduced, arguing the punishment was disproportionate to previous ball-tampering cases.

Disgraced former captain Smith and his deputy Warner were suspended from international and domestic cricket for 12 months and Bancroft for nine months over a plot to alter the ball during the third Test against South Africa in Cape Town. All three players have apologized and accepted responsibility in emotional press conferences after being kicked off the tour and returning home last week.

Australian Cricketers' Association (ACA) president Greg Dyer said "justice which is rushed can sometimes be very flawed", referring to Cricket Australia (CA) handing out its punishment so soon after the incident. He urged a relaxation of the bans to allow the men to return to domestic action sooner, saying of the dozen or so previous cases the ACA had studied, the most severe punishment was a ban for two ODIs.

Dyer pointed to the International Cricket Council sanction, which suspended Smith for one Test and docked him his match fee after he admitted responsibility for the ball-tampering scandal. He also said the contrition expressed by players has been "extraordinary" and should be taken into account. A wave of sympathy for Smith, in particular, has been gathering pace since a heart-wrenching public apology on Thursday, in which he broke down in tears.

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