Australia in mourning (11 December 1998)
Australia is in mourning
11-Dec-1998
11 December 1998
Australia in mourning
Samson Abeyagunawardena
AUSTRALIA, December 10
Australia is in mourning. As one commentator observed today, the
nation's mood is that normally associated with a state funeral or
death of national hero, the announcement of a war or some national
disaster.
The disaster is the admission yesterday by two of the country's
sports idols - Mark Waugh and Shane Warne - that they had dealings
with an illegal bookmaker from India during the 1994 tour to Sri
Lanka.
Television stations interrupted scheduled programs to announce the
news and televise the media conference. Australia's Prime Minister
John Howard issued a statement. He said: "I would imagine that given
the great passion Australians have for cricket, there's an intense
feeling of disappointment about the whole issue. Australians love
their cricket and anything that looks as though it's knocking cricket
off is pedestal is something that's going to deeply disturb
Australians."
The achievements of Australia's cricketers have been vital in
bringing people together and in sustaining national pride. So the
admission by two modern heroes of Australian cricket that they took a
bookmaker's money is seen by some commentators on this case as
evidence of greed.
"The fact is" says Mark Wallace writing in today's Canberra Times,
"that they (Mark Waugh and Shane Warne) have tainted the great game
of cricket, tainted the baggy green cap and broken the hearts of a
million kids."
The influential quality newspaper, The Age, stated in its editorial
today: "This scandal serves as a reminder to professional sports
people that money can all too easily become the sole justification
for any act, that the desire to maximise earnings in the relatively
short period when players are 'hot' can sometimes blind them to wider
considerations of right and wrong. When our cricketers wear the baggy
green cap they are representing Australia - literally. Our players
and administrators must now, through their candour and their future
behaviour, show that they understand all the ramifications of that."
Also in today's Age, cricket commentator Peter McFarline writes: "In
the spirit of cricket, the acceptance of money for information,
mundane or otherwise, is a crime against that spirit. It is also a
step towards the ultimate bastardy - match fixing."
Source :: Daily News (https://www.lanka.net)