As he settles into a new season at Durham, the Australian batsman reflects on how his nine-month suspension for using sandpaper on the ball during a Test match changed his views on life and cricket

Cameron Bancroft is out of quarantine and, after being “brutally cold” on his arrival in Durham last week, the Australian batsman is beginning to thaw out and open up to another season of English county cricket. “I wouldn’t say the mornings have been red-hot,” he says dryly at Durham’s serene Riverside ground, “but they’re significantly warmer than when I got here and the wind was coming in from the Arctic.”

His five-day period in quarantine was also a minor inconvenience compared to the nine-month ban he endured from cricket after his role in the ball-tampering saga against South Africa in March 2018.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Don’t worry too much, Generation Z, we humans are a resilient species | Letters

Sue Ball and Phyll Hardie respond to the fears that young people…

The Queen has more power over British law than we ever thought | Adam Tucker

Now we know that the mysterious ‘Queen’s consent’ is more than just…

Lloyd George defined ‘profiteer’ more than a century ago. It may be time to revisit it | Tim Adams

The scandal of PPE procurement is surely reason enough for the term…

Arizona primary

arizona election results