0
![Not allowed!](images/buttons/down_dis.png)
![Not allowed!](images/buttons/up_dis.png)
Cricket Australia- News Display - Cricket Australia
Harbhajan Singh has been cleared to play in the upcoming triangular one-day series between Australia, Sri Lanka and India, with his racial vilification charge overturned by an ICC Code of Conduct Appeal.
Harbhajan's initial penalty of three Test matches has been quashed, with the off spinner fined 50 per cent of his match fee from the third Test at the SCG when the incident took place for using abusive language.
New Zealand High Court Judge John Hansen ruled that there was not sufficient evidence to prove an offence under rule 3.3 of the Code of Conduct, which relates to racially insulting behaviour, in Harbhajan's verbal attack on Andrew Symonds.
Harbhajan plead guilty to a level 2.8 offence, which relates to abusive language.
Level Two offences draw anything between a 50 per cent fine and a ban of one Test match of two ODIs. Harbhajan's punishment is at the lower end of the scale. Level Three offences, which match referee Mike Proctor initially found the Indian spinner guilty of, carry an automatic ban.
Audio and video evidence was presented at the trial, while a full explanation of Justice Hansen's decision will be made on Wednesday.
The Commonwealth Bank triangular series will also go ahead, with the BCCI (Board of Control for Cricket and India) pleased with the outcome of the hearing.
"My understanding is, but you'd have to have to confirm with the Indians, that the Indian team is now planning to travel to Melbourne for the Twenty20 match on Friday," CA spokesman Peter Young said.
"All parties will move on with the cricket. The game is the important thing," he said.
the ICC are again bowing to the indians...
Pathetic!!!
Maybe Australia should refuse to play against any team that Harbhajan is in.
Posted via space
Political correctness is a doctrine, fostered by a delusional, illogical minority, and rabidly promoted by an unscrupulous mainstream media, which holds forth the proposition that it is entirely possible to pick up a turd by the clean end.
What a farce![]()
"Bloody oath we did!"
Nathan Sharpe, Legend.
Allegedly the "M" word was only used by an Aussie fielder claiming that Harbajan had called Symonds a monkey. Maybe they should ban the entire Aussie team for racial vilification of one of their own!!!
CHEERLEADERS ROCK!!!
I read somewhere that he called Symonds a Maa ki which apparently means "mother f****er in his own language!
I think that in reality they were reacting to the precedent been set rather than receiving a bit Ecky.
It is only the supporters tour reports and the really in depth cricket reports that ever tell what the Australians cop from the International crowds, especially on the Sub Continent.
Before the Test the Captains agreed there would be none of it, there was, there was a reaction.
"Bloody oath we did!"
Nathan Sharpe, Legend.
Watches Aussie goes Bolly this week (The Mumbai incident)
It was ugly, I can understand why Symonds wants to get any potential ocurrence of this sort of stuff in the news. The problem is, with the reaction of the BCCI, the 'fans' in Mumbai will surely interpret it as a justification of that term, whether or not it was actually used. I can imagine how it will be for Roy next tour!
C'mon the![]()
![]()
If you're on the end of some clever sledging you have respect for it .. if someone just calls you a mother****er, that isn't clever!
"What colour was the couch?" is an example of a very clever sledge!
I still think you should be allowed to say what ever you like on the field!
Chuck Norris has the greatest Poker-Face of all time. He won the 1983 World Series of Poker, despite holding only a Joker, a Get out of Jail Free Monopoly card, a 2 of clubs, 7 of spades and a green #4 card from the game Uno.
heres some of the best sledges: Top Cricket Sledges
According to channel 10 here the judge that heard the appeal yesterday says that Symonds started it.
The "so called fans" in Mumbai did actually have a sign in the crowd which said something along the lines of "Symonds don't dare come back to India" (from Mondays episode of An Aussie goes Bolly). As we are scheduled for a test series there in October, we have not heard the last of this and Ponting and Co will be reminded of it when they arrive in India.