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Cricket Crap

Mr Spock!

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Police and Cricket Australia investigate sexual assault allegations from 1980s​

  • Jamie Mitchell says he was raped on Australian under-19s tour
  • CA in contact with Mitchell and cooperating with investigation
A former Australian under-19s cricketer who alleges he was sexually assaulted on a representative tour in the 1980s has revealed the “trauma and distress” he has felt for decades.
Jamie Mitchell went public with the allegations in an ABC report on Sunday, stating he believed he had been raped by a team official on a tour of India and Sri Lanka when he was 18.

Mitchell’s discussions with Sports Integrity Australia prompted an Australian Federal Police investigation late last year and Cricket Australia is cooperating. No charges have been laid and the cricket official linked to the allegations denies any wrongdoing.
In a statement, Mitchell said he was relieved the 1985 tour was being investigated.
“Instead of being a highlight of my cricketing life, that tour has caused me trauma and distress over many years,” he said. “Cricket Australia has a chance to distinguish itself by facing up to this issue and doing the right thing.”
Mitchell will send a list of questions to the governing body surrounding the tour, including what authorities knew about the team official when he led the tour, if any complaints were made about him, and whether or not he was sacked when he left cricket soon after the alleged incident.
He is also asking if CA can produce medical records from the tour, including what he was injected with by a team doctor on two occasions.
“My focus is on getting answers and on player welfare ... I’m expecting Cricket Australia to take this very seriously,” he said.

CA told News Corp in a statement the organisation is aware of a police investigation into claims of alleged historical offences occurring on an overseas tour decades ago.
“Cricket Australia is in contact with the alleged victim and is cooperating fully with the police investigation. Because the matter is being investigated by police, we are prevented from commenting further,” the statement read.
“Cricket Australia has no tolerance for any form of abuse and is committed to ensuring a safe environment for all staff, participants and their families in all their interactions with the game.”
An AFP spokesperson said the organisation does not comment on specific investigations.
Rightside Legal partner Michael Magazanik, whose firm is advising Mitchell, said CA should provide a comprehensive response to his questions before they decide on further legal steps.
“This tour was in 1985, and that’s not ancient history ... it’s in everyone’s interests that the information be provided quickly,” he said.


 

Mr Spock!

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TheParraboy

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U19 WC under way
Australia thumped WI by 6wkts, with 31 balls to spare
Teague Wyllie 86*

SL accounted for Scotland
 

Twizzle

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U19 WC under way
Australia thumped WI by 6wkts, with 31 balls to spare
Teague Wyllie 86*

SL accounted for Scotland

seen a bit of him on Youtube, he's gonna be some talent that kid, plays for Scarborough CC, my old stomping ground
 

TheParraboy

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68,128
Easy win to SL overnight v Aussies






Australia Under-19s Flag

Australia Under-19s
175
Sri Lanka Under-19s Flag

Sri Lanka Under-19s
(37/50 ov, target 176)177/6
S'Lanka U19 won by 4 wickets (with 78 balls remaining)
 

TheParraboy

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Fat shaming?

Never happens on these forums :rolleyes:



A bombshell report into England’s disastrous Ashes campaign has revealed worrying details about the preparation, culture and performance that culminated in a 4-0 drubbing.

The tourists saved their worst for last, collapsing in humiliating fashion to cough up the final Test in Hobart inside three days. They failed to pass 300 at any stage of the series and serious questions are being asked about the need to blow up the structure of English cricket and start again.

A damning insight into the tour from hell by English cricket writer Nick Hoult for The Telegraph outlined the issues around quarantine that hampered the team’s ability to prepare for the series — including inclement weather and lack of practice matches resulting in more indoor than outdoor training — and put the spotlight on poor selections.

The report outlines angst with particularly invasive Covid testing procedures, especially in Sydney, where a more uncomfortable swab was required as the virus threatened to derail the series.

As outlined in The Telegraph: “Some players refused to do it, others did it and then made a stand saying they would not let their partners and young children go through the same procedure. It led to the biggest row between players and management of the whole tour and was only resolved by the resumption of normal PCR testing for those who refused.”

The report goes on to detail fitness issues within the camp. “One player refused to take part in the skin-fold test — a gauge of body fat — and, when pressed, accused England of trying to fat shame him. The test was never carried out,” Hoult writes.

“Fitness levels clearly dipped for some players, who started the tour in good shape but appeared to let that side drift as the tour went on. (Ollie) Robinson’s conditioning was an issue from the first Test, when he spent time off the field, but became a recurring theme in every game.”

The report says Ollie Robinson played golf on a day off in Hobart despite carrying a shoulder injury that was threatening his place in the starting XI for the last Test.

During the match in Hobart, England bowling coach Jon Lewis alluded to Robinson’s fitness issues after the seamer left the field and couldn’t come back to bowl, suffering from what was described as back stiffness.

“It (fitness) is something he (Robinson) needs to improve. He’s got a record of playing a lot of games of county cricket,” Lewis said. “Playing international cricket is a higher intensity and you play all year around. He’s got to get used to understanding what it takes to be a full-time, year-round international cricketer.

“That’s something he is going to have to deal with. It is one of his things he really needs to work on.”

The Telegraph also reports of concerns around a drinking culture in the squad before Covid protocols were tightened later in the series, while players were allegedly not always on the same page when it came to team management and tactics involving spinner Jack Leach — who was belted in Brisbane and axed for the second Test, despite the Adelaide Oval curator predicting the pitch would turn.

“Some senior players felt left out of discussions over tactics and another was angered to learn he had been dropped after reading it in the press. Another felt he had not been given enough time to prepare for a Test, learning only 48 hours before that he would be playing,” Hoult reports.

“The tactics for Leach also caused bemusement among the squad. Before the Brisbane Test it was agreed England would be defensive when Leach came on for the first time, knowing Australia would be scenting blood. Players were incredulous when Root brought the field in and attacked, with Leach being taken apart by Australia’s top order. It took him weeks to get over and affected selection for Adelaide.”
 

JJ

Immortal
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32,457
Just a quality tour all round

Shame NZ aren’t at the U 19, Govt making it impossible, for many of those kids it would have been their career highlight
 

TheParraboy

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😲

Some serious shit going on still, only two years back

Probably more of it going on below the top tier of cricketing nations



Taylor - who has played 34 Test matches as well as 250 combined one-day internationals and Twenty20 internationals for Zimbabwe - claims he was approached by "an Indian businessman" in October 2019.

The "businessman" asked him to fly to India, where he would be paid $15,000 (USD) to "discuss sponsorships and the potential launch of a T20 competition in Zimbabwe".

After arriving in India, Taylor says he was then offered cocaine while on a night out. Footage taken of him ingesting cocaine was then allegedly used to force him to take money and engage in match fixing.

"I was cornered. And with (six) of these individuals in my hotel room, I was scared for my own safety," he wrote in a lengthy statement he posted on Twitter.

"I'd fallen for it. I'd willingly walked into a situation that has changed my life forever."

https%3A%2F%2Fprod.static9.net.au%2Ffs%2Fa0a99222-714d-4bb3-a425-3c00731c0d56

Zimbabwes batsman Brendan Taylor walks back to pavilion. (AP)

Taylor says he was given $15,000, which was a "deposit", and promised he would receive an additional $20,000 "once the job was complete".

"I took the money so I could get on a plane and leave India," he says.

"I felt I had no choice at the time because saying no was clearly not an option. All I knew was I had to get out of there."

Taylor says when he returned home the alleged incidents in India had "severely impacted my mental and physical health".

He says he never participated in any match-fixing activity, and eventually reported the situation to the ICC four months after the fact.

"The ICC are still taking the decision to impose a multi-year ban on my international cricketing career," he says.

"I humbly accept this decision and only hope that my story will be used as a means of encouragement for cricketers to report any approaches early."
 
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