14 Feb 1998
When Hansie stumped the umpires
Trevor Chesterfield
Centurion - Hansie Cronje's image as a cool, calm and totally
collected captain has taken a nasty knock.
Revelations are that he was the culprit who speared a stump
through the umpires dressingroom door at the end of the third
Test at the Adelaide Oval earlier this month.
And a shame-faced Cronje has written a letter of apology to the
Australian Cricket Board over an incident which the South
African captain and Dr Ali Bacher, managing director of the
United Cricket Board (of SA) says the "matter is now closed".
Dr Bacher made known that it was Cronje who shoved the stump
through the umpires dressingroom door, after a frustrating, if
controversial final day's play of the game which ended in a
draw. No action will be taken against Cronje, and this includes
incurring a possible fine.
"The whole matter is now closed," Dr Bacher said. Which is one
way of looking at it, although hee declined to say whether the
UCB are paying for a new door to the dressingroom.
"Hansie and I spoke about it before the team left Australia and
again after he arrived back, and he apologised profusely over
the incident," Dr Bacher commented.
"It was done in a moment of frustration, profound disappointment
and tension after the game. Hansie committed an injudicious act
and has acknowledged it. He is very apologetic about it," the
UCB MD said.
Cronje sent a letter of apology to the ACB the day he arrived in
South Africa.
"It certainly wasn't a decision we (UCB) forced on him forced on
him," Dr Bacher added.
It appears the incident was sparked by the umpires ruling not to
give Mark Waugh out after dislodging the bail with his bat
shortly after being hit on the shoulder by a Shaun Pollock
delivery. South Africa's top umpires have said that under the
law the younger Waugh twin was out.
What was interesting was how Pat Symcox was taken through the 10
dropped catches in the Test when interviewed on the weekly
cricket programme co-hosted by Mike Haysman, the former South
Australian batsman. The grizzled, trench-fighter image Symcox
desports on the field was gone; he squirmed with embarrassment
when shown each fielding misdemeanour: several were of his own
making.
Little wonder Cronje said that it was hard enough taking 20
Aussie wickets but trying to take 30 was 10 too many.
Trevor Chesterfield Cricket writer Pretoria News
tche@ptn.independent.co.za